Topoisomerase I stimulates SV40 T antigen-mediated DNA replication and inhibits T antigen's ability to unwind DNA at nonorigin sites

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Abstract

We have previously found that purified SV40 T antigen and topoisomerase I (topo I) bind to one another in vitro. In this report, we determined the effects of human topo I on T antigen-mediated DNA replication and investigated whether it altered T antigen's biochemical activities. Topo I stimulates DNA replication and especially increases the amounts of finished circular molecules. This protein had no effect on T antigen's ability to bind, distort, or unwind the origin of replication. However, unwinding of DNA by T antigen was strongly inhibited by topo I when it was initiated at sites other than the origin. We demonstrate that the presence of T antigen binding sites in DNA interfere with inhibition of unwinding by topo I. These results indicate that topo I may increase the specificity of unwinding by inhibiting the reaction at non-origin sites. Fragments of T antigen that bind to topo I abrogate topo I's inhibition of non-origin-dependent unwinding, indicating that topo I inhibits unwinding through a direct interaction with T antigen. We propose a model whereby T antigen and topo I function together at the origin to specifically unwind it and initiate DNA replication.

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Simmons, D. T., Trowbridge, P. W., & Roy, R. (1998). Topoisomerase I stimulates SV40 T antigen-mediated DNA replication and inhibits T antigen’s ability to unwind DNA at nonorigin sites. Virology, 242(2), 435–443. https://doi.org/10.1006/viro.1997.9024

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