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Journal of Virology, September 2007, p. 9426-9436, Vol. 81, No. 17
0022-538X/07/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JVI.00747-07
Copyright © 2007, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.

Molecular Virology Laboratory, Department of Medical Microbiology, Center of Infectious Diseases, Leiden University Medical Center, PO Box 9600, 2300 RC Leiden, The Netherlands
Received 5 April 2007/ Accepted 13 June 2007
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Over the past decade, it has been increasingly recognized that RNA-mediated processes can be controlled by conformational switches that are based on alternative RNA structures (20, 27, 42). Recent evidence, obtained using several unrelated viruses, suggests that such conformational switches may be needed to hide and expose specific RNA signals in the 3' end of viral genomes. Some viruses appear to activate these switches by changing the conformation of 3' proximal structures (16, 28, 33, 51). For example, barley yellow dwarf virus is proposed to repress minus-strand RNA synthesis by embedding its genomic 3' end in a "pocket" structure, thereby making it unavailable to the RNA-dependent RNA polymerase (RdRp) complex (16). A similar molecular switch was proposed for several coronavirus genomes, involving sequences within stem-loop and RNA pseudoknot structures in the 3' untranslated region (UTR) (9, 12, 13, 47). In addition, cellular factors or viral proteins may affect the balance between such alternative structural conformations (28, 38). For example, the 3' terminus of the alfalfa mosaic virus genome can adopt an alternative conformation by the formation of a pseudoknot. Binding of the viral coat protein to the genomic 3' end inhibits minus-strand RNA synthesis by interfering with the formation of this pseudoknot (28). These findings among different groups of RNA viruses suggest that RNA conformational switches may control the exposure of RNA signals recognized by the RdRp complex to regulate both the timing and the levels of viral RNA synthesis.
The plus-strand RNA genomes of members of the order Nidovirales (arterivirus, coronavirus, torovirus, and ronivirus; for reviews, see references 11 and 39) are capped at their 5' end and polyadenylated at their 3' end. Nidovirus replication occurs in the cytoplasm of the infected cell and is driven by a complex of 13 to 16 replicase subunits, including the viral RdRp complex. In addition to producing full-length plus- and minus-strand molecules, the RNA-synthesizing machinery of nidoviruses engages in the production of a nested set of 3' coterminal subgenomic (sg) mRNAs. In the case of corona- and arteriviruses, these transcripts also contain a common 5' leader sequence that is derived from the genomic 5' end. Subgenomic RNA production relies on a unique mechanism of discontinuous RNA synthesis that is thought to operate during minus-strand RNA synthesis and serves to produce the subgenome-length minus-strand templates for mRNA synthesis (for reviews see references 30, 35, and 36 and references therein). Thus, for nidoviruses, both genome replication and sg RNA synthesis are thought to initiate at the 3' end of the viral genome RNA.
Equine arteritis virus (EAV) is the prototype virus of the arterivirus family. In a previous study, we investigated the RNA secondary structure of the 3' end of the 12.7-kb EAV genome (3). Two stem-loop structures were implicated in the initiation of viral RNA synthesis SL5 (Fig. 1A), located in the 3' UTR, and SL4, located in the most 3' proximal gene of the EAV genome, which encodes the nucleocapsid (N) protein. To gain insight into the mechanisms involved in the regulation of EAV minus-strand RNA synthesis, we have now further characterized the RNA signals near the 3' end of the genome. We demonstrate that the structure of the SL5 stem is important for RNA synthesis, as is its large single-strand loop region. We have also obtained evidence for a pseudoknot interaction between the loop region of SL5 and the SL4 hairpin, a structural feature that was found to be essential for viral RNA synthesis. We propose that the formation of this pseudoknot interaction may constitute a molecular switch that could regulate the specificity or timing of viral RNA synthesis. This notion was supported by a phylogenetic analysis revealing that the 3' proximal pseudoknot interaction has likely been conserved in arterivirus evolution.
