Abstract
ABSTRACTSegmented negative-strand RNA bunyaviruses encode a multi-functional polymerase that performs genome replication and transcription. Here, we establish conditions for in vitro activity of La Crosse virus polymerase and visualize by cryo-electron microscopy its conformational dynamics, unveiling the precise molecular mechanics underlying its essential activities. Replication initiation is coupled to distal duplex promoter formation, endonuclease movement, prime-and-realign loop extension and closure of the polymerase core that direct the template towards the active site. Transcription initiation depends on C-terminal region closure and endonuclease movements that firstly prompt primer cleavage and secondly promote primer entry in the active site. Product realignment after priming, observed in replication and transcription, is triggered by the prime-and-realign loop. Switch to elongation results in polymerase reorganization and core region opening to facilitate template-product duplex formation in the active site cavity. The detailed uncovered mechanics will be crucial for future design of antivirals counteracting bunyaviral life-threatening pathogens.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
1 articles.
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