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Journal of Virology, May 2001, p. 4506-4518, Vol. 75, No. 10
Department of Genetics and Microbiology,
University of Geneva Medical School, CMU, CH-1211 Geneva 4, Switzerland
Received 16 October 2000/Accepted 14 February 2001
The "rule of six" stipulates that the Paramyxovirus
RNA polymerase efficiently replicates only viral genomes counting
6n + 0 nucleotides. Because the nucleocapsid proteins
(N) interact with 6 nucleotides, an exact nucleotide-N match at the RNA
3'-OH end (3'-OH congruence) may be required for recognition of an
active replication promoter. Alternatively, assuming that the six
positions for the interaction of N with the nucleotides are not
equivalent, the nucleotide position relative to N may be critical (N
phase context). The replication abilities of various minireplicons, designed so that the 3'-OH congruence could be discriminated from the N
phase context, were studied. The results strongly suggest that the
application of the rule of six depends on the recognition of
nucleotides positioned in the proper N phase context.
The active genome of the
negative-stranded RNA viruses is found in the form of a nucleocapsid.
In the nucleocapsid, the single-stranded RNA is tightly associated with
the nucleocapsid proteins (N) in a rod-shaped helical structure. The
interaction between the RNA and the N subunits can be so stable that
the nucleocapsid structure does not disintegrate in high salt
concentrations, even upon density equilibrium centrifugation
(35). In such cases, the sugar-phosphate backbone may not
be accessible to solvent (29) and the RNA chain may be
protected from RNase attack (37). This suggests that the
RNA is inside the nucleocapsid structure. However, its exact position
is not known, because the RNA-N three-dimensional structure has not
been resolved at atomic resolution.
For the Sendai virus (SeV), a member of the Paramyxoviridae
family, Respirovirus genus (other genera of the same family
include Morbillivirus, Rubulavirus, and
Pneumovirus), the nucleocapsid rod, containing an RNA of
15,384 nucleotides (54, 55), is ~1.0 µm long and has a
diameter of ~20.0 nm (19, 28). A three-dimensional reconstruction at 2.4-nm resolution has been obtained from electron microscopy images (17). The left-handed helix can coexist
in three different pitch conformations: 5.3, 6.8, and 37.5 nm. In the
most prevalent pitch state, 5.3 nm, there are 13 N subunits per helix
turn and each N subunit is proposed to interact with 6 nucleotides.
The RNA genome is linearly organized in six successive transcription
units separated by a few nucleotides (see Fig. 1A). This coding region
is flanked, at the 3' and 5' ends, by short extracistronic sequences,
of 55 and 57 nucleotides, respectively, for SeV. These sequences
(called leader+ and leader
0022-538X/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JVI.75.10.4506-4518.2001
Copyright © 2001, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
"Rule of Six": How Does the Sendai Virus
RNA Polymerase Keep Count?
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ABSTRACT
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References
![]()
INTRODUCTION
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References
or trailer [see
Fig. 1B]) have been predicted to represent promoters for viral RNA
synthesis. However, the Paramyxovirus promoters outflank
these regions, in contrast with those of the Rhabdoviruses (vesicular
stomatitis virus [VSV]) (12, 46, 60). They extend over
96 nucleotides, overlapping the first (N gene) and last (L gene)
transcription units (Fig. 1B) (41, 58). At the genome 3'
end, the genomic promoter (GP) operates in transcription and replication, while at the antigenome 3' end, the antigenomic
promoter (AGP) is used for replication only (Fig.
1A). It is noteworthy that the
replication promoter, in the present context, refers not only to the
3'-end nucleotides of the template RNA but also to the 5'-end
nucleotides of the nascent RNA. This is because the encapsidation
efficiency of this nascent RNA is seen as a factor that governs
replication (for a review, see reference 35).

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FIG. 1.
Structural features of SeV genome, promoters, and
minireplicon. (A) Schematic representation of the SeV genome (
) with
the plus (le+) and minus (le
) leaders, and
the six transcription units (N, P, M, F, HN, and L) portrayed. Above it
are shown the products of the transcription initiating at the GP only.