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FIG. 1. RNA secondary structure models for the 3' UTR of wild-type EAV and SL5 mutants. (A) Mutations were introduced in the SL5 stem region. Mutant 1L has a 3-nucleotide substitution on the left side of the stem, and mutant 1R on the right side. Mutations 1L and 1R are complementary, and base pairing is restored in the double mutant 1LR. Similar mutations were also introduced in the lower stem segment (2L, 2R, and 2LR). The stability of the stem region was targeted in mutants 3L, 3R, and 3LR by the replacement of two G-C base pairs. (B) Mutants Loop1, Loop2, and Loop3 contain point mutations in the SL5 loop region. (C) Mfold prediction of an alternative structure for the SL5 stem-loop with similar stability, in which part of the loop region is closed by base pairing. This alternative structure was stabilized by the mutations introduced in mutant Stable and prevented by the mutation introduced in mutant Open.
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Cells and transfections. Baby hamster kidney cells (BHK-21; ATCC CCL10) were used for EAV full-length RNA transfection experiments as described previously (45). Cells were grown to subconfluence, trypsinized, washed with phosphate-buffered saline (PBS), and resuspended in PBS at a concentration of 5 x 107 cells per ml. Equal amounts (6 µg) of full-length EAV RNA were used to transfect 100 µl of the BHK-21 cell suspension (5 x 106 cells) by electroporation using a Nucleofector (Amaxa) system according to the supplier's protocol (kit T, program T-20). After transfection, the cells were seeded and incubated at 39.5°C.
Analysis of virus replication. Immunofluorescence dual-labeling assays with a rabbit antiserum specific for EAV nsp3 and mouse monoclonal antibody 3E2 directed against the EAV N protein were performed as described previously (44) at different time points after transfection. For intracellular RNA isolation, cells were lysed at 14 h posttransfection, and RNA was isolated using the acidic phenol method, as described previously (29). Viral RNA was analyzed with denaturing formaldehyde-agarose gels and hybridized with the radioactively labeled oligonucleotide probe E868 (antisense, genome positions 12270 to 12289) which recognizes both genomic and subgenomic plus-strand RNAs. Dried gels were imaged using phosphorimager screens, which were scanned with a Personal Molecular Imager FX (Bio-Rad) after exposure. Virus titration using plaque assays was done as described previously (23). BHK-21 cells were grown to subconfluence and infected with a serial dilution of the sample to be tested. Infection was performed for 1 h at 39.5°C, after which an overlay of 1% agarose in medium was applied. Plaques were detected after incubation at 39.5°C for 2 to 3 days.
Analysis of revertants. The 3' proximal region of the EAV genome was amplified from intracellular RNA (see description above), using reverse transcription (RT)-PCR. For the RT reaction, an 18-nucleotide oligo(dT) primer was used to prime reverse transcription from the poly(A) tail. In the subsequent PCR, the reverse primer oligo(dT) and the forward primer E817 (positions 12288 to 12308) were used. The RT-PCR product was used for direct population sequencing or was cloned into a plasmid using a TOPO TA cloning kit (Invitrogen), after which individual clones were sequenced. To analyze the impact of the acquired mutations on the viral phenotype, sequences derived from the revertants were cloned back into full-length clone pEAV211. Introduction of the revertant sequences was verified by sequence analysis, and full-length clones were used to launch (potential) revertant viruses as described above.
Phylogenetic analysis. The sequences of different arteriviruses (EAV, porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome virus [PRRSV], simian hemorrhagic fever virus [SHFV], and lactate dehydrogenase-elevating virus [LDV]) were retrieved and aligned using the nucleotide-nucleotide BLAST service at NCBI. RNA secondary structures were predicted using the Zuker algorithm (52) on the Mfold Web server (53). RNA secondary structure drawings were created using RNAviz software (6).
