Replication of mycoplasma virus L51. VII. effect of chloramphenicol on the synthesis of DNA replicative intermediates

Das, J. ; Maniloff, J. (1982) Replication of mycoplasma virus L51. VII. effect of chloramphenicol on the synthesis of DNA replicative intermediates Journal of Virology, 44 (3). pp. 877-881. ISSN 0022-538X

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Official URL: http://jvi.asm.org/cgi/content/abstract/44/3/877

Abstract

Chloramphenicol affects several steps in the DNA replication of mycoplasma virus L51, a noncytocidal, naked, bullet-shaped virion containing circular single-stranded (SS) DNA of 1.5 × 106 daltons (4.5 kilobases). In the presence of chloramphenicol, adsorption was normal and parental SS DNA was converted to double-stranded replicative forms (RF), but subsequent RF → RF replication was inhibited. Chloramphenicol added late in infection, when most viral nascent DNA is in progeny SS molecules, inhibited SS synthesis, but nascent RF molecules were formed. However, a chase experiment showed that these RF molecules could not be converted to SS DNA. Therefore, viral RF molecules made in the presence of chloramphenicol are not functional as SS DNA precursors.

Item Type:Article
Source:Copyright of this article belongs to American Society for Microbiology.
ID Code:26573
Deposited On:08 Dec 2010 13:33
Last Modified:17 May 2016 09:51

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