Affiliation:
1. Departments of Biological Chemistry and Molecular Pharmacology1 and
2. Microbiology and Molecular Genetics2and
3. Committee on Virology,3 Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02115
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Herpes simplex virus specifies two sets of transcripts from the
UL24
gene, short transcripts (e.g., 1.4 kb), processed at the
UL24
poly(A) site, and long transcripts (e.g., 5.6 kb), processed at the
UL26
poly(A) site. The 1.4- and 5.6-kb transcripts initiate from the same promoter but are expressed with early and late kinetics, respectively. Measurements of transcript levels following actinomycin D treatment of infected cells revealed that the 1.4- and 5.6-kb
UL24
transcripts have similar stabilities, consistent with
UL24
transcript kinetics being regulated by differential polyadenylation rather than by differential stabilities. Although the
UL24
poly(A) site, which gives rise to short transcripts, is encountered first during processing, long transcripts processed at the
UL26
site are equally or more abundant; thus, operationally, the
UL24
site is weak. Using a series of viral
ICP27
mutants, we investigated whether ICP27, which has been suggested to stimulate the usage of weak poly(A) sites, stimulates 1.4-kb transcript accumulation. We found that accumulation of 1.4-kb transcripts did not require ICP27 during viral infection. Rather, ICP27 was required for full expression of 5.6-kb transcripts, and the decrease in 5.6-kb transcripts relative to 1.4-kb transcripts was not due solely to reduced DNA synthesis. Our results indicate that temporal expression of
UL24
transcripts can be regulated by differential polyadenylation and that although ICP27 is not required for processing at the operationally weak
UL24
poly(A) site, it does modulate 5.6-kb transcript levels at a step subsequent to transcriptional initiation.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Virology,Insect Science,Immunology,Microbiology
Cited by
35 articles.
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