Transcription of the Polyoma Virus Genome: Synthesis and Cleavage of Giant Late Polyoma-Specific RNA

  1. Nicholas H. Acheson,
  2. Elena Buetti,
  3. Klaus Scherrer*, and
  4. Roger Weil
  1. Department of Molecular Biology, University of Geneva, 1211 Geneva
  2. Department of Virology, Swiss Institute for Experimental Cancer Research, 1005 Lausanne, Switzerland
  3. *Department of Molecular Biology, Swiss Institute for Experimental Cancer Research, 1005 Lausanne, Switzerland

Abstract

The size of virus-specific RNA synthesized in cultured mouse kidney cells infected with polyoma virus was estimated by electrophoresis and sedimentation analysis of RNA extracts from whole cells. Newly synthesized “late” polyoma-specific RNA appears as “giant” molecules of heterogeneous size, up to several times larger than a strand of polyoma DNA (1.5 × 106 daltons). Treatment with dimethylsulfoxide or urea showed that the large size of these molecules is not due to aggregation. Giant polyoma-specific RNA is strikingly similar in size distribution to “nuclear messenger-like” RNA (“heterogeneous nuclear” RNA) of the host cell. Subsequent to its synthesis, some of the giant polyoma-specific RNA appears to be cleaved to at least three smaller species.

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