Below it is shown the product of replication, the antigenome
(+), which in turn serves as a template for genome amplification,
starting at the AGP. (B) Detailed representation of GP and AGP primary
structure and features. The sequence, portrayed as RNA of the sense
template, is written in groups of 6 nucleotides (hexamers, numbered 1 through 16) to account for the fact that the N (small rectangle)
contacts 6 nucleotides. Definitions of regions I and II are given in
the text. Nucleotides 56 on GP and 58 on AGP, representing,
respectively, the start of the N gene and the end of the L gene, are
indicated. (C) Schematic representation of the parent minireplicon DNA
sequence flanked by the T7 promoter (T7p) and the ribozyme (Rbz) as in
plasmid pSP65 (see Materials and Methods). Restriction sites relevant
for construction of derivatives, some harboring an insertion
(CelII) (
), a deletion (BstX1) (
), or an
introduction of the Swap editing site (XbaI) (*), are
shown. The position of the IRD800 oligonucleotide used in the primer
extensions is indicated.
In the Paramyxoviridae family, with the possible exception of the members of the Pneumovirus genus (respiratory syncytial virus [RSV]), the replication promoters are composed of two discontinuous elements. The first 20 to 30 nucleotides most proximal to the 3' end (Region I in Fig. 1B), fairly conserved among members of the same genus, are likely to contain, in addition to the signal for RNA synthesis initiation, the encapsidation signal, active on the 5' end of the nascent RNA. The second element (Region II in Fig. 1B) spans the internal extremity of the promoter. A motif repeated three times, common for the respiro- and morbilliviruses [(CNNNNN)3, nucleotides 79 to 96] or for the rubulaviruses [(NNNNGC)3, nucleotides 77 to 94], has been shown to be absolutely required in number and location for replication to take place (41, 42, 58). Note that the motifs are repeated, for SeV and simian virus 5 (SV5), with a periodicity of 6 nucleotides. The mechanism underlying the role of this second element is not known, but it is noteworthy that, in the nucleocapsid three-dimensional structure, it is found juxtaposed to the first element, on the second turn of the helix (58). The two elements, then, are on the same face of the helix, composing a surface that may allow the polymerase complex to interact with two helix turns.
The definition of the promoters was achieved thanks to a system of reverse genetics that only recently became available for negative-stranded RNA viruses (1a, 2, 8, 11, 15, 21, 25, 27, 31, 36, 43, 45, 50, 51, 53, 61). By using this system to replicate minigenome templates (minireplicons), the length of the RNA was shown, for the members of the Paramyxoviridae family, to be a major factor that determines the level of genome replication, which is most efficient when the total number of nucleotides is a multiple of 6. This basic requirement, dubbed the "rule of six," appears to apply with varying stringency. Very strict for SeV, softer for other members of the family such as SV5 (16, 41), it nevertheless seems valid for all the members of the family, with the exception of the Pneumovirus genus (52).
The question of the mechanism underlying the application of this rule now arises. A first interpretation flows from the general picture of the genome replication process. The nucleotides on the nascent strand are encapsidated, concomitantly with replication, in units of 6, with 5'-to-3'-end polarity. At the 3' end, when the total number of replicated nucleotides is a multiple of 6, the last 6 nucleotides synthesized are perfectly covered by the last N subunit (3'-OH congruence). This 3'-OH congruence may be required for this 3' end to be recognized as an active promoter. Another possible mechanism integrates the notion that the nucleotides are seen in the context of the N subunit, and that interaction points N1 to N6 are not equivalent. A particular nucleotide, then, part of a signal for the viral polymerase, could be seen as such only in the proper N subunit context, N phase context N1, N2, or N3, etc. The existence of such a phase context is supported by the phase conservation of the repeated motifs identified in the promoters (see above). In SeV, the C is found repeated three times in phase N1 (58), while in SV5, GC in positions N5 and N6 is repeated three times (41, 42). Extending this observation, it is noteworthy that the first nucleotides of the transcription start and stop signals, as well as the P gene editing site, are not found in a random N phase context in a particular genome (33). Finally, experimentally changing the N phase context of nucleotides in the middle of the GP has been shown to affect replication (49).
In the present study, we compare the replication properties of minireplicons in which the 3'-OH congruence has been separated from the 3'-end N phase context. This approach allows the conclusion that the RNA polymerase complex is insensitive to 3'-OH congruence. Moreover, the RNA polymerase is shown to start internally when an irrelevant sequence is added at the 3' end before the promoter region. Also, initiation at two different sites is observed when two promoters are present in tandem, directly adjacent or separated by intervening sequences. The relevance of these results for the application of the rule of six and for the mechanism of action of the RNA polymerase is discussed.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Virus and cells. Cells (A549 and HeLa) were grown in regular minimal essential medium (MEM) supplemented with 5% fetal calf serum (FCS) under a 5% CO2 atmosphere. Recombinant vaccinia virus expressing T7 RNA polymerase (vTF7-3) a gift from Bernard Moss (National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Md.), has been described by Fuerst and colleagues (20) and was used as specified. vTF7-3 stocks were grown in HeLa cells with titers ranging from 5 × 108 to 109 PFU/ml.
