Affiliation:
1. Department of Biochemistry and Biophysics, Texas A&M University, College Station, Texas 77843
Abstract
ABSTRACT
RNA viruses employ a combination of mechanisms to regulate their gene expression and replication.
Brome mosaic virus
(BMV) is a tripartite positive-strand RNA virus used to study the requirements for virus infection. BMV genomic RNA1 encodes protein 1a, which contains a methyltransferase (MT) domain and a helicase domain that are required for replication. 1a forms a complex with the 2a RNA-dependent RNA polymerase for the replication and transcription of all BMV RNAs. RNA1 expressed with 2a from
Agrobacterium
-based vectors can result in RNA1 replication in
Nicotiana benthamiana.
A mutation in the 1a translation initiation codon significantly decreased RNA1 accumulation even when wild-type (WT) 1a and 2a were provided in
trans
. Therefore, efficient RNA1 replication requires 1a translation from RNA1 in
cis
, indicating a linkage between replication and translation. Mutation analyses showed that the full-length 1a protein was required for efficient RNA1 replication, not just the process of translation. Three RNA1s with mutations in the 1a MT domain could be partially rescued by WT 1a expressed in
trans
, indicating that the
cis
-acting function of 1a was retained. Furthermore, an RNA motif in the 5′-untranslated region of RNA1, named the B box, was required for 1a to function in
cis
and in
trans
for BMV RNA accumulation. The B box is required for the formation of the replication factory (M. Schwartz, J. Chen, M. Janda, M. Sullivan, J. den Boon, and P. Ahlquist, Mol. Cell 9:505-514, 2002). Results in this work demonstrate a linkage between BMV RNA1 translation and replication.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Virology,Insect Science,Immunology,Microbiology
Cited by
32 articles.
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