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Book ChapterDOI

RNA-Directed DNA Synthesis and RNA Tumor Viruses

TLDR
It is hypothesized that the leukovirus RNA-directed DNA polymerase activity is an integral part of the ribonucleoprotein core of the virions, which suggests that the virion enzyme activity is related to normal cellular DNA polymerases, and that there are homologies between the amino acid sequences of the viral enzyme and normal cellular enzymes.
Abstract
Publisher Summary The discovery of RNA-directed DNA synthesis in disrupted virions of RNA tumor viruses added strong support to the hypothesis that information transfer from RNA to DNA exists in biological system. The chapter discusses the properties of the endogenous reaction carried out by the virion DNA polymerase. To study the endogenous reaction disrupted, virions are incubated with substrates in the absence of any added template and synthesis of DNA is observed using the RNA present in the virions as template. The chapter also discusses the general implications of RNA-directed DNA synthesis in relation to tumor viruses, neoplastic cells, and normal cells. It is hypothesized that the leukovirus RNA-directed DNA polymerase activity is an integral part of the ribonucleoprotein core of the virions. The cores are synthesized in cells as precursor particles and then are incorporated into complete virions when the virions are assembled by budding at the cell surface. This core enzyme system contains not only the template-primer RNA, a DNA polymerase that can transfer information from RNA to double-stranded DNA, but ancillary enzymes, such as polynucleotide ligase and nucleases, which may aid in integrating the viral information with cellular DNA. This suggests that the virion enzyme activity is related to normal cellular DNA polymerases, and that there are homologies between the amino acid sequences of the viral enzyme and normal cellular enzymes. The relationship of RNA-directed DNA synthesis to neoplasia depends upon the relationship of RNA tumor viruses to neoplasia, which is supported by three general hypotheses: the provirus model, the oncogene model, and the protovirus model.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Nucleotide sequence of Moloney murine leukaemia virus.

TL;DR: The 8,332-nucleotide structure of the genome of Moloney murine leukaemia virus is determined and the coding frame for the gag gene is the same as that for pol, separated only by a single amber triplet.
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DNA polymerase associated with human hepatitis B antigen.

TL;DR: DNA polymerase activity was detected in each of eight preparations of concentrated human hepatitis B antigen (HBAg) rich in Dane particles prepared by high-speed centrifugation of antigen-positive human plasma and in none of seven control preparations prepared in the same way from HBAg-negative plasma.
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Structure, replication, and recombination of retrovirus genomes: some unifying hypotheses.

TL;DR: This article will consider only a limited number of interrelated subjects dealing with the organization of information in tumour virus genomes and its transfer from parent to progeny.
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Characterization of the AIDS-associated retrovirus reverse transcriptase and optimal conditions for its detection in virions.

TL;DR: The RNA-dependent DNA polymerase of the AIDS-associated retrovirus (ARV) gives highest activity with the synthetic template, poly(rA)oligo(dT) and prefers Mg2+ over Mn2+ as a divalent cation.
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Genome of hepatitis B virus: restriction enzyme cleavage and structure of DNA extracted from Dane particles.

TL;DR: D Dane particle DNA is proposed to be a double-stranded circular DNA approximately 3600 nucleotides in length containing a single-stranding gap of 600-2100 nucleosidetriphosphate and the endogenous DNA polymerase reaction appears to repair this single-Stranded gap.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Repeated Sequences in DNA

TL;DR: Hundreds of thousands of copies of DNA sequences have been incorporated into the genomes of higher organisms and used in medicine, science, and engineering.
Journal ArticleDOI

Viral RNA-dependent DNA Polymerase: RNA-dependent DNA Polymerase in Virions of RNA Tumour Viruses

TL;DR: Two independent groups of investigators have found evidence of an enzyme in virions of RNA tumour viruses which synthesizes DNA from an RNA template, apparently the classical process of information transfer from DNA to RNA can be inverted.
Journal ArticleDOI

RNA-dependent DNA polymerase in virions of Rous sarcoma virus.

TL;DR: Viral RNA-dependent DNA Polymerase: RNA- dependent DNA polymerase in Virions of Rous Sarcoma Virus and its role in cell reprograming is studied.
Journal ArticleDOI

Murine Leukemia Virus: High-Frequency Activation in vitro by 5-Iododeoxyuridine and 5-Bromodeoxyuridine

TL;DR: It is indicated that the full genome of murine leukemia virus is present in an unexpressed form in all AKR cells and provide a potentially powerful technique for activating leukemia virus genomes in other cell systems.
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