Bovine papilloma virus plasmids replicate randomly in mouse fibroblasts throughout S phase of the cell cycle - PubMed (original) (raw)

Bovine papilloma virus plasmids replicate randomly in mouse fibroblasts throughout S phase of the cell cycle

D M Gilbert et al. Cell. 1987.

Abstract

Bovine papilloma virus (BPV) replicates as a multicopy nuclear plasmid in mouse fibroblasts. Using fluorescence activated cell sorting and mitotic selection procedures, we show that the replication of BPV occurs throughout S phase of the cell cycle and that replication is confined to S phase. After one round of chromosomal DNA replication, almost one quarter of BPV plasmids have replicated more than once, while a similar number of plasmids have not replicated at all. While multiple forms of BPV exist in the cell, all forms show the same pattern of replication. These results are consistent with a model in which BPV plasmids are chosen at random for replication throughout, and only during, S phase and support the view that the completion of S phase is a specifically activated event in the cell cycle rather than simply the end of one round of chromosomal DNA replication.

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