| Literature DB >> 9654446 |
J B Rascle1, D Ficheux, J L Darlix.
Abstract
Retroviral nucleocapsid (NC) protein, in addition to its structural roles in the virion core, is involved in the early and late phases of the viral replication cycle. To further characterise the role of NC protein of MoMuLV (NCp10) in the replication of the viral genome, the influence of NCp10 on self-primed versus primer-specific reverse transcription has been analysed in vitro. The results show that NCp10 can enhance the specificity of proviral DNA synthesis by inhibiting self-primed cDNA synthesis while promoting primer-specific DNA synthesis within active NCp10-RNA nucleoprotein complexes. Retroviruses are known to show a high degree of variability and this prompted us to examine the possible implication of NCp10 in the genetic variability of MoMuLV. The ability of reverse transcriptase (RT) to extend different mutated primers using an RNA or a DNA template has been investigated in the presence or in the absence of NCp10. NCp10 was found to have different effects on RT depending on the nature of the template: an enhancement at the elongation level of mutated primers using RNA as template versus a slight inhibition using DNA as template. These observations suggest that NCp10 could be implicated in the genetic variability of MoMuLV by allowing nucleotide misincorporation principally during minus strand DNA synthesis. Copyright 1998 Academic PressMesh:
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Year: 1998 PMID: 9654446 DOI: 10.1006/jmbi.1998.1873
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Mol Biol ISSN: 0022-2836 Impact factor: 5.469