Allshire R C, Bostock C J
J Mol Biol. 1986 Mar 5;188(1):1-13. doi: 10.1016/0022-2836(86)90475-4.
Linearized bovine papillomavirus type 1 (BPV-1) DNA was introduced into mouse C127 cells, where it recircularized and replicated as an intact monomeric, extrachromosomal circular form in the resulting transformants. These cells contained a mixture of complex high molecular weight forms that were converted to a linear form of approximately BPV-1 size upon digestion with an enzyme that cuts once within the BPV-1 genome. Further analysis of one of these cell lines revealed that these high molecular weight forms consisted of two components. One was detected on agarose gels as a diffuse smear of slow-migrating material representing linear forms that were tightly associated with host chromosomes, probably by integration. The second component was composed of discrete-sized oligomeric open and supercoiled extrachromosomal circular forms of up to approximately 48 X 10(3) base-pairs (6 tandemly linked BPV-1 genomes) in size. No catenated (interlocked) forms could be detected.