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J. Virol., Jul 1997, 4944-4953, Vol 71, No. 7
L Kuo, R Fearns and PL Collins
The gene start (GS) and gene end (GE) transcription signals of human
respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) strain A2 were analyzed in helper-
dependent monocistronic and dicistronic minireplicons which were
complemented by a standard RSV strain. The GS signal, which is the start
site for mRNA synthesis, is highly conserved for the first nine genes:
3'-CCCCGUUUA(U/C) (negative sense). This conserved version of the signal
was analyzed by "saturation" mutagenesis, in which all 10 positions, as
well as one downstream and one upstream position, were changed one at a
time into each of the other three nucleotides. Most of the positions appear
to contribute to the signal: positions 1, 3, 6, 7, and, in particular, 9
were the most sensitive, whereas position 5 was relatively insensitive. The
effect of nucleotide substitution in the first position of the signal was
examined further by cDNA cloning and sequence analysis of the residual mRNA
which was produced. For the two mutants examined (1C to U, and 1C to A),
the site of initiation was unchanged. However, the mRNAs were dimorphic
with regard to the assignment of the 5'-terminal nucleotide: two-thirds
contained the predicted mutant substitution, and one-third contained the
parental assignment. Intracellular minigenome contained only the mutant
assignment, indicating that the heterogeneity was at the level of
transcription by the RSV polymerase. This suggests that the templated
mutant assignment at position 1 can sometimes be overridden by an innate
preference for the parental assignment, a phenomenon which we dubbed
quasi-templated initiation. The GS signal of the L gene, encoding the 10th
RSV mRNA, contains three differences (3'-CCCUGUUUUA) compared to the
conserved version. It was shown to be equal in efficiency to the conserved
version. This was unexpected, since the saturation mutagenesis described
above indicated that U in place of A at position 9 should be highly
inhibitory. Instead, the A at position 10 of the L GS signal was found to
be critical for activity, indicating that an essential A residue indeed was
present in both versions of the GS signal but that its spacing differed.
The GE signal, which directs termination and polyadenylation, has more
sequence diversity in nature than does the GS signal. The naturally
occurring GE signals of strain A2 were compared by their individual
incorporation into a dicistronic minigenome. They were similar in the
ability to produce translatable mRNA except in the cases of NS1 and NS2,
which were approximately 60% as efficient.
Copyright © 1997, American Society for Microbiology
Analysis of the gene start and gene end signals of human respiratory syncytial virus: quasi-templated initiation at position 1 of the encoded mRNA
Laboratory of Infectious Diseases, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, Bethesda, Maryland 20892-0720, USA.
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