首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
Positive-strand RNA virus RNA replication is invariably membrane associated and frequently involves viral proteins with nucleoside triphosphatase (NTPase)/helicase motifs or activities. Brome mosaic virus (BMV) encodes two RNA replication factors: 1a has a C-terminal NTPase/helicase-like domain, and 2a(pol) has a central polymerase domain. 1a accumulates on endoplasmic reticulum membranes, recruits 2a(pol), and induces 50- to 70-nm membrane invaginations (spherules) serving as RNA replication compartments. 1a also recruits BMV replication templates such as genomic RNA3. In the absence of 2a(pol), 1a dramatically stabilizes RNA3 by transferring RNA3 to a membrane-associated, nuclease-resistant state that appears to correspond to the interior of the 1a-induced spherules. Prior results show that the 1a NTPase/helicase-like domain contributes to RNA recruitment. Here, we tested mutations in the conserved helicase motifs of 1a to further define the roles of this domain in RNA template recruitment. All 1a helicase mutations tested showed normal 1a accumulation, localization to perinuclear endoplasmic reticulum membranes, and recruitment of 2a(pol). Most 1a helicase mutants also supported normal spherule formation. Nevertheless, these mutations severely inhibited RNA replication and 1a-induced stabilization of RNA3 in vivo. For such 1a mutants, the membrane-associated RNA3 pool was both reduced and highly susceptible to added nuclease. Thus, 1a recruitment of viral RNA templates to a membrane-associated, nuclease-resistant state requires additional functions beyond forming spherules and recruiting RNA to membranes, and these functions depend on the 1a helicase motifs. The possibility that, similar to some double-stranded RNA viruses, the 1a NTPase/helicase-like domain may be involved in importing viral RNAs into a preformed replication compartment is discussed.  相似文献   

2.
In contrast to the synthesis of minus-strand genomic and plus-strand subgenomic RNAs, the requirements for brome mosaic virus (BMV) genomic plus-strand RNA synthesis in vitro have not been previously reported. Therefore, little is known about the biochemical requirements for directing genomic plus-strand synthesis. Using DNA templates to characterize the requirements for RNA-dependent RNA polymerase template recognition, we found that initiation from the 3' end of a template requires one nucleotide 3' of the initiation nucleotide. The addition of a nontemplated nucleotide at the 3' end of minus-strand BMV RNAs led to initiation of genomic plus-strand RNA in vitro. Genomic plus-strand initiation was specific since cucumber mosaic virus minus-strand RNA templates were unable to direct efficient synthesis under the same conditions. In addition, mutational analysis of the minus-strand template revealed that the -1 nontemplated nucleotide, along with the +1 cytidylate and +2 adenylate, is important for RNA-dependent RNA polymerase interaction. Furthermore, genomic plus-strand RNA synthesis is affected by sequences 5' of the initiation site.  相似文献   

3.
Brome mosaic virus (BMV) and cowpea chlorotic mottle virus (CCMV) are related positive-strand RNA viruses with tripartite genomes. RNA replication by either virus requires genomic RNAs 1 and 2, which encode protein 1a and the polymeraselike, 94-kilodalton 2a protein, respectively. Proteins 1a and 2a share extensive sequence similarity with proteins encoded by a wide range of other positive-strand RNA viruses of animals and plants. Heterologous combinations of BMV and CCMV RNAs 1 and 2 do not support viral RNA replication, and although BMV RNA2 is amplified in CCMV-infected cells, CCMV RNA2 is not amplified by BMV. Construction of hybrids by precise exchange of segments between BMV and CCMV RNA2 has now allowed preliminary mapping of such virus-specific replication functions in RNA2 and the 2a protein. The ability to support replication in trans with BMV RNA1 segregated with a 5' BMV RNA2 fragment encoding the first 358 2a gene amino acids, while a 5' fragment extending over 281 BMV 2a codons transferred only cis-acting competence for RNA2 amplification in cells coinfected with wild-type BMV. Successful trans-acting function with CCMV RNA1 segregated with a CCMV RNA2 3' fragment that included the last 206 2a gene codons. Thus, the less conserved N- and C-terminal 2a segments appear to be involved in required interaction(s) of this polymeraselike protein with the 1a protein or RNA1 or both. Moreover, when individual hybrid RNA2 molecules that function with either BMV or CCMV RNA1 were tested, BMV- and CCMV-specific differences in recognition and amplification of RNA3 templates appeared to segregate with RNA1.  相似文献   

