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Journal of Virology, December 2005, p. 14555-14561, Vol. 79, No. 23
0022-538X/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JVI.79.23.14555-14561.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Wen-Jen Chou,1,
Pei-Yu Lee,2
Yau-Heiu Hsu,1 and
Ching-Hsiu Tsai1,3*
Graduate Institute of Biotechnology, National Chung Hsing University, Taichung, Taiwan,1 Institute of Medical Biotechnology, Central Taiwan University of Science and Technology, Taichung, Taiwan,2 Center of Nanoscience and Nanotechnology, National Chung Hsing University, Taichung, Taiwan3
Received 1 June 2005/ Accepted 6 September 2005
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cis-acting sequences, such as the promoters for minus-strand RNA, plus-strand genomic RNA, and subgenomic RNA synthesis, have been identified in several RNA viruses (7, 11, 32, 38, 39). Additional cis elements required for the assembly of replication complexes have been shown in the Brome mosaic virus system expressed in yeast (35). It has been suggested that the replication complexes assembled on the plus-strand templates for minus-strand RNA synthesis could be recycled and modified to recognize the minus-strand templates for plus-strand genomic and subgenomic RNA synthesis (2).
Moreover, the 3' untranslated region (UTR) of the viral RNA genome could fold into secondary or tertiary structures, acting as cis-acting elements to be recognized by the replicase complex to initiate minus-strand RNA synthesis (10). The genome of a large portion of RNA viruses ends with a poly(A) tail whose length is within the typical range of the eukaryotic mRNAs (20, 47). The poly(A) tail in mRNA has been proposed to be involved in RNA stability (45, 46), translation efficiency (12, 19), and RNA transport from the nucleus to the cytoplasm (3, 4). Longer poly(A) tails appear to be associated with higher infection efficiencies for several viruses, including White clover mosaic virus (WClMV) (15) and Bamboo mosaic virus (BaMV) (43). The poly(A) tail of Bovine coronavirus RNA was shown to be required for viral RNA to interact with host proteins for RNA replication (40). However, some species of viral RNA transcripts without any adenylate residue at their 3' ends were infectious, and the poly(A) tail was restored in the case of WClMV (15), Sindbis virus (17), and clover yellow vein potyvirus (41).
BaMV has a single-stranded, positive-sense RNA genome with a 5' m7GpppG structure and a 3' poly(A) tail (28). The sequence of the entire 6,366-nucleotide (nt) genome [excluding the 3' poly(A) tail] has been determined (28, 48). Like other potexviral genomes, five open reading frames (ORF1 to -5) encoding 155-, 28-, 13-, 6-, and 25-kDa polypeptides, respectively, were identified. The 155-kDa polypeptide can be synthesized directly from the genomic RNA in an in vitro rabbit reticulocyte lysate (29) and is involved in viral RNA capping (26, 27) and replication (25).
The 3' UTR of the BaMV RNA has been suggested to fold into a series of stem-loops, including a tertiary pseudoknot structure, by enzymatic and chemical structural probing (5, 43). Two major subgenomic RNAs 2.0 and 1.0 kb in length share the same 3' terminus (29). A highly conserved potexviral hexamer motif (ACNUAA) and a putative polyadenylation signal (AAUAAA) are located in the apical and internal loops of domain D, respectively, in this region (5, 28, 33). Extensive mutations, including substitutions, deletions, and insertions, were introduced to dissect the structural requirements in domain D for RNA replication (5). One of the mutants, BaMV-O/
IL, with a deletion of the putative polyadenylation motif, accumulates coat protein at 2% of the wild-type levels in the protoplasts of Nicotiana benthamiana, likely due to the loss of the conserved AAUAAA sequence.
In this study, the importance of the AAUAAA motif in BaMV genomic RNA replication was investigated. Transcripts derived from the wild-type sequence and its 15 single-point substitution mutants were synthesized in vitro and used to inoculate N. benthamiana protoplasts. Effects on the accumulation of the viral coat protein and RNAs were examined.