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The SL5 hairpin contains a large single-stranded loop region, as was previously predicted by Mfold RNA secondary structure analysis (52, 53) and verified with biochemical probing experiments (3). To study the importance of this loop region in RNA synthesis, mutants Loop1, Loop2, and Loop3 were generated which contained various point mutations in the loop region (Fig. 1B). In addition, the Mfold program predicted an alternative SL5 structure with similar stability, in which part of the loop sequence is engaged in base pairing (Fig. 1C). To study the possible contribution of this alternative structure to RNA synthesis, two mutants were generated (Fig. 1C). In mutant Stable, substitutions were introduced on the left side of the stem, which were complementary to bulge nucleotides on the right side of the stem. This resulted in a modified SL5 structure with an extended, more stable stem region and part of the loop sequence engaged in base-pairing interactions. In mutant Open, on the other hand, the formation of this putative alternative structure was prevented by a single point mutation.
The SL5 structure and loop region are critical for EAV RNA synthesis. BHK-21 cells were transfected with infectious RNA transcribed in vitro from wild-type and mutant EAV full-length cDNA clones. For an initial rapid screening, the production of viral proteins in transfected cells was monitored by dual-labeling immunofluorescence assays (IFA) using antisera recognizing nonstructural protein 3 and the structural N protein, which served as indicators for genome replication and sg mRNA synthesis, respectively (summarized in Table 1). In addition, supernatants harvested from the transfected cell cultures were tested for the presence of progeny virus by using plaque assays (Table 1). No IFA signal or infectious progeny was detected for the mutants in which one side of the stem was mutated (1L, 1R, 2L, and 2R), whereas virus replication was comparable to that of the wild-type control in the case of double mutants 1LR and 2LR, in which the base-pairing possibilities to form the SL5 stem had been restored. The stability of the stem region also appeared important for virus viability. Replacing two G-C base pairs with A-U base pairs in mutant 3LR resulted in reduced IFA signals, a small-plaque phenotype, and a 450-fold reduction of virus titer. Substitution with G-U base pairs in mutant 3R and disruption of base pairing in mutant 3L completely blocked virus replication. The viability of mutant Loop1 was reduced as illustrated by a smaller-plaque phenotype and 40-fold reduction in virus titer, whereas the Loop2 and Loop3 mutations completely abolished replication (Table 2). Mutant Open replicated efficiently, but no IFA signal or infectious progeny could be detected for mutant Stable (Table 2).
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TABLE 1. Viability of SL5 stem mutantsa
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TABLE 2. Viability of SL5 loop mutantsa
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FIG. 2. RNA synthesis by wild-type EAV and SL5 mutants. Infectious RNA was transfected into BHK-21 cells, and intracellular RNA was isolated at 14 h posttransfection. The RNA was separated in a denaturing agarose gel and analyzed by hybridization to an oligonucleotide detecting all plus-stranded viral RNAs. The positions of the genome (RNA1) and sg mRNAs (RNA2 to RNA7) are indicated.
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Reversion of two SL5 mutants. Upon prolonged culture of viruses with impaired replication properties, revertants with increased fitness can arise. Analysis of the changes in the genomes of such revertants may identify important RNA sequences and/or structures. At 72 h posttransfection, the first positive IFA signal was observed for cells transfected with mutants Stable and Loop2. To analyze the genetic changes in these revertants, RNA was isolated from infected cells, and the 3' proximal domain of the EAV genome was amplified by RT-PCR. Population-based sequencing of the PCR product for the revertants of the Stable mutant produced an inconclusive result, probably due to the presence of a mixture of sequences. Therefore, this PCR product was cloned in a plasmid, and seven individual clones were analyzed (Fig. 3). Two of these clones contained an insertion in the upper part of the SL5 stem, and in addition, the G introduced into the lower part of the stem had reverted back to the wild-type U residue (St-rev1). One clone (St-rev2) contained the insertion lacking the 5' G residue, and in four other clones, an additional G was lacking from the insertion (St-rev3), resulting in a sequence that differed at only one position (the U-to-A change) from that of the wild-type sequence (Fig. 3). After one additional virus passage, all of the eight clones analyzed were of the St-rev3 type, suggesting that reversion most likely started with an insertion that was further modified to gain replication capacity. Clones St-rev1 and St-rev2 may represent intermediates from an evolutionary pathway leading to the St-rev3 sequence, which differs from the wild-type sequence at only one position in the SL5 loop.
