The herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) a sequence serves as a cleavage/packaging signal but does not drive recombinational genome isomerization when it is inserted into the HSV-2 genome.

1992 
Abstract We inserted the terminal repeat (a sequence) of herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) strain KOS into the tk gene of HSV-2 strain HG52 in order to assess the ability of the HSV-1 a sequence to provoke genome isomerization events in an HSV-2 background. We found that the HSV-1 a sequence was cleaved by the HSV-2 cleavage/packaging machinery to give rise to novel genomic termini. However, the HSV-1 a sequence did not detectably recombine with the HSV-2 a sequence. These results demonstrate that the viral DNA cleavage/packaging system contributes to a subset of genome isomerization events and indicate that the additional recombinational inversion events that occur during infection require sequence homology between the recombination partners.
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