Sequence and plasmids. The complete SeV RNA primary sequence (15,384 nucleotides) was taken from the work of Shioda et al. (54, 55) and Neubert et al. (44). Except for Fig. 1B (see legend), the sequence is written as DNA according to standard convention, 5' to 3', left to right. The plasmids expressing the SeV N protein (pGem-N), P plus C protein (pGem-P/Cwt), P without C protein (pGem-PCstop), and L protein (pGem-L) under the control of the T7 RNA polymerase promoter have been described previously (13, 14, 30).
The structure of the minireplicon SeV DI-H4-(+)
DRA/AGP96 (referred
to below as DI-H4-
96, construct #1) and its cloning into pSP65 have
been described by Tapparel et al. (58). As before (4, 58, 59), the 3' end of the viral genome is called the GP, and the 3' end of the antigenome is called the AGP. In the case of H4 RNA, which contains the AGP on both the minus- and the
plus-strand RNA, AGPL or AGPR respectively
denote these two promoters (see Fig. 1C). In all the derivatives used
in this study, the 3' end of the H4 minus-strand RNA containing
AGPL was never changed. Modifications, including
site-directed base substitutions (G91C or G4T)
and extension of AGP with GP (with intervening sequences) or with
unrelated sequences at the 3' end, were made exclusively at the
AGPR 3' end of the DI-H4-
96 minireplicon. Creation of
constructs #15 and #19, and subsequent modifications to yield
constructs #16, #17, and #18 (see Fig. 6), were introduced by fusion
PCR methodology (26), using adequate overlapping
oligonucleotides at the inner modification sites and external primers
containing the MunI site (position 1027 in Fig. 1C) in the
minireplicon sequence and the BamHI site at the 3' end of
the ribozyme sequence (3) (Fig. 1C). The intervening
sequences between AGP and the ribozyme in constructs #8 and #9 (see
Fig. 4) were introduced by taking advantage of an XhoI site
(6 nucleotides) introduced first by fusion PCR at the 3' end of AGP to
generate construct #6. These promoter-unrelated sequences originate
from the SeV M gene (accession number X53056) between nucleotides 595 and 821. They were PCR amplified with adequate primers flanked by two
XhoI sites. From construct #6, a cut at the XhoI
site, followed by filling and religation, yielded construct #7. In
contrast, a recession at the same site, followed by blunt ligation,
yielded construct #21 (see Fig. 7). The +3 addition at the
CelII site (see Fig. 1C) in constructs #4, #5, #20, #22, and
#23 (Fig. 3 and 7) was made by replacing the small SalI
(prior to the T7 promoter [Fig. 1C])/XbaI (position 934)
fragment of the pSV DI-H4-
96 derivatives with that of derivative
pSV-DIH4-01 (3). The
4 deletion at the BstX1
site (see Fig. 1C) in constructs #2, #3, #11, #12, #13, and #14 (Fig. 3
and 5) was created by replacing the large MunI (position
1027)/BamHI (at the end of the ribozyme sequence) fragment of
pSV-DI-H4-
96 with that of derivative pSV-DIH4-02 (3).
The Swap editing site was introduced (constructs #01, #3, #5, #12, and
#14) (see Fig. 3 and 5) by cloning the Swap editing cassette (5'-CTAGAACTACTGGTAGGGAATTAAAAAAGGGCTCGTAAACTGCCGTAT-3') (boldfaced nucleotides, editing site; italicized nucleotides, complementary sequence of the primer used for limited primer extension) (23) flanked with two XbaI sites into the
unique XbaI site (position 934) (Fig. 1C) of pSV-DI-H4-
96
and its derivatives. The orientation of the editing cassette was such
that genome length correction took place upon minus-strand RNA
synthesis. The portions of the constructs that had undergone
modifications were all extensively sequenced using the LICOR DNA 4000 automated sequencing apparatus.
Replication system and recovery of encapsidated RNA.