4.
5.
The approximately 150 nt tRNA-like structure present at the 3' end of each of the brome mosaic virus (BMV) genomic RNAs is sufficient to direct minus-strand RNA synthesis. RNAs containing mutations in the tRNA-like structure that decrease minus-strand synthesis were tested for their ability to interact with RdRp (RNA-dependent RNA polymerase) using a template competition assay. Mutations that are predicted to disrupt the pseudoknot and stem B1 do not affect the ability of the tRNA-like structure to interact with RdRp. Similarly, the +1 and +2 nucleotides are not required for stable template-RdRp interaction. Mutations in the bulge and hairpin loops of stem C decreased the ability of the tRNA-like structure to interact with RdRp. Furthermore, in the absence of the rest of the BMV tRNA, stem C is able to interact with RdRp. The addition of an accessible initiation sequence containing ACCA3' to stem C created an RNA capable of directing RNA synthesis. Synthesis from this minimal minus-strand template is dependent on sequences in the hairpin and bulged loops.  相似文献   

6.
Sequences within the conserved, aminoacylatable 3' noncoding regions of brome mosaic virus (BMV) genomic RNAs 1, 2, and 3 direct initiation of negative-strand synthesis by BMV polymerase extracts and, like sequences at the structurally divergent but aminoacylatable 3' end of tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) RNA, are required in cis for RNA replication in vivo. A series of chimeric RNAs in which selected 3' segments were exchanged between the tyrosine-accepting BMV and histidine-accepting TMV RNAs were constructed and their amplification was examined in protoplasts inoculated with or without other BMV and TMV RNAs. TMV derivatives whose 3' noncoding region was replaced by sequences from BMV RNA3 were independently replication competent when the genes for the TMV 130,000-M(r) and 180,000-M(r) replication factors remained intact. TMV replicase can thus utilize the BMV-derived 3' end, though at lower efficiency than the wild-type (wt) TMV 3' end. Providing functional BMV RNA replicase by coinoculation with BMV genomic RNAs 1 and 2 did not improve the amplification of these hybrid genomic RNAs. By contrast, BMV RNA3 derivatives carrying the 3' noncoding region of TMV were not amplified when coinoculated with wt BMV RNA1 and RNA2, wt TMV RNA, or all three. Thus, BMV replicase appeared to be unable to utilize the TMV 3' end, and there was no evidence of intervirus complementation in the replication of any of the hybrid RNAs. In protoplasts coinoculated with BMV RNA1 and RNA2, the nonamplifiable RNA3 derivatives bearing TMV 3' sequences gave rise to diverse new rearranged or recombined RNA species that were amplifiable.  相似文献   

7.
The multidomain RNA replication protein 1a of brome mosaic virus (BMV), a positive-strand RNA virus in the alphavirus-like superfamily, plays key roles in assembly and function of the viral RNA replication complex. 1a, which encodes RNA capping and helicase-like domains, localizes to endoplasmic reticulum membranes, recruits BMV 2a polymerase and viral RNA templates, and forms membrane-bound, capsid-like spherules in which RNA replication occurs. cis-acting signals necessary and sufficient for RNA recruitment by 1a have been mapped in BMV genomic RNA2 and RNA3. Both signals comprise an extended stem-loop whose apex matches the conserved sequence and structure of the TPsiC stem-loop in tRNAs (box B). Mutations show that this box B motif is crucial to 1a responsiveness of wild-type RNA2 and RNA3. We report here that, unexpectedly, some chimeric mRNAs expressing the 2a polymerase open reading frame from RNA2 were recruited by 1a to the replication complex and served as templates for negative-strand RNA synthesis, despite lacking the normally essential, box B-containing 5' signal. Further studies showed that this template recruitment required high-efficiency translation of the RNA templates. Moreover, multiple small frameshifting insertion or deletion mutations throughout the N-terminal region of the open reading frame inhibited this template recruitment, while an in-frame insertion did not. Providing 2a in trans did not restore template recruitment of RNAs with frameshift mutations. Only those deletions in the N-terminal region of 2a that abolished 2a interaction with 1a abolished template recruitment of the RNA. These and other results indicate that this alternate pathway for 1a-dependent RNA recruitment involves 1a interaction with the translating mRNA via the 1a-interactive N-terminal region of the nascent 2a polypeptide. Interaction with nascent 2a also may be involved in 1a recruitment of 2a polymerase to membranes.  相似文献   