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FIG. 3. Reversion of mutant Stable. The mutations originally introduced into mutant Stable are boxed. Upon sequence analysis, we identified two clones named St-rev1 that contained an insertion partly restoring the wild-type sequence and opening the loop region (insertions are shown in balls, wild-type residues are marked in light gray, mutant residues in dark gray). The sequence St-rev2 was obtained from one clone, the sequence St-rev3 from four clones. After one additional virus passage, all eight clones sequenced were of the St-rev3 type.
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FIG. 4. Reversion of mutant Loop2. (A) Sequences of the 3' terminal region of the genome of the Loop2 revertant were determined by RT-PCR, followed by sequencing of nine individual clones. Of the sequenced clones, seven were found to contain a second-site mutation in the SL5 loop region (L-rev1), but two clones acquired mutations in the SL4 domain. The revertant sequences were introduced into the wild-type EAV cDNA clone. Virus replication was studied using IFA with EAV-specific antisera for nsp3 and N at different time points after transfection, and virus titration was performed using plaque assays. The sequence of the SL5 loop region is depicted in the 3'-to-5' direction, whereas that of SL4 is depicted in the 5'-to-3' direction. Base-pairing possibilities between the two sequences are indicated by dots. The mutations introduced in the Loop2 mutant are marked in italics; the acquired reversions are marked by a black box. (B) Hybridization analysis of the RNA synthesis of the loop2 revertants (see the legend to Fig. 2 for details).
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FIG. 5. RNA secondary structure model showing the proposed SL4-SL5 pseudoknot interaction and pseudoknot mutants. The nucleotides involved in the pseudoknot interaction are marked in gray, and the base-pairing interaction is depicted by lines. The orientation of the central pentanucleotide in the loop was changed in SL4 (Or4) or SL5 (Or5) or both (Or45), which restored base-pairing possibilities. The pentanucleotide sequence of SL4 was switched with that of SL5 in mutant Sw4, and vice versa in mutant Sw5. Base-pairing possibilities were again restored in mutant Sw45. The stop codon of the N protein gene is underlined.
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BHK-21 cells were again transfected with the full-length RNA transcribed from wild-type and mutant EAV cDNA clones, and virus replication was monitored as described above. No IFA signal or infectivity was detected for the single mutants Or4 and Or5, whereas replication was restored in the double mutant Or45 (Table 3). Upon analysis of intracellular viral RNA synthesis (Fig. 6), there was no signal for the single mutants, whereas the RNA levels produced by double mutant Or45 approached those of the wild-type control. Also, for the Sw4 and Sw5 single mutants, RNA synthesis was completely disrupted (Fig. 6 and Table 3). Restoration of the base-pairing possibilities in double mutant Sw45 resulted in a low level of virus activity, as evidenced by the production of small quantities of intracellular viral RNA (Fig. 6) and a modestly positive IFA result (Table 3). However, for this double mutant, infectious progeny could not be detected in plaque assays, either because there was no virus production or, more likely, because the slow replication and low titers of this mutant virus were insufficient to allow plaque formation (as observed for other studies of severely crippled EAV mutants). Nevertheless, the results listed above, in particular those obtained with the Or4, Or5, and Or45 set of mutants, confirmed the critical importance for EAV RNA synthesis of both SL4 and SL5 loop sequences and their pseudoknot-type interaction.
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TABLE 3. Viability of SL4-SL5 pseudoknot mutants
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FIG. 6. Hybridization analysis of the RNA synthesis by wild-type EAV and pseudoknot mutants (see the legend to Fig. 2 for details).