The
replication system has been described previously (4) and
was used here with few modifications (Fig. 2). In brief, A549 cells
(about 107, in 9-cm-diameter petri dishes) were infected
with the recombinant vaccinia virus vTF7-3 (multiplicity of infection
3) expressing T7 RNA polymerase. One hour later, the cells were
transfected with 5 µg of pGem-N, 5 µg of pGem-PCstop
(or
PCwt), 1.0 µg of pGem-L, and 5 µg of the plasmid
carrying the minireplicon sequence, by incubation of the cells (for
3 h at 33°C) with 3 ml of MEM containing the mixed plasmids and
15 µl of Transfectase (BRL). Seven milliliters of MEM plus 5% FCS
was then added. Forty hours later, cells were disrupted in 300 µl of
lysis buffer (0.6% NP-40, 50 mM Tris-HCl [pH 8.0], 10 mM NaCl). The
cytoplasmic extract was clarified (at 3,000 × g for 15 min at 4°C), and the encapsidated RNA was purified by banding to
equilibrium in CsCl density gradients. The collected nucleocapsids were
pelleted and resuspended in TE-SDS (10 mM Tris-HCl [pH 7.5], 1 mM
EDTA, 0.1% sodium dodecyl sulfate). After chloroform-phenol
extraction, the RNA was precipitated with ethanol in the presence of 20 µg of tRNA carrier and kept at
20°C.
Analysis of encapsidated RNA. The replicated RNA was characterized by Northern blotting and/or primer extension. Northern blotting was performed as described previously using an RNA probe of the same polarity (5' ex-probe) (38) as the T7 defective interfering (DI) RNA transcript (plus strand) to detect the minus-strand RNA resulting from replication (4, 59). For primer extension, sodium carbonate-treated RNA (see "RNA fragmentation" below) was resuspended in 12 µl of TE containing 1 pmol of IRD800 oligonucleotide (positions 1172 to 1186) (see Fig. 2B). After being boiled for 1 min, the mixture was cooled on ice for 3 min before addition of 4 µl of 0.8 M NaCl. After annealing for 5 min at 42°C, 34 µl of primer extension mix (50 mM Tris-HCl [pH 8.3], 75 mM KCl, 3 mM MgCl2, 5 mM dithiothreitol [DTT], 0.5 mM deoxynucleoside triphosphates [dNTPs], 12.5 U of RNasin [Amersham-Promega], 4 U of Moloney murine leukemia virus [M-MLV] reverse transcriptase [RTase] [Promega]) was added, and the reaction mixture was further incubated for 1 h at 42°C. The reaction was stopped by addition of 20 µg of tRNA and ethanol precipitation. For analysis, the product of the reaction was resuspended in 2 µl of H2O and 1 µl of stop dye (90% formamide, 2 mM EDTA, xylene cyanol, and bromophenol blue) and was then boiled for 1 min. A 1.5-µl sample was analyzed on a LICOR DNA 4000 automated sequencing apparatus according to the manufacturer's instructions, along with a sequence obtained from plasmids expressing the minireplicon RNA and amplified with the same primer. The replicated RNA obtained from amounts of transfected cells ranging from 5 × 106 to 4 × 107 was treated in the same way. The use of different cell equivalent amounts of RNA is required to compensate for differences in replication efficiencies exhibited by modified templates (see Results and figure legends). In that respect, the primer extension signal was found not to be totally proportional to the input RNA, due to built-in properties of the automated sequencer, as well as to different degrees of potential intramolecular hybridization hindering the primer extension reactions, despite attempts to fragment the RNA (see below). For these reasons, the results can be interpreted only semiquantitatively.
RNA fragmentation. To minimize intramolecular hybridization due to the inverse complementary sequences of AGPL and AGPR, purified nucleocapsid RNAs were fragmented as follows (7). After resuspension in TE and preheating at 50°C, an identical volume of preheated 100 mM Na2Co3 was added and incubation at 50°C was continued for 30 min. The reaction was stopped by lowering the pH by addition of 100 mM (final concentration) Tris-HCl (pH 7.5), followed by ethanol precipitation. The period of incubation was experimentally set so as to find the peak of primer extension efficiency (before extensive RNA degradation took place [data not shown]).