8.
9.
The Brome mosaic virus (BMV) coat protein (CP) accompanies the three BMV genomic RNAs and the subgenomic RNA into and out of cells in an infection cycle. In addition to serving as a protective shell for all of the BMV RNAs, CP plays regulatory roles during the infection process that are mediated through specific binding of RNA elements in the BMV genome. One regulatory RNA element is the B box present in the 5' untranslated region (UTR) of BMV RNA1 and RNA2 that play important roles in the formation of the BMV replication factory, as well as the regulation of translation. A second element is within the tRNA-like 3' UTR of all BMV RNAs that is required for efficient RNA replication. The BMV CP can also encapsidate ligand-coated metal nanoparticles to form virus-like particles (VLPs). This update summarizes the interaction between the BMV CP and RNAs that can regulate RNA synthesis, translation and RNA encapsidation, as well as the formation of VLPs.  相似文献   

10.
All positive-strand RNA viruses assemble their RNA replication complexes on intracellular membranes. Brome mosaic virus (BMV) replicates its RNA in endoplasmic reticulum (ER)-associated complexes in plant cells and the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. BMV encodes RNA replication factors 1a, with domains implicated in RNA capping and helicase functions, and 2a, with a central polymerase-like domain. Factor 1a interacts independently with the ER membrane, viral RNA templates, and factor 2a to form RNA replication complexes on the perinuclear ER. We show that BMV RNA replication is severely inhibited by a mutation in OLE1, an essential yeast chromosomal gene encoding delta9 fatty acid desaturase, an integral ER membrane protein and the first enzyme in unsaturated fatty acid synthesis. OLE1 deletion and medium supplementation show that BMV RNA replication requires unsaturated fatty acids, not the Ole1 protein, and that viral RNA replication is much more sensitive than yeast growth to reduced unsaturated fatty acid levels. In ole1 mutant yeast, 1a still becomes membrane associated, recruits 2a to the membrane, and recognizes and stabilizes viral RNA templates normally. However, RNA replication is blocked prior to initiation of negative-strand RNA synthesis. The results show that viral RNA synthesis is highly sensitive to lipid composition and suggest that proper membrane fluidity or plasticity is essential for an early step in RNA replication. The strong unsaturated fatty acid dependence also demonstrates that modulating fatty acid balance can be an effective antiviral strategy.  相似文献   

11.
Hema M  Gopinath K  Kao C 《Journal of virology》2005,79(3):1417-1427
The 3' portions of plus-strand brome mosaic virus (BMV) RNAs mimic cellular tRNAs. Nucleotide substitutions or deletions in the 3'CCA of the tRNA-like sequence (TLS) affect minus-strand initiation unless repaired. We observed that 2-nucleotide deletions involving the CCA 3' sequence in one or all BMV RNAs still allowed RNA accumulation in barley protoplasts at significant levels. Alterations of CCA to GGA in only BMV RNA3 also allowed RNA accumulation at wild-type levels. However, substitutions in all three BMV RNAs severely reduced RNA accumulation, demonstrating that substitutions have different repair requirements than do small deletions. Furthermore, wild-type BMV RNA1 was required for the repair and replication of RNAs with nucleotide substitutions. Results from sequencing of progeny viral RNA from mutant input RNAs demonstrated that RNA1 did not contribute its sequence to the mutant RNAs. Instead, the repaired ends were heterogeneous, with one-third having a restored CCA and others having sequences with the only commonality being the restoration of one cytidylate. The role of BMV RNA1 in increased repair was examined.  相似文献   

