
In a polyomavirus-transformed rat cell line, designated LPT, the polyomavirus DNA is integrated into a single chromosomal site. Treatment of LPT cells with carcinogens induces amplification of the integrated virus DNA and flanking cellular sequences. We show that the amplification is arrested within a specific cell DNA segment that maps 1.3 to 1.85 kilobases beyond one virus-cell DNA junction, defined as the left junction. We also present the sequence of an 897-base-pair fragment spanning the arrest site. This fragment contains an unusual sequence element, which consists of two contiguous components, a potential cruciform with stems of 6 base pairs and a d(G-A)27 X d(T-C)27 tract, and maps 1,497 to 1,564 nucleotides beyond the left junction. The possibility that this unusual sequence plays a role in the arrest of the amplification process is discussed.
Base Sequence, Genes, Viral, DNA, Viral, Gene Amplification, Animals, Chromosome Mapping, Cell Transformation, Viral, Polyomavirus, Cell Line, Repetitive Sequences, Nucleic Acid
Base Sequence, Genes, Viral, DNA, Viral, Gene Amplification, Animals, Chromosome Mapping, Cell Transformation, Viral, Polyomavirus, Cell Line, Repetitive Sequences, Nucleic Acid
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