Abstract
| - We have previously reported that the non-transforming junD (wild type) gene can acquire transforming activity through spontaneous mutations when it is replicated through avian replication-competent retrovirus vectors in chicken embryo fibroblasts. In two of these spontaneous mutants, T1 and T2, which were isolated from proviral DNA in the same transformed cell clone, a specific 48 bp polynucleotide segment of the junD coding sequence was tandemly repeated three and five times, respectively. We report here that the number of direct repeats in these mutants rapidly changes (mostly decreases) in the context of either RSV-based replication-competent or MLV-based replication-defective retroviruses, most likely during the process of reverse transcription, while these mutations are stable in the cellular chromosome. We also show that the growth conditions of the infected culture modulate the proportions of polymorphic proviral populations in the infected culture. We finally discuss the possible molecular mechanisms that generate genetic diversity in these amplification mutants.
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