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Mutant construction. A PCR-based mutagenesis strategy was used to introduce mutations into the conserved AAUAAA sequence in the full-length infectious cDNA clone pBaMV40A (6) using five degenerate primers with three different nucleotides at positions 2 to 6 of the AAUAAA sequence. The sequences of the primers are as follows: BaA32 [5'GCCAGCAGA(G/T/C)TAAAGACCTT3'], BaU31 [5'GCCAGCAGAA(G/A/C)AAAGACCTTT3'], BaA30 [5'GCCAGCAGAAT(G/T/C)AAGACCTTTT3'], BaA29 [5'GCCAGCAGAATA(G/T/C)AGACCTTTTG3'], and BaA28 [5'GCCAGCAGAATAA(G/T/C)GACCTTTTGG3']. The boldface letters correspond to the substituted residues at each position. Mutants were generated by a two-step PCR (37) involving initial amplification of a 150-bp fragment with the mutagenic primers described above and a downstream primer, M13 universal (5'GTTTTCCCAGTCACGAC3'). The amplified 150-bp fragments were used in the second PCR step as megaprimers, together with the 5' primer, BaMV + 5910 (5'CCAAACCGACGTTCGCCA3'), to synthesize a 559-bp DNA fragment. The amplified PCR products were cloned into the pGEM-T Easy vector-System I (Promega), and the sequence of each mutant was verified before being subcloned into pBaMV40A using the 5' NruI (5964) and 3' BamHI sites. These mutants were designated pBa-A32G, -A32U, -A32C, -U31G, -U31A, -U31C, -A30G, -A30U, -A30C, -A29G, -A29U, -A29C, -A28G, -A28U, and -A28C [nucleotides are numbered from the 3'-end cytosine abutting the poly(A) tail] (Fig. 1).
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FIG. 1. Tertiary folding of domains ABC, D, and E in the 3' UTR of Bamboo mosaic virus RNA (5, 43). Nucleotides are numbered from the 3'-end cytosine just upstream of the poly(A) tail.
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Northern and Western blotting analyses. For Northern blotting analysis, total RNAs were extracted from the inoculated protoplasts (2 x 105 cells), glyoxalated, electrophoresed through a 1% agarose gel, and transferred to a membrane (Zeta-Probe; Bio-Rad) as described previously (42). The hybridization probes were 0.6- and 0.7-kb 32P-labeled RNA transcripts derived from HindIII-linearized pBaMV-O/SB2.6 (18) and BglI-linearized pBaMV-O (43), complementary to the 3' ends of the plus and minus strands of BaMV RNA, respectively. The banding signals were scanned and quantified using a phosphorimager (Fujifilm BAS 1500). Total protein harvested from the inoculated protoplasts (2 x 105 cells) was separated on a 14% polyacrylamide gel containing 0.1% sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) and electroblotted onto a nitrocellulose membrane (PROTRAN BA 85; Schleicher & Schuell). The levels of coat protein were detected by Western blotting, using an anti-BaMV capsid protein serum as the primary antibody, a horseradish peroxidase-labeled secondary antibody, and the chromogenic substrate 4-chloro-1-naphthol as described previously (43). Results were quantitated by scanning densitometry (Bioimage Intelligent Quantifier).
In vitro translation. In vitro translation was performed in the TnT Coupled Transcription/Translation System (Promega). The reaction was carried out in a 12.5-µl reaction mixture containing 2 µg plasmid DNA in nuclease-treated rabbit reticulocyte lysate (Promega) or wheat germ extract (Promega) supplemented with all amino acids except methionine. Proteins were labeled by the incorporation of 5 µCi of L-[35S]methionine (1,000 Ci/mmol; 10 mCi/ml; Amersham) in the reaction. Incubations were performed at 28°C for 1 h and terminated by the addition of Laemmli sample buffer. The translation products were resolved by 8% SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE). Gels were fixed, dried, and analyzed by a phosphorimager (Fujifilm BAS 1500).
Characterization of the poly(A) tail of BaMV RNA.