Limited primer extension. Following replication, the nucleocapsid RNAs were amplified by reverse transcription-PCR (RT-PCR) with primers (20 oligomers) flanking the Swap editing cassette (see above). One-tenth of a classical reverse transcription reaction mixture (M-MLV RTase [Promega]), using one of the primers, was amplified using 20 pmol of each primer in 30 cycles of a standard 100-µl PCR using 2.5 U of Taq polymerase (Gibco) in an MWG-Biotech Primus apparatus. The purified PCR product (1.5% agarose gel) was recovered by elution from the gel, followed by ethanol precipitation in the presence of 20 µg of tRNA. For limited primer extension, the DNA fragment was resuspended in 12 µl of TE containing 1 pmol of an IRD800 oligonucleotide (5'-CTAGATACGGCAGTTT-3') complementary to the 3' side of the Swap editing cassette (italicized nucleotides in sequence under "Sequence and plasmids" above) so that the extension through the run of six A's of the editing site (boldfaced nucleotides in sequence under "Sequence and plasmids" above) was blocked by the presence of ddTTP (for details see reference 23). After boiling for 1 min, the mixture was cooled on ice for 3 min before addition of 4 µl of 0.8 M NaCl. After annealing for 5 min at 42°C, 34 µl of the limited primer extension mix (as described under "Analysis of the encapsidated RNA" above except for the presence of 0.5 mM ddTTP in place of the dTTP) was added and the reaction mixture was further incubated for 10 min at 42°C. Then the four dNTPs (0.5 mM each) were added, and incubation was prolonged for 10 more min at 42°C to chase the stalled complexes. The reaction was finally stopped by addition of 20 µg of tRNA followed by ethanol precipitation. For analysis, the products were resuspended in 2 µl of H2O plus 1 µl of stop dye (see above) and boiled for 1 min before being loaded on a 12.5% agarose sequencing gel. Similar extensions using plasmids encoding the RNA templates were performed as controls.
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RESULTS |
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The replication system.
The replication system used is
schematically represented in Fig. 2A (see
Materials and Methods for details). A few points are noteworthy. All
the minireplicons were derived from the copy-back parent DI-H4
96,
which contains the same AGP promoter at the 3' ends of the minus-strand
(AGPL) and the plus-strand (AGPR) RNAs (Fig.
2Aa). The T7 RNA transcript is of positive polarity (Fig. 2Ab), so that
the first promoter recognized by SeV RNA polymerase (SeV RNAp) is
AGPR (Fig. 2Ac). Only AGPR, then, or, more
generally, the context of the plus-strand RNA 3' end was modified in
order to investigate its ability to prime replication (Fig. 2Ad). In
the end, the replicated minus-strand RNA was detected (Fig. 2Ae) by
Northern blotting for quantitative recording of replication or by
primer extension for precise mapping of the replicated RNA 5' end.
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The rule of six and the C proteins.
Paramyxovirus P genes are
remarkable for the complexity of their genetic information. Apart from
producing the P protein, an essential component of the P/L viral RNA
polymerase complex, this gene contains additional overlapping open
reading frames (ORF). In SeV, these ORF encode, among others, a set of
four C proteins, with staggered N termini but a common C terminus
(reviewed in reference 34). Expression of this set of C
proteins during replication of SeV minireplicons imposes greater
selectivity on the SeV RNAp function (57): in general, the
tolerance of the SeV RNAp for conditions that do not precisely fulfil
those of the wild-type template is higher in the absence than in the
presence of the C proteins. Figure 3
illustrates this phenomenon. As previously assessed, the presence or
absence of C had no effect on the efficiency of replication of a
copy-back minireplicon which complied with the rule of six (compare
Fig. 3B, lanes #1 and #01, +C and
C conditions). In contrast,
replication of constructs #2 and #4, of 6n + 2 (result
of
4 deletion) and 6n + 3 nucleotides,
respectively, was highly affected. Almost undetected under +C
conditions (~50- to 100-fold lower than that of the parent template,
#1), their replication was favored in the absence of C (Fig. 3B, lanes
#2 and #4, +C and
C). An engineered editing site (Swap), responsible for a 1- to 4-guanine insertion at the canonical SeV
A6G3 editing sequence (23), was
then introduced into constructs #2 and #4 to generate derivatives #3
and #5 (Fig. 3A; see also Fig. 1C and Materials and Methods). Upon
replication, at least partial genome length correction can occur at the
editing site (24, 57) to generate RNAs with 6n + 0 nucleotides. Depending on the frequency of +4 or +3 nucleotide
addition, the replication products of constructs #3 and #5 were
expected to replicate better than their corresponding parents, since
the nucleotide length was potentially corrected. Indeed they did so
(Fig. 3B; compare lanes #2 and #3 and lanes #4 and #5, especially under
C conditions) (57). To better demonstrate genome length
correction, the region spanning the editing site of the RNAs resulting
from #3 and #5 replication was amplified by RT-PCR (see the legend to
Fig. 3C; also Materials and Methods), and a limited primer extension,
across the editing site sequence (template strand,
3'-GGGAAAAAA-5'), was performed in the presence of ddTTP. G
insertion was then monitored by the presence of a product extending
past the G3 limit (for details, see Materials and Methods;
also reference 32). Figure 3C shows that during construct
#5 replication, in which a +3 insertion was required to reach
6n + 0, insertions of 1, 2, and 3 nucleotides took
place at about equal frequency. In construct #3 (of 6n + 2 nucleotides), a +4 insertion was observed, along with a +1
insertion. Note that, as expected, no extension past the last G was
observed when the plasmid expressing construct #5 was used as the
template (lane #5p). These results show that RNAs with corrected
lengths had been amplified during replication, although not
exclusively.
