Generation of a novel SARS-CoV-2 sub-genomic RNA due to the R203K/G204R variant in nucleocapsid: homologous recombination has potential to change SARS-CoV-2 at both protein and RNA level

Author:

Leary ShayORCID,Gaudieri SilvanaORCID,Parker Matthew D.ORCID,Chopra AbhaORCID,James Ian,Pakala SumanORCID,Alves Eric,John Mina,Lindsey Benjamin B.,Keeley Alexander J,Rowland-Jones Sarah L.,Swanson Maurice S.ORCID,Ostrov David A.,Bubenik Jodi L.,Das SumanORCID,Sidney John,Sette Alessandro,de Silva Thushan I.ORCID,Phillips Elizabeth,Mallal SimonORCID,

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundGenetic variations across the SARS-CoV-2 genome may influence transmissibility of the virus and the host’s anti-viral immune response, in turn affecting the frequency of variants over-time. In this study, we examined the adjacent amino acid polymorphisms in the nucleocapsid (R203K/G204R) of SARS-CoV-2 that arose on the background of the spike D614G change and describe how strains harboring these changes became dominant circulating strains globally.MethodsDeep sequencing data of SARS-CoV-2 from public databases and from clinical samples were analyzed to identify and map genetic variants and sub-genomic RNA transcripts across the genome.ResultsSequence analysis suggests that the three adjacent nucleotide changes that result in the K203/R204 variant have arisen by homologous recombination from the core sequence (CS) of the leader transcription-regulating sequence (TRS) rather than by stepwise mutation. The resulting sequence changes generate a novel sub-genomic RNA transcript for the C-terminal dimerization domain of nucleocapsid. Deep sequencing data from 981 clinical samples confirmed the presence of the novel TRS-CS-dimerization domain RNA in individuals with the K203/R204 variant. Quantification of sub-genomic RNA indicates that viruses with the K203/R204 variant may also have increased expression of sub-genomic RNA from other open reading frames.ConclusionsThe finding that homologous recombination from the TRS may have occurred since the introduction of SARS-CoV-2 in humans resulting in both coding changes and novel sub-genomic RNA transcripts suggests this as a mechanism for diversification and adaptation within its new host.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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