12.
13.
Previously, we used the ability of the higher eukaryotic positive-strand RNA virus brome mosaic virus (BMV) to replicate in yeast to show that the yeast LSM1 gene is required for recruiting BMV RNA from translation to replication. Here we extend this observation to show that Lsm1p and other components of the Lsm1p-Lsm7p/Pat1p deadenylation-dependent mRNA decapping complex were also required for translating BMV RNAs. Inhibition of BMV RNA translation was selective, with no effect on general cellular translation. We show that viral genomic RNAs suitable for RNA replication were already distinguished from nonreplication templates at translation, well before RNA recruitment to replication. Among mRNA turnover pathways, only factors specific for deadenylated mRNA decapping were required for BMV RNA translation. Dependence on these factors was not only a consequence of the nonpolyadenylated nature of BMV RNAs but also involved the combined effects of the viral 5' and 3' noncoding regions and 2a polymerase open reading frame. High-resolution sucrose density gradient analysis showed that, while mutating factors in the Lsm1p-7p/Pat1p complex completely inhibited viral RNA translation, the levels of viral RNA associated with ribosomes were only slightly reduced in mutant yeast. This polysome association was further verified by using a conditional allele of essential translation initiation factor PRT1, which markedly decreased polysome association of viral genomic RNA in the presence or absence of an LSM7 mutation. Together, these results show that a defective Lsm1p-7p/Pat1p complex inhibits BMV RNA translation primarily by stalling or slowing the elongation of ribosomes along the viral open reading frame. Thus, factors in the Lsm1p-7p/Pat1p complex function not only in mRNA decapping but also in translation, and both translation and recruitment of BMV RNAs to viral RNA replication are regulated by a cell pathway that transfers mRNAs from translation to degradation.  相似文献   

14.
The nucleotide sequences of brome mosaic virus (BMV) RNAs 1 (3234 bases) and 2 (2865 bases) have been determined, completing the primary structure of the 8200 base tripartite BMV genome. cDNA clones covering 99% of BMV RNA1 and a full-length cDNA clone of BMV RNA2 were isolated in the course of this work. Extensive sequence homology and known interaction with several proteins suggest that the 3' ends of the BMV RNAs are the major regulatory regions of the genome. Smaller regions at the 5' ends of RNAs 1 and 2 show strong homology to each other and lesser homology to RNA3. These and other features of the sequences are discussed in relation to replication, regulation and evolution of the BMV genome.  相似文献   

15.
The nucleotide sequence of the 3389 residues of RNA 1 (Mr 1.15 X 10(6) of the Q strain of cucumber mosaic virus (CMV) was determined, completing the primary structure of the CMV genome (8617 nucleotides). CMV RNA 1 was sequenced by the dideoxy-chain-termination method using M13 clones carrying RNA 1 sequences as well as synthetic oligonucleotide primers on RNA 1 as a template. At the 5' end of the RNA there are 97 noncoding residues between the cap structure and the first AUG (98-100), which is the start of a single long open-reading frame. This reading frame encodes a translation product of 991 amino acid residues (Mr 110791) and stops 319 nucleotide residues from the 3' end of RNA 1. In addition to the conserved 3' region present in all CMV RNAs (307 residues in RNA 1), RNAs 1 and 2 have highly homologous 5' leader sequences, a 12-nucleotide segment of which is also conserved in the corresponding RNAs of brome mosaic virus (BMV). CMV satellite RNA can form stable base pairs with a region of CMV RNAs 1 and 2 including this 12-nucleotide sequence, implying a regulatory function. This conserved sequence is part of a hairpin structure in RNAs 1 and 2 of CMV and BMV and in CMV satellite RNA. The entire translation products of RNA 1 of CMV and BMV could be aligned with significant homology. Less prominent homologies were found with alfalfa mosaic virus RNA 1 translation product and with tobacco mosaic virus Mr-126000 protein.  相似文献   

