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Journal of General Virology (2000), 81, 2059-2065.
© 2000 Society for General Microbiology


Animal: DNA Viruses

Evidence that the first strand-transfer reaction of duck hepatitis B virus reverse transcription requires the polymerase and that strand transfer is not needed for the switch of the polymerase to the elongation mode of DNA synthesis

Yunhao Gongb,1, Ermei Yao1, Melissa Stevens1 and John E. Tavis1

Department of Molecular Microbiology and Immunology, St Louis University School of Medicine, 1402 S. Grand Blvd, St Louis, MO 63104, USA1

Author for correspondence: John Tavis. Fax +1 314 773 3403. e-mail tavisje{at}slu.edu

Deletion of amino acids 79–88 in the duck hepatitis B virus reverse transcriptase had minimal effects on polymerase activities prior to the minus-strand DNA transfer reaction, yet it greatly diminished strand transfer and subsequent DNA synthesis. This mutation also reduced reverse transcription on exogenous RNA templates. The reaction on exogenous RNAs employed the phosphonoformic acid (PFA)-sensitive elongation mode of DNA synthesis rather than the PFA-resistant priming mode, despite the independence of DNA synthesis in this assay from the priming and minus-strand transfer reactions. These data provide experimental evidence that the polymerase is involved directly in the minus-strand transfer reaction and that the switch of the polymerase from the early PFA-resistant mode of DNA synthesis to the later PFA-sensitive elongation mode does not require the strand-transfer reaction.







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