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FIG. 7. Alignment of the nucleotides involved in the pseudoknot interaction in different arteriviruses. Several nucleotide changes were identified, as follows: those not disrupting base pairing (unmarked) and disrupting base pairing (black), those creating an additional base pair (dark gray), and covariations (light gray).
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FIG. 8. Conservation of the pseudoknot interaction in all known arteriviruses. The RNA secondary structure predictions for the two terminal stem-loop structures in different arterivirus genomes are shown. For all arteriviruses, a putative interaction between the top region of the terminal hairpin and the upstream hairpin is predicted and is marked in gray. Shown are EAV (Brucyrus [accession number NC002532]), SHFV (M6941 [accession number NC003092]), LDV (Plagemann [accession number U15146]), PRRSV (VR2332 [accession number U87392]), and PRRSV (Lelystad [accession number M96262]).
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Revertants obtained after prolonged culturing of the mutant Loop2 had acquired second-site mutations in either the SL5 loop (L-rev1) or the SL4 hairpin (Fig. 4A), suggesting a functional interaction between the SL5 and SL4 domains. The role of the acquired mutations in the phenotypic reversion of the loop2 mutant was verified by introduction of the revertant sequences into the wild-type EAV cDNA clone. The revertants L-rev1 and L-rev3 indeed gained replication capacity, but the revertant L-rev2 appeared to be replication deficient (Fig. 4). The SL4 hairpin is located in the N protein gene, and the acquired mutations in both L-rev2 and L-rev3 affected the amino acid sequence of the N protein. The mutation found in L-rev3 was also identified in natural EAV isolates, indicating that it is unlikely to affect N protein function. On the other hand, in contrast to what has been suggested for coronaviruses (1, 2, 25, 37, 41), the arterivirus N protein was previously found to be dispensable for both replication and transcription (24, 31), since the L-rev2 sequence was cloned from RT-PCR on total cellular RNA, it could represent a nonreplicating genome.
The existence and importance of an SL4-SL5 base-pairing interaction was supported in more detail by using a series of mutants in which base pairing was disrupted and restored without affecting the structure of the individual hairpins (Fig. 6). These mutations only targeted the central pentanucleotide sequence located in the loop region, and the results would be consistent with an SL5-SL4 interaction consisting of a kissing loop interaction (i.e., involving only the unpaired nucleotides in the loop regions). However, the potential for a more extended SL4-SL5 pseudoknot interaction was discovered to consist of up to 10 base pairs (interrupted by two mismatches). Phylogenetic analysis revealed that the possibility for this extended SL4-SL5 interaction is conserved in different EAV isolates (Fig. 7). The mismatches were absent in two different isolates of EAV, and one mismatch was repaired in two different Loop2 revertants (Fig. 4). In addition, similar pseudoknot interactions can be predicted for the 3'-proximal domain of the genomes of all other arteriviruses (Fig. 8), which are only quite distantly related to EAV (11). Possibly due to this evolutionary distance, the predicted number of base pairs involved in the pseudoknot interaction is quite variable, and some mismatches appear to be permitted (Fig. 7). On the basis of these combined observations, we consider it likely that the SL5 and SL4 hairpins can indeed engage in the more extended pseudoknot interaction. A pair of 3' proximal hairpins involved in a pseudoknot interaction may thus be a conserved feature of arterivirus genomes and one that, given its position in the genome and our results, is likely involved in regulating a critical step in viral of RNA synthesis.
A property inherent in RNA pseudoknots (32) is their low stability, which often results in the folding of alternative structures (8, 17, 34, 48). This feature enables them to function as "molecular switches," a situation also encountered, for example, elsewhere in the genome of EAV and all other nidoviruses, where an RNA pseudoknot is a key element of the ribosomal frameshift-inducing mechanism that regulates expression of replicase ORF1b (4, 5). The SL4-SL5 pseudoknot interaction now identified in the 3' proximal domain of the EAV genome is essential for viral RNA synthesis, most likely by playing a role in the initiation of minus-strand RNA synthesis. Possibly, the pseudoknot conformation is specifically recognized by the viral replicase complex, and switching to or from a conformation containing the individual SL4 and SL5 hairpins could regulate the specificity or timing of an apparently critical step in arterivirus RNA synthesis.