Viral particles were isolated from plants infected with BaMV-S or its derivatives 4 days postinfection (p.i.) by polyethylene glycol precipitation according to the method of Lane (24) and subsequently subjected to RNA purification by two phenol-chloroform extractions, followed by an ethanol precipitation. Viral RNAs, after further purification through oligo(dT)25-coupled paramagnetic beads (Dynal A.S., Oslo, Norway), were labeled with [5'-32P]cytidine 3',5'-bis(phosphate) ([
-32P]Cp) using T4 RNA ligase, resuspended in urea-containing loading buffer, denatured in boiling water for 90 s, and cleaved with RNase T1 (120 units) at 55°C for 30 min. The cleaved RNA fragments were resolved on 6% sequencing gels.
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We had demonstrated that a deletion of the internal loop in stem D in the 3' UTR of BaMV RNA containing the putative polyadenylation signal drastically reduced the accumulation of viral RNA products (5). In order to investigate systematically the function of the putative polyadenylation A1A2U3A4A5A6 motif in BaMV RNA, residues from 2 to 6 were replaced by the other three nucleotides. Transcripts derived from wild-type and mutant plasmids were transfected into N. benthamiana protoplasts. Total protein was extracted after a 48-h incubation and subjected to Western blot analysis (Fig. 2). Northern blot analysis of total RNAs extracted at the same time point, using a probe complementary to the 3' end of BaMV genomic RNA, showed that the genomic RNA of about 6.4 kb and two subgenomic RNAs about 2 and 1 kb in length could be detected (Fig. 3A). With the 5'-end plus-strand RNA probe, the minus-strand RNAs of 6.4 kb could be detected (Fig. 3B). The levels of the plus- and minus-strand RNAs were quantified based on their relative densities. The level of minus-strand RNA accumulation was used to indicate the efficiency of the early processes of viral RNA replication. The ratio of the plus-strand/minus-strand RNAs was used to deduce the efficiency of genomic RNA accumulation.
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FIG. 2. Amplification of BaMV40A and its derivatives in N. benthamiana protoplasts. Representative experiments that contributed to the quantitative data in Table 1 are shown. Protoplasts (4 x 105 cells) inoculated with 5 µg of transcripts of 15 single-substitution mutants at nt 2 to 6 of the AAUAAA sequence (32G/U/C, 31G/A/C, 30G/U/C, 29G/U/C, and 28G/U/C) and an internal loop deletion mutant (dIL) were harvested at 48 hr postinoculation. Total-protein extracts were separated on a 14% SDS-polyacrylamide gel, blotted, and probed with an anti-BaMV coat protein serum. The blot was developed using horseradish peroxidase-linked secondary antibody and 4-chloro-1-naphthol color reagent. The identity of the mutant is indicated at the top of each lane. WT, wild type.
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FIG. 3. Amplification of BaMV40A and its derivatives in N. benthamiana protoplasts. Representative experiments that contributed to the quantitative data in Table 1 are shown. (A) Northern blot analysis of the plus-strand genomic (G; 6.4 kb) and two subgenomic (SG; 2.0 and 1.0 kb) RNAs. RNAs were probed with a 32P-labeled RNA transcript complementary to a 0.6-kb region at the 3' end of genomic RNA. (B) Northern blot analysis of the minus-sense antigenomic (G; 6.4 kb) RNAs. RNAs were probed with a 32P-labeled RNA transcript complementary to a 0.7-kb area at the 3' end of minus-sense RNA. Lane dIL represents the mutant with a deletion at the 3' side of the internal loop, and lane c represents 1 ng of virion RNA loaded as a negative control. The other mutants are indicated at the top of each lane. WT, wild type.
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TABLE 1. Levels of accumulation of viral products of BaMV and its derivatives in protoplasts of N. benthamiana
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Some mutants have defects in both minus- and plus-strand RNA accumulation. Minus-strand RNAs of seven mutants, namely, BaA32G, BaA30G, BaA30U, BaA30C, BaA29G, BaA29U, and BaA29C, showed 10 to 54% of the wild-type accumulation levels, and the plus-strand RNA accumulated to less than 36% of the wild-type level (Table 1). The plus/minus RNA ratios of these mutants were less than 72% that of the wild type. Therefore, these mutants appear to have defects in the accumulation of both plus- and minus-strand RNAs, and they are grouped in category 3 (Table 1).
