Publication | Open Access
Mutational analysis of the 3′‐terminal extra‐cistronic region of poliovirus RNA: secondary structure is not the only requirement for minus strand RNA replication
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Citations
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References
1995
Year
Viral ReplicationViral Polymerase StructureViral Polymerase MechanismGeneticsSecondary StructureMolecular BiologyViral Structural ProteinVirus StructureViral Rna ReplicationPoliovirus RnaVirus GeneViral GeneticsNeurovirologyDna ReplicationVirologyStructural BiologyMutational AnalysisMolecular VirologyNatural SciencesViral Rna SynthesisMedicine
A series of mutations were introduced in the 3'-terminal untranslated region (3'-UTR) of full-length infectious poliovirus cDNA clones, and following transfection of COS-1 cells the ability of these constructs to generate viable viral particles and/or to support viral RNA synthesis was assayed. Substitution of the 3'-UTR of poliovirus RNA with the equivalent sequences of HAV RNA abrogated viral RNA replication, whereas the introduction of extended 'foreign' sequences between the open reading frame and the 3'-UTR was well tolerated. Point mutation that either destabilized the stem-and-loop structure or altered the sequence of the loop in domain 'Y' (nomenclature as per Pilipenko et al., [Nuclei Acids Res. 20 (1992) 1739-1745]) abolished both the infectivity and viral RNA synthesis. These were not restored by compensatory mutation that reconstructed the native secondary structure of this domain, suggesting that the secondary/tertiary folding of the 3'-UTR is not the only determinant for template recognition at initiation of RNA synthesis, but rather that a specific primary sequence is indeed required.
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