The genomes of plus-strand RNA viruses are not only templates for RNA synthesis, but are also directly translated to yield viral proteins. Opposing the model in which every genomic RNA molecule is used for both translation and RNA synthesis stands a model in which RNA molecules may have a designated function, at least later in infection. Replication of the genome of EAV and other plus-strand RNA viruses takes place in complexes that are associated with cytoplasmic membranes and contain both viral and host proteins. It has been speculated that this compartmentalization may serve to create an optimal environment for RNA synthesis (7, 21, 40). According to this model, the local concentration of essential factors in a given compartment could determine whether translation or replication would be favored, maintaining two separate pools of genomic RNAs. Studies of RNA synthesis suggested that this is not the case for poliovirus. Viral RNA replication was found to depend on translation in cis of the genome, suggesting that a particular viral genome must first be translated to become competent for RNA synthesis (26). These results imply that for poliovirus and possibly other plus-strand RNA viruses, each viral RNA genome has a dual role which would require regulation throughout the entire virus life cycle. Viral RNA synthesis in poliovirus and other enteroviruses was suggested to be regulated by a pseudoknot interaction in the 3' UTR (15, 22). Pseudoknots are present near the 3' end of many viral RNA genomes and may be optimally suited to function as a molecular switch regulating the initiation of RNA synthesis.
For PRRSV, an additional kissing loop interaction between the upstream stem-loop involved in the proposed pseudoknot (the "equivalent" of EAV SL4) and a hairpin located in the N protein gene was previously suggested to be required for virus replication (46). The pseudoknot and the kissing loop interaction are mutually exclusive interactions, which may both act as molecular switches in different stages of the PRRSV life cycle. However, a similar kissing loop interaction could not be predicted in the genomes of EAV and other arteriviruses. Coronaviruses have a longer and more complex 3' UTR than arteriviruses, and we were unable to identify a pseudoknot interaction similar to that in EAV, involving a 3' terminal hairpin. However, a conserved pseudoknot in sequences more upstream in the coronavirus 3' UTR has been documented (9, 9, 12, 13, 47). This pseudoknot interaction was also proposed to act as a molecular switch during virus replication, but it is currently unknown whether it could be the functional equivalent of the one described here for arteriviruses. Although none of them mapped to the region containing the pseudoknot, several protein binding sites were reported in the coronavirus 3' UTR. For example, four cellular proteins were found to bind the 3' terminus of the mouse hepatitis virus (MHV) genome (49, 50), and a binding site for the hnRNP A1 was mapped to the 3' proximal region of the MHV genome (14). However, these binding sites could be deleted without a significant effect on viral replication or RNA synthesis (10).
Depending on the energy barrier between the conformation with individual SL4 and SL5 hairpins and the pseudoknot conformation in the EAV 3' genome terminus, the putative switch could be self-induced or require trans-acting elements. Previously, pseudoknot formation was not detected during in vitro chemical and enzymatic probing experiments (3). This suggests that in vivo trans-acting factors may be involved in pseudoknot formation. Alternatively, the pseudoknot may be a very unstable and transient interaction that cannot be detected using biochemical probing. A recent study of SHFV described binding of two cellular proteins to the stem-loop structure at the 3' end of the genome, which were identified as polypyrimidine tract-binding protein and aldolase A (18, 19). The same proteins were reported to interact with the 3' UTR of the EAV and PRRSV genomes (19), but the biological role and importance of these interactions with the 3' UTR remain to be investigated. Our ongoing studies will focus on identification of cellular and viral proteins that bind specifically to the hairpin or pseudoknot structures in the EAV genome, and could be involved in a putative switch between these conformations.
Nancy Beerens was supported by Veni grant 700.53.405 from the Council for Chemical Sciences of The Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO-CW).
Published ahead of print on 20 June 2007. ![]()
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