Affiliation:
1. Departments of Laboratory Medicine
2. Genetics, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The parvovirus minute virus of mice (MVM) packages predominantly negative-sense single strands, while its close relative LuIII encapsidates strands of both polarities with equal efficiency. Using genomic chimeras and mutagenesis, we show that the ability to package positive strands maps not, as originally postulated, to divergent untranslated regions downstream of the capsid gene but to the viral hairpins and predominantly to the nick site of OriR, the right-end replication origin. In MVM, the sequence of this site is 5′-CTAT
▾
TCA-3′, while in LuIII a two-base insertion (underlined) changes it to 5′-CTAT
AT
▾
TCA-3′. Matched LuIII genomes differing only at this position (designated LuIII and LuΔ2) packaged 47 and <8% positive-sense strands, respectively. OriR sequences from these viruses were both able to support NS1-mediated nicking in vitro, but initiation efficiency was consistently two- to threefold higher for LuΔ2 derivatives, suggesting that LuIII's ability to package positive strands is determined by a suboptimal right-end origin rather than by strand-specific packaging sequences. These observations support a mathematical “kinetic hairpin transfer” model, previously described by Chen and colleagues (K. C. Chen, J. J. Tyson, M. Lederman, E. R. Stout, and R. C. Bates, J. Mol. Biol. 208:283-296, 1989), that postulates that preferential excision of particular strands is solely responsible for packaging specificity. By analyzing replicative-form (RF) DNA generated in vivo during LuIII and LuΔ2 infections, we extend this model, showing that positive-sense strands do accumulate in LuΔ2 infections as part of duplex RF DNA, but these do not support packaging. However, replication is biphasic, so that accumulation of positive-sense strands is ultimately suppressed, probably because the onset of packaging removes newly displaced single strands from the replicating pool.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Virology,Insect Science,Immunology,Microbiology