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The 3'-OH congruence of the template promoter is not critical for
replication.
To discriminate between the importance of the 3'-OH
congruence and the phase context for the application of the rule of
six, it was necessary to separate the two properties. This was achieved in a first step by inserting sequence extensions at the minireplicon extremity, further than the AGPR sequence. Depending on
whether the extra sequence was 6n + 0 nucleotides long,
the 3'-OH congruence of the nucleocapsid was or was not conserved,
under conditions where the N phase context of AGPR remained
unaltered (see Fig. 4). To monitor replication of constructs in which
the 3'-OH no longer corresponded with AGPR, the precise 5'
end of the replicated RNA had to be identified. Primer extensions were
therefore performed using a primer of positive polarity directing the
reverse extension to the end of the replicated RNA. The sequencing of
the plasmid carrying the minireplicon was done in parallel with the
same primer, to precisely localize the size of the extended product.
Figure 2B illustrates the essential features of the primer extension
and shows the analysis of the products obtained in a replication assay
of SV-DI-H4
96. Under conditions of positive replication (+P/N/L), a
main product was seen corresponding to the extension ending at the
right end of AGPR. This product was not seen when L was
omitted. The phenomenon of parasite bands, whose presence depended on a
positive replication assay, refers to extension products blocked by
panhandle RNA structures due to inverted complementary sequences at
both RNA extremities (AGPL and AGPR; see
Materials and Methods). Constructs with extra 3'-OH sequences were
therefore analyzed by this method, which proved very reproducible but
had the drawback of being only semiquantitative (see Materials and
Methods). Figure 4A shows, to the left, a
schematic representation of the constructs, with the light shaded boxes
representing the unrelated extra sequences (see Materials and Methods
for details). To the right, the 3'-OH N phase context is portrayed (see
the legend). Constructs #6 and #8, in contrast to constructs #7 and #9,
each contained an extra sequence that was 6n + 0
nucleotides long and therefore harbored a correct 3'-OH congruence at
the end of the template nucleocapsid. Replication of these constructs started at AGPR regardless (Fig. 4B). Although there
appeared to be a penalty in replication for the 3'-OH extensions, a
penalty proportional to the length of the extensions (compare the
replication obtained with a control RNA [construct #1], present in an
eightfold-lower RNA amount, with that of the other four constructs, and
compare constructs #6 and #7 with constructs #8 and #9),
whether the 3'-OH congruence was kept or not did not seem to matter
(compare replication of constructs #6 and #8 with that of
their corresponding partners #7 and #9). From this experiment we would
conclude that 3'-OH congruence did not represent a pertinent signal for
the SeV RNAp. It is noteworthy that in the four constructs
with extensions, AGPR is placed internally to the end of
the template, and that promoter recognition was not affected by this
configuration. With this unexpected flexibility of the replication
system (this is, for example, not allowed for VSV minireplicon
replication [47]), it became possible to analyze
constructs in which the promoter phase context was altered while 3'-OH
congruence was maintained.
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4 deletion, which changed the promoter phase context. The templates,
however, harbored a precise congruence at their 3'-OH end, due to the
number of nucleotides in the extra sequences (6n + 4).
Both constructs replicated at the limit of detection or below,
potentially indicating that an out-of-phase AGPR was not
functional in these constructs. It is, however, important to remember
that if AGPR had been used, the replicated RNA would have
been 6n + 2 nucleotides long and could, therefore, have
been hampered in replication. For this reason, the Swap editing site,
which could correct the genome length in case AGPR was
used, was introduced (constructs #12 and #14). Despite this potential
genome size correction, replication was still not detected (Fig. 5B,
lanes #12 and #14), arguing that replication had not taken place at the
out-of-phase AGPR.
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Introducing double promoters.
Adding unrelated extra sequences
allowed comparison of the in- and out-of-phase configurations of the
template 3'-OH end. However, this approach itself introduced a penalty
for replication (see comments on Fig. 4B, corresponding Northern blots
[data not shown]). Unrelated extra sequences were then replaced by a
bona fide promoter sequence added in tandem (Fig.