16.
Brome mosaic virus (BMV) and cowpea chlorotic mottle virus (CCMV) are related positive-strand RNA viruses with genomes divided among RNAs 1, 2, and 3. RNAs 1 and 2 encode the viral RNA replication factors, which share extensive conservation with proteins encoded by the animal alphaviruses and diverse plant viruses. In barley protoplasts, CCMV RNAs 1 and 2 support high but distinguishable amplification of either BMV RNA3 (B3) or CCMV RNA3 (C3), while BMV RNAs 1 and 2 show even greater discrimination, amplifying C3 poorly relative to B3. To identify the cis-acting determinants of these template-specific and virus-specific differences in RNA3 accumulation, we constructed and tested a series of B3/C3 hybrids that exchange in turn the 5',3', and intercistronic noncoding regions, which contain all sequences required in cis for efficient B3 and C3 amplification. Despite suggestive prior in vitro results, the 3' noncoding regions were not the major determinant of the differences in amplification of B3 and C3 in vivo. Rather, 3' exchanges had relatively modest effects and did not transfer the distinctive asymmetry of amplification between B3 and C3. Intercistronic exchanges produced larger effects on RNA3 accumulation and transferred some of the polarized characteristics of the wild-type B3 and C3 behaviors. 5' exchanges revealed context-specific effects showing that the contribution of the B3 5' region to RNA3 amplification is dependent on some other B3 segment or segments. Together with previous results implicating the BMV and CCMV 1a genes in trans-acting discrimination between B3 and C3 (P. Traynor and P. Ahlquist, J. Virol. 64:69-77, 1990), these observations should help to guide studies of protein-RNA interactions governing template specificity in bromovirus RNA replication.  相似文献   

17.
Brome mosaic virus (BMV) encodes two RNA replication proteins: 1a, which contains RNA capping and helicase-like domains, and 2a, which is related to polymerases. BMV 1a and 2a can direct virus-specific RNA replication in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, which reproduces the known features of BMV replication in plant cells. We constructed single amino acid point mutations at the predicted capping and helicase active sites of 1a and analyzed their effects on BMV RNA3 replication in yeast. The helicase mutants showed no function in any assays used: they were strongly defective in template recruitment for RNA replication, as measured by 1a-induced stabilization of RNA3, and they synthesized no detectable negative-strand or subgenomic RNA. Capping domain mutants divided into two groups. The first exhibited increased template recruitment but nevertheless allowed only low levels of negative-strand and subgenomic mRNA synthesis. The second was strongly defective in template recruitment, made very low levels of negative strands, and made no detectable subgenomes. To distinguish between RNA synthesis and capping defects, we deleted chromosomal gene XRN1, encoding the major exonuclease that degrades uncapped mRNAs. XRN1 deletion suppressed the second but not the first group of capping mutants, allowing synthesis and accumulation of large amounts of uncapped subgenomic mRNAs, thus providing direct evidence for the importance of the viral RNA capping function. The helicase and capping enzyme mutants showed no complementation. Instead, at high levels of expression, a helicase mutant dominantly interfered with the function of the wild-type protein. These results are discussed in relation to the interconnected functions required for different steps of positive-strand RNA virus replication.  相似文献   

18.
19.
RNA recognition receptors are important for detection of and response to viral infections. RIG-I and MDA5 are cytoplasmic DEX(D/H) helicase proteins that can induce signaling in response to RNA ligands, including those from viral infections. LGP2, a homolog of RIG-I and MDA5 without the caspase recruitment domain required for signaling, plays an important role in modulating signaling by MDA5 and RIG-I, presumably through heterocomplex formation and/or by serving as a sink for RNAs. Here we demonstrate that LGP2 can be coexpressed with RIG-I to inhibit activation of the NF-kappaB reporter expression and that LGP2 protein produced in insect cells can bind both single- and double-stranded RNA (dsRNA), with higher affinity and cooperativity for dsRNA. Electron microscopy and image reconstruction were used to determine the shape of the LGP2 monomer in the absence of dsRNA and of the dimer complexed to a 27-bp dsRNA. LGP2 has striking structural similarity to the helicase domain of the superfamily 2 DNA helicase, Hef.  相似文献   

20.
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号