Structural Plasticity and Rapid Evolution in a Viral RNA Revealed by In Vivo Genetic Selection
Autor: | Rong Guo, David B. Kushner, Wai Lin, Jiuchun Zhang, Anne E. Simon |
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Rok vydání: | 2009 |
Předmět: |
Molecular Sequence Data
Immunology Adaptation Biological Arabidopsis Microbiology Evolution Molecular Virology Plant virus Selection Genetic Recombination Genetic Genetics Base Sequence biology Protoplasts Turnip crinkle virus RNA Conformation food and beverages RNA biology.organism_classification Genome Replication and Regulation of Viral Gene Expression Insect Science Helper virus Nucleic Acid Conformation RNA Viral Carmovirus Pseudoknot Systematic evolution of ligands by exponential enrichment |
Zdroj: | Journal of Virology. 83:927-939 |
ISSN: | 1098-5514 0022-538X |
Popis: | Satellite RNAs usually lack substantial homology with their helper viruses. The 356-nucleotide satC of Turnip crinkle virus (TCV) is unusual in that its 3′-half shares high sequence similarity with the TCV 3′ end. Computer modeling, structure probing, and/or compensatory mutagenesis identified four hairpins and three pseudoknots in this TCV region that participate in replication and/or translation. Two hairpins and two pseudoknots have been confirmed as important for satC replication. One portion of the related 3′ end of satC that remains poorly characterized corresponds to juxtaposed TCV hairpins H4a and H4b and pseudoknot ψ 3 , which are required for the TCV-specific requirement of translation (V. A. Stupina et al., RNA 14:2379-2393, 2008). Replacement of satC H4a with randomized sequence and scoring for fitness in plants by in vivo genetic selection (SELEX) resulted in winning sequences that contain an H4a-like stem-loop, which can have additional upstream sequence composing a portion of the stem. SELEX of the combined H4a and H4b region in satC generated three distinct groups of winning sequences. One group models into two stem-loops similar to H4a and H4b of TCV. However, the selected sequences in the other two groups model into single hairpins. Evolution of these single-hairpin SELEX winners in plants resulted in satC that can accumulate to wild-type (wt) levels in protoplasts but remain less fit in planta when competed against wt satC. These data indicate that two highly distinct RNA conformations in the H4a and H4b region can mediate satC fitness in protoplasts. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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