6). GP, containing the 96 nucleotides
required, was added to the right of AGPR (Fig. 6A, #15).
Interestingly, construct #15 led to the replication of two populations
of RNA (Fig. 6B, lane #15), a minor one starting at GP and a major one
starting at AGPR. The two promoters appeared to act
independently, since a nucleotide substitution (C91G) known
to abolish promoter activity (58) on one of the promoters
did not kill the activity of the other (construct #16 or #17). Even
when the killing substitution (C4U, found in this study to
impair promoter activity [data not shown]) was very close to the GP
3'-OH end (construct #18), the internal AGPR activity was
still present. Finally, the insertion of 6 nucleotides between the two
promoters (construct #19) led to the efficient utilization of both
promoters. Note that all these constructs contained 6n + 0 nucleotides and that the promoters were found in the normal N
phase context.
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DISCUSSION |
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In conclusion, in cases where the N phase context of the promoter was conserved, the 3'-OH congruence of the template was not critical for replication. On the other hand, when the N phase context was changed so as to obliterate replication, the 3'-OH congruence could not restore replication. Therefore, it appears that the SeV RNAp is likely to be sensitive to the nucleotide N phase context. The observance of the rule of six, then, must depend on the recognition of certain nucleotides properly positioned, in the promoter region, with regard to the N interaction points (pockets).
The first 12 nucleotides of the promoter, conserved in GP and AGP, are obvious candidates for recognition in the N phase context, although it is not yet clear whether every nucleotide has a significant role. A nucleotide addition at position 13, shifting the phase of nucleotides 1 to 12 by 1, was shown to abolish expression of a reporter gene, possibly by preventing replication of the minireplicon (22). Other phase shifts were accompanied by a nucleotide deletion, making the interpretation of the results difficult. For VSV and RSV (48; reference 62 and references therein), detailed studies have come to the conclusion that not all the nucleotides in the promoter sequence are relevant for replication. Whether these results apply to SeV (and the Paramyxoviridae family) is open to question, since RSV and VSV do not conform to the rule of six (or to the rule of any number [52]), a fact that may indicate that the nucleotides are not seen in the context of N (see below). This assertion, however, is counterbalanced by the finding that the chemical probe reactivities of the bases in the VSV nucleocapsid are not uniform. Some are protected and others are hyperreactive, implying a discriminate association of certain nucleotides with N (29).
The C residues in the repeated motif C1NNNNN (or the NNNNC5G6 residues of the corresponding Rubulavirus SV5 motif [42]), on the other hand, are likely to constitute such signals. Indeed, the appearance of these motifs three times in the same context speaks for the importance of the phase in their recognition by the viral RNAp (vRNAp). The start-stop transcription sequence motifs, as well as the editing sites (D. Kolakofsky, personal communication), have been proposed to represent other examples of such signals, on the basis of their nonrandom positioning with regard to the phase context (33). Recently, a recombinant measles virus (a Paramyxovirus of the Morbillivirus genus) series with modifications resulting in shifting of these regions into all possible phases exhibited an abnormal pattern of readthrough at the M/F and F/H gene boundaries (1). Similarly, all mutants showed slightly altered P transcript editing behavior, suggesting that the nucleotides participating in these signals might be recognized differently depending on the N phase context. The difference between the editing patterns of constructs #5 and #3 (no +2 or +3 addition in #3 [Fig. 3C]) may also add to the argument, since the Swap editing sequence is not in a similar N phase context in the two constructs (N6 and N3 for constructs #5 and #3, respectively).
In the absence of precise structural information on the N-RNA complex,
one is reduced to mere speculations as to how the signal recognition
operates. The nucleotide signal could be properly accessible to the
vRNAp only when in the proper N pocket. Alternatively, the nucleotide
could induce a conformational change in the N protein only when in a
defined pocket. This second possibility is particularly attractive for
the (C1NNNNN)3 motif, since the C's
in phase context N1 appear to signal independently of the
primary sequence environment (N2 to N6). If it
is not repeated, the signal must obviously be formed by more than one
nucleotide, since the probability is increased that any nucleotide is
going to be presented many times in each N phase context. If the signal
is made by a local conformational change in the nucleocapsid, this
change should propagate through more than one N subunit. The picture
could be more complicated, considering that the signal recognition
mechanism might have to be flexible, if, for instance, it is confirmed
that the N phase context is relevant for transcription. Indeed, the
transcriptional start-stop signals remain ignored during replication.
