The origin of adenovirus DNA replication lies within an inverted sequence repetition at either end of the linear, double-stranded
viral DNA. Initiation of DNA replication is primed by a deoxynucleoside that is covalently linked to a
protein, which remains bound to the newly synthesized
DNA. We demonstrate that virion-derived
DNA-
protein complexes from five human adenovirus serological subgroups (A to E) can act as a template for both the initiation and the elongation of DNA replication in vitro, using nuclear extracts from adenovirus type 2 (Ad2)-infected HeLa cells. The heterologous template
DNA-
protein complexes were not as active as the homologous Ad2
DNA, most probably due to inefficient initiation by Ad2 replication factors. In an attempt to identify common features which may permit this replication, we have also sequenced the inverted terminal repeated
DNA from human adenovirus serotypes Ad4 (group E), Ad9 and
Ad10 (group D), and Ad31 (group A), and we have compared these to previously determined sequences from Ad2 and Ad5 (group C), Ad7 (group B), and Ad12 and Ad18 (group
A) DNA. In all cases, the sequence around the origin of DNA replication can be divided into two structural domains: a proximal A . T-rich region which is partially conserved among these serotypes, and a distal G . C-rich region which is less well conserved. The G . C-rich region contains sequences similar to sequences present in papovavirus replication origins. The two domains may reflect a dual mechanism for initiation of DNA replication: adenovirus-specific
protein priming of replication, and subsequent utilization of this primer by host replication factors for completion of
DNA synthesis.