
Structure, DNasel hypersensitivity and expression of integrated papilloma virus in the genome of HeLa cells
Author(s) -
LAZO Pedro A.
Publication year - 1987
Publication title -
european journal of biochemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1432-1033
pISSN - 0014-2956
DOI - 10.1111/j.1432-1033.1987.tb11452.x
Subject(s) - biology , orfs , genome , open reading frame , genetics , microbiology and biotechnology , gene , inverted repeat , nucleic acid sequence , rna , virology , peptide sequence
Three integrated copies of human papilloma virus‐18 (HPV‐18) have been identified in HeLa DNA as Hind III bands. HPV‐18 has no Hind III restriction site in its‐genome. The three segments: A, 8.4 kb; B, 7.9 kb and C, 5.8 kb, have an incomplete viral genome. All of them have most of the 1.1‐kb Bam H1 non‐coding fragment of HPV‐18, which seems to contain the viral origin of replication and regulatory elements. Two of the segments (A and B) have a common 5′‐end break‐point in the viral genome within the L2 open reading frame (ORF). In both segments the second early transcriptional unit of the virus (E6, E7 and E1) is structurally conserved in a new environment. The 3′‐end break‐point for segments A and B is within the E2 ORF. Segment C has the L2 and L1 ORF but none of the genes of the early region. Segments A and B have a specific DNaseI‐hypersensitive site located in the E7/E1 region. The nucleotide sequence of this region has twelve papova virus enhancer‐like consensus sequence (5′‐T A C CACAN T A ‐3′) and a double inverted repeat with fixed spacing capable of forming a hairpin loop. Two viral RNA transcripts of 4.8 kb and 1.7 kb have been detected in poly(A)‐rich RNA. The larger transcripts hybridizes to E6, E7 and E1 ORFs as well and has 2.4 kb of host sequence in its 3′ end. The smaller transcript hybridizes with E6 and E7 ORFs and the beginnig of E1, the final 0.7 kb of E1 are not detectable. No transcripts have been detected carrying E2, E4, E5, L2 and L1 ORF sequences. The transcripts are derived from segments A or B. Segment C is not transcriptionally competent.