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J. Virol., 12 1995, 7529-7540, Vol 69, No. 12
W Chen and RS Baric
Persistently infected cultures of DBT cells were established with mouse
hepatitis virus strain A59 (MHV-A59), and the evolution of the MHV leader
RNA and 5' end of the genome was studied through 119 days postinfection.
Sequence analysis of independent clones demonstrated an overall mutation
frequency approaching 1.2 x 10(-3) to 6.7 x 10(-3). The rate of fixation of
mutations was about 1.2 x 10(-5) to 7.6 x 10(- 5) per nucleotide (nt) per
day. In contrast to finding in bovine coronavirus, the MHV leader RNA
sequences were extremely stable and did not evolve significantly during
persistent infection. Rather, a 5' untranslated region (UTR) A-to-G
mutation at nt 77 in the genomic RNA emerged by day 56 and accumulated
until 50 to 80% of the genome-length molecules retained the mutation by 119
days postinfection. Although other 5'-end mutations were noted, only the nt
77 mutation was significantly associated with viral persistence in vitro.
Mutations were also found in the 5' end of the p28 coding region, but no
specific alterations accumulated in genome-length molecules through 119
days postinfection. The 5' UTR nt 77 mutation resulted in an 18-amino-acid
open reading frame (ORF) upstream of the ORF 1a AUG start site. By in vitro
translation assays, the small ORF was not translated into detectable
product but the mutation significantly enhanced translation of the
downstream p28 ORF about 2.5-fold. Variant viruses, containing either the
nt 77 A-to-G mutation (V16-ATG+) or wild-type sequences at this locus
(V1-ATG-), were isolated at 119 days postinfection. The variant viruses
replicated more efficiently than wild-type virus and were extremely
cytolytic in DBT cells, suggesting that the A-to-G mutation did not encode
a nonlytic or attenuated phenotype. Consistent with the in vitro
translation results, a significant increase (approximately 3.5-fold) in p28
expression was also observed with the mutant virus (V16-ATG+) in DBT cells
compared with that in wild-type controls. These data indicate that MHV
persistence was significantly associated with mutation and evolution in the
5'-end UTR which enhanced the translation of the ORF 1a and potentially ORF
1b polyproteins which function in virus transcription and replication.
Copyright © 1995, American Society for Microbiology
Function of a 5'-end genomic RNA mutation that evolves during persistent mouse hepatitis virus infection in vitro
Department of Epidemiology, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill 27599-7400, USA.
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