The vRNAp could be made insensitive to the signals, subsequent to a
structural modification (phosphorylation or conformational change
induced by encapsidation of the nascent RNA chain or by interaction
with a viral cofactor, etc.). Alternatively, the signal could be masked to the vRNAp by a modification of the N-RNA complex itself, although a
biochemical or conformational difference between the transcription and
replication templates has not been considered so far. At early times of
infection, the nucleocapsids could conform better to transcription.
Later, following interaction with a viral partner that accumulates with
time, or following a slow chemical modification, they could conform
better to replication. The C proteins, shown to modulate the
selectivity of the vRNAp for the replication signals, may in fact act
by modifying the template. Indeed, the different C protein-to-template
ratios required to inhibit replication at AGP or at GP
inhibition seen
here as the price of selectivity
argue for a stoichiometric rather
than an enzymatic role of the C's (57). It is noteworthy
in this context that the polR mutants of VSV, producing more
leader-N junction readthrough transcripts, harbor a mutation in N
(6). This is compatible with the idea that the
modification of the template could be responsible for the lower
stringency with which the signal is observed. Finally, nucleocapsid
subpopulations with different sensitivities to RNase or harboring a
cleaved N have been reported (5, 10, 39, 40).
The ability to add a sequence extension at the 3'-OH end of the T7 RNA template without losing the ability to replicate is surprising. Similar extensions are not tolerated for VSV and RSV, in contrast to 5'-end extensions (guanosine residues generally added to improve T7 RNA polymerase activity) (9, 47, 52; D. Garcin, unpublished data). Whether the discrepancy between SeV and VSV or RSV reflects a significant difference in the template structure or in the template recognition mechanism is open to question. The vRNAp could recognize the nucleocapsid 3'-OH end as such, regardless of the RNA sequence, or regardless of 3'-OH congruence. After binding, the vRNAp would gain access to the nucleotides and scan the template in search of the promoter sequence to start RNA synthesis. Evidence for forward, and even backward, scanning by negative-stranded RNA virus polymerases has been provided (18, 56). Alternatively, the vRNAp could bind internally to the promoter region, a mechanism that implies a vRNAp capable of nucleotide sequence discrimination before binding. We propose that, when the rule of six applies, the phase context provides the vRNAp with all the information needed to bind the template at the promoter and to initiate replication, without the need for 3'-OH-end recognition. The 3'-OH-end recognition would then be the prerogative of the templates (VSV and RSV) lacking the phase context conditions and thus requiring the information given by the 3'-OH end. The question of access to internal replication promoters, although it is academic considering that the replication promoters are naturally present at the nucleocapsid 3'-OH end, may still be of interest for understanding of the general manner in which the vRNAp operates. The achievement of the present work, namely, the use of double promoter constructs, may lead to the design of more-appropriate experiments to contribute to the understanding of transcription initiation or of the mechanism of defective interfering RNA generation.
The conditions used to perform these experiments, i.e., the absence of
the C proteins, may raise concerns about the validity of the results,
since the C proteins are known to influence SeV RNAp activity by
increasing selectivity (57). However, even if the absence
of C tones down the stringency of the rule of six, the rule still
applies (see Fig. 3B). In the absence of C, observations not possible
in the presence of C, where constructs of 6n + x (x
0) nucleotides do not replicate to detectable
levels, can now be made. Extending sequences past the promoter (Fig. 4)
and adding two promoters in tandem (Fig. 7) represent other artificial conditions. These clearly impose more penalties on the replicating system, so that a distinction can now be perceived between 3'-OH congruence and a change in the N phase context. This distinction was,
for instance, not possible in Fig. 3, where the constructs still
replicated efficiently. Thus, the application of both sets of
conditions appears to widen the window of observation so that more
recognition steps can be identified.
| |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
We are indebted to Caroline Tapparel, who, before leaving at the end of her Ph.D. studies, introduced the double promoter constructs, and to Dominique Garcin and Daniel Kolakofsky for critical discussions and critical reading of the manuscript. D.V. is very grateful to Geneviève Mottet-Osman for constant support and technical expertise and to Nathalie Fouillot-Coriou for the demonstration of scientific rigor.
L.R. is the recipient of a grant from the Swiss National Foundation for Scientific Research.
| |
FOOTNOTES |
|---|
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of Genetics and Microbiology, University of Geneva Medical School, CMU, 1 rue Michel-Servet, CH-1211 Geneva 4, Switzerland. Phone: 41-22-702-56-83. Fax: 41-22-702-57-02. E-mail: Laurent.Roux{at}medecine.unige.ch.
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