Developing adenoviral vectors encoding therapeutic genes toxic to host cells: comparing binary and single-inducible vectors expressing truncated E2F-1. (49/111)

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Antibody-dependent natural killer cell-mediated cytotoxicity engendered by a kinase-inactive human HER2 adenovirus-based vaccination mediates resistance to breast tumors. (50/111)

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The SWI/SNF-like BAF complex is essential for early B cell development. (51/111)

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Adenoviral E2 IVa2 protein interacts with L4 33K protein and E2 DNA-binding protein. (52/111)

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Nuclear localization of the adenovirus DNA-binding protein: requirement for two signals and complementation during viral infection. (53/111)

The adenovirus DNA-binding protein (DBP) is an abundant multifunctional protein located primarily in the nuclei of infected cells. To define sequences involved in nuclear transport of DBP, a series of point and small deletion mutants were constructed via oligonucleotide-directed mutagenesis. Two short stretches of basic amino acids located in the amino-terminal domain (amino acids 42 to 46 and 84 to 89) were identified. Their importance, however, depended on the context in which DBP was expressed. Disruption of either site prevented nuclear localization after transient expression in transfected 293 cells, implying that two nuclear localization signals are necessary for transport of this nuclear protein. In contrast, the mutant DBPs synthesized during viral infection were located either primarily in the nucleus or in the nucleus and cytoplasm, depending on the mutation and the stage of the viral infection. Thus, the nuclear localization defect could be complemented by viral infection, perhaps through the interaction of the mutant polypeptide with a virus-encoded or -induced factor(s).  (+info)

Functional characterization of thermolabile DNA-binding proteins that affect adenovirus DNA replication. (54/111)

The human adenovirus type 2 (Ad2) mutant Ad2ts111 has previously been shown to contain two mutations which result in a complex phenotype. Ad2ts111 contains a single base change in the early region 1B (E1B) 19,000-molecular-weight (19K) coding region which yields a cyt deg phenotype and another defect which maps to the E2A 72K DNA-binding protein (DBP) coding region that causes a temperature-sensitive DNA replication phenotype. Here we report that the defect in the Ad2ts111 DBP is due to a single G----T transversion that results in a substitution of valine for glycine at amino acid 280. A temperature-independent revertant, Ad2ts111R10, was isolated, which reverts back to glycine at amino acid 280 yet retains the cyt and deg phenotypes caused by the 19K mutation. We physically separated the two mutations of Ad2ts111 by constructing a recombinant virus, Ad2ts111A, which contained a wild-type Ad2 E1B 19K gene and the gly----val mutation in the 72K gene. Ad2ts111A was cyt+ deg+, yet it was still defective for DNA replication at the nonpermissive temperature. The Ad2ts111 DBP mutation is located only two amino acids away from the site of the mutation in Ad2+ND1ts23, a previously sequenced DBP mutant. Biochemical studies of purified Ad2+ND1ts23 DBP showed that this protein was defective for elongation but not initiation of replication in a cell-free replication system consisting of purified Ad polymerase, terminal protein precursor, and nuclear factor I. Ad2+ND1ts23 DBP bound less tightly to single-strand DNA than did Ad2 DBP, as shown by salt gradient elution of purified DBPs from denatured DNA cellulose columns. This decreased binding to DNA was probably due to local conformational changes in the protein at a site that is critical for DNA binding rather than to global changes in protein structure, since both the Ad2+ND1ts23 and Ad2 DBPs showed identical cleavage patterns by the protease thermolysin at various temperatures.  (+info)

Identification of two nuclear subclasses of the adenovirus type 5-encoded DNA-binding protein. (55/111)

The synthesis, accumulation, and subcellular distribution of the adenovirus serotype 5 DNA-binding protein (DBP) has been examined during the infectious cycle in HeLa cells. With the onset of viral DNA replication and entry into the late phase, two nuclear subclasses of DBP are distinguishable by immunofluorescence microscopy and can be separately isolated by in situ cell fractionation. The first subclass, represented by diffuse-staining DBP, is released by the addition of 1% Nonidet P-40-150 mM NaCl. The second subclass of DBP, which is sequestered into intranuclear globular structures, requires a high ionic strength (2 M NaCl) for extraction and appears to be associated with centers of active viral DNA replication. This association is based on the observations that: DBP within the globules and viral DNA, as detected by in situ hybridization, form identical structures that colocalize within the nuclei of infected cells, the formation of DBP globular structures requires the onset and continuation of viral DNA replication, and once formed, the globular structures can be perturbed by modulating viral DNA synthesis.  (+info)

The pentapeptide motif of Hox proteins is required for cooperative DNA binding with Pbx1, physically contacts Pbx1, and enhances DNA binding by Pbx1. (56/111)

The vertebrate Hox genes, which represent a subset of all homeobox genes, encode proteins that regulate anterior-posterior positional identity during embryogenesis and are cognates of the Drosophila homeodomain proteins encoded by genes composing the homeotic complex (HOM-C). Recently, we demonstrated that multiple Hox proteins bind DNA cooperatively with both Pbx1 and its oncogenic derivative, E2A-Pbx1. Here, we show that the highly conserved pentapeptide motif F/Y-P-W-M-R/K, which occurs in numerous Hox proteins and is positioned 8 to 50 amino acids N terminal to the homeodomain, is essential for cooperative DNA binding with Pbx1 and E2A-Pbx1. Point mutational analysis demonstrated that the tryptophan and methionine residues within the core of this motif were critical for cooperative DNA binding. A peptide containing the wild-type pentapeptide sequence, but not one in which phenylalanine was substituted for tryptophan, blocked the ability of Hox proteins to bind cooperatively with Pbx1 or E2A-Pbx1, suggesting that the pentapeptide itself provides at least one surface through which Hox proteins bind Pbx1. Furthermore, the same peptide, but not the mutant peptide, stimulated DNA binding by Pbx1, suggesting that interaction of Hox proteins with Pbx1 through the pentapeptide motif raises the DNA-binding ability of Pbx1.  (+info)