Among the 15 mutants tested, only two showed accumulation levels of viral products similar to those of the wild type. Thirteen mutants showed defects in minus-strand RNA accumulation, with seven of them having extra defects in plus-strand RNA accumulation, indicating that most mutations lead to lower levels of minus-strand RNA accumulation. The lower levels of minus-strand accumulation are unlikely to be due to defects at the translation level, since RNAs of the wild type and mutants from each category can be translated to similar levels in rabbit reticulocyte lysate or wheat germ extract in vitro (Fig. 4). Therefore, we propose that most nucleotides in the AAUAAA motif are involved in the initiation of minus-strand RNA synthesis. These observations have been reported in Potato virus X, where mutations in the 3' UTR affect the accumulation of both plus- and minus-strand RNAs (33). Furthermore, the mutations at the polyadenylatioin motif also produced less plus-strand RNA accumulation.
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FIG. 4. In vitro translation assay of pBaMV40A and its derivatives. In vitro translation was performed in rabbit reticulocyte lysate (A) or wheat germ extract (B) with plasmid template DNAs of pBaMV40A and its derivatives. The products were separated on 8% SDS-PAGE and analyzed by a phosphorimager (Fujifilm BAS 1500). The molecular masses of the markers are indicated on the left. The arrow indicates the position of the replicase. WT, wild type.
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FIG. 5. Analysis of the RNA 3' poly(A) tails of BaMV and its derivatives. (A) Diagram showing the strategy for analyzing the length of the poly(A) tail. Virion RNAs were purified and labeled with [ -32P]Cp using T4 RNA ligase. The labeled RNAs were resuspended in urea-containing loading buffer, denatured, and cleaved with RNase T1. The cleaved RNA fragments were resolved on a 6% sequencing gel. (B) Autoradiogram of the RNase T1-digested 3'-end-labeled RNA fragments. Lane M, size markers indicated on the left of the gel; lane 1, BaMV RNA; lane 2, BaU31A RNA from category 1; lane 3, BaU31C RNA from category 2; lanes 4 and 5, BaA30U and BaA29U RNAs, respectively, from category 3. (C) Length distribution of panel B determined by densitometer scanning, accompanied by size markers. The arrows indicate the sizes of the longest RNA fragments detected.
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In this study, 15 single-nucleotide substitutions were used to study the function of the putative polyadenylation signal, A1A2U3A4A5A6, of BaMV RNA. U3 (the only uridylate residue) apparently is less important in viral RNA accumulation in protoplasts and plants. Conversely, A2, A4, A5, and A6 are likely involved in minus-strand RNA accumulation. Moreover, substitutions at A4 and A5 appeared to affect polyadenylation efficiency (Fig. 6). Similarly, reductions of local lesions on cowpea plants and in the length of the poly(A) tail from 200 to 300 As to 100 to 200 As were observed in WClMV when its A4 was changed to G4 (15). The A1A2U3A4A5A6 motif in BaMV RNA is sensitive to a change from A4 to U4. Viral particles containing RNA genomes with shorter poly(A) tails can be isolated only at 4 days p.i. while still retaining the mutation. At 7 days p.i., reversion mutants with poly(A) tails of wild-type length were detected in the viral RNAs isolated from virus particles. Overall, we conclude that the AAUAAA sequence in the 3' UTR of BaMV RNA is not only involved in minus-strand RNA accumulation, but also plays a role in plus-strand RNA accumulation, possibly by regulating the polyadenylation reaction.
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FIG. 6. Cartoon representation of the BaMV RNA polyadenylation model. The two adenylate residues of the aauAAa motif involved in polyadenylation are in capital letters. The oval enzyme complex is responsible for BaMV RNA polyadenylation. The interactions between the aauAAa motif and the enzyme complex could regulate the length of the poly(A) tail.
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I-Hsuan Chen and Wen-Jen Chou made equal contributions to the study. ![]()
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