Dt. Simmons et al., THE ACTIVITY OF TOPOISOMERASE-I IS MODULATED BY LARGE T-ANTIGEN DURING UNWINDING OF THE SV40 ORIGIN, The Journal of biological chemistry, 273(32), 1998, pp. 20390-20396
When simian virus 40 (SV40) large T antigen binds to the virus origin
of replication, it forms a double hexamer that functions as a helicase
to unwind the DNA bidirectionally. We demonstrate in this report that
T antigen can unwind and release an origin DNA single strand of less
than full length in the presence of purified human topoisomerase I. Th
e sites nicked by topoisomerase I in the strands released by T antigen
during DNA unwinding were localized primarily to the ''late'' side of
the origin, and the template for lagging strand synthesis was preferr
ed significantly over the one for leading strand synthesis. Importantl
y, these sites were, for the most part, different from the sites nicke
d by topoisomerase I in the absence of T antigen. These data indicate
that T antigen activates topoisomerase I nicking at discrete sites and
releases these nicked strands during unwinding. We hypothesize that a
single molecule of topoisomerase I can form a functional complex with
a double hexamer of T antigen to simultaneously relax and unwind doub
le-stranded origin-containing DNA.