6 research outputs found

    A Freeze Frame View of Vesicular Stomatitis Virus Transcription Defines a Minimal Length of RNA for 5β€² Processing

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    The RNA synthesis machinery of vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) comprises the genomic RNA encapsidated by the viral nucleocapsid protein (N) and associated with the RNA dependent RNA polymerase, the viral components of which are a large protein (L) and an accessory phosphoprotein (P). The 241 kDa L protein contains all the enzymatic activities necessary for synthesis of the viral mRNAs, including capping, cap methylation and polyadenylation. Those RNA processing reactions are intimately coordinated with nucleotide polymerization such that failure to cap results in termination of transcription and failure to methylate can result in hyper polyadenylation. The mRNA processing reactions thus serve as a critical check point in viral RNA synthesis which may control the synthesis of incorrectly modified RNAs. Here, we report the length at which viral transcripts first gain access to the capping machinery during synthesis. By reconstitution of transcription in vitro with highly purified recombinant polymerase and engineered templates in which we omitted sites for incorporation of UTP, we found that transcripts that were 30-nucleotides in length were uncapped, whereas those that were 31-nucleotides in length contained a cap structure. The minimal RNA length required for mRNA cap addition was also sufficient for methylation since the 31-nucleotide long transcripts were methylated at both ribose-2β€²-O and guanine-N-7 positions. This work provides insights into the spatial relationship between the active sites for the RNA dependent RNA polymerase and polyribonucleotidyltransferase responsible for capping of the viral RNA. We combine the present findings with our recently described electron microscopic structure of the VSV polymerase and propose a model of how the spatial arrangement of the capping activities of L may influence nucleotide polymerization

    Protein Expression Redirects Vesicular Stomatitis Virus RNA Synthesis to Cytoplasmic Inclusions

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    Positive-strand and double-strand RNA viruses typically compartmentalize their replication machinery in infected cells. This is thought to shield viral RNA from detection by innate immune sensors and favor RNA synthesis. The picture for the non-segmented negative-strand (NNS) RNA viruses, however, is less clear. Working with vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV), a prototype of the NNS RNA viruses, we examined the location of the viral replication machinery and RNA synthesis in cells. By short-term labeling of viral RNA with 5β€²-bromouridine 5β€²-triphosphate (BrUTP), we demonstrate that primary mRNA synthesis occurs throughout the host cell cytoplasm. Protein synthesis results in the formation of inclusions that contain the viral RNA synthesis machinery and become the predominant sites of mRNA synthesis in the cell. Disruption of the microtubule network by treatment of cells with nocodazole leads to the accumulation of viral mRNA in discrete structures that decorate the surface of the inclusions. By pulse-chase analysis of the mRNA, we find that viral transcripts synthesized at the inclusions are transported away from the inclusions in a microtubule-dependent manner. Metabolic labeling of viral proteins revealed that inhibiting this transport step diminished the rate of translation. Collectively those data suggest that microtubule-dependent transport of viral mRNAs from inclusions facilitates their translation. Our experiments also show that during a VSV infection, protein synthesis is required to redirect viral RNA synthesis to intracytoplasmic inclusions. As viral RNA synthesis is initially unrestricted, we speculate that its subsequent confinement to inclusions might reflect a cellular response to infection

    Synthesis of genomic and subgenomic RNAs by a membrane-bound RNA-dependent RNA polymerase isolated from oat plants infected with cereal yellow dwarf virus

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    A membrane-bound RNA-dependent RNA polymerase (RdRp) complex was isolated by differential sedimentation from oat plants infected with cereal yellow dwarf virus (CYDV). When incubated with P-32-labelled UTP, unlabelled ATP, CTP and GTP, and Mg2+ ions, the RdRp preparation catalysed the synthesis of double-stranded (ds) RNAs corresponding in size to the virus genomic RNA (5.7 kbp) and two putative subgenomic RNAs (2.8 and 0.7 kbp). Hybridisation using strand-specific hybridization targets showed that the 5.7-kbp dsRNA was labelled mainly in the plus strand, whereas the 2.8- and 0.7-kbp dsRNAs were labelled only in the minus strand. Genomic-length single-stranded, plus-strand RNA of 5.7 kb and single-stranded, plus-strand subgenomic RNAs of 2.8 and 0.7 kbp were detected in RNA isolated from oat plants infected with CYDV. Mapping experiments were consistent with the genomic and subgenomic RNAs having common 3' ends, but different 5' ends, whether produced in vitro or in vivo. The RdRp-encoding region of the CYDV genome was cloned and expressed in Escherichia coli, and the purified protein was used to raise antibodies in a rabbit. In immunoblots, the antibodies detected a protein of about 68 kDa in RdRp preparations from CYDV-infected oat plants, but not from equivalent preparations from healthy oats. As far as we are aware, this is the first report of an in vitro RNA synthesis system for a phloem-limited virus.Peer reviewe
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