Ambisense Sendai Viruses Are Inherently Unstable but Are Useful To Study Viral RNA Synthesis
- 1 June 2002
- journal article
- Published by American Society for Microbiology in Journal of Virology
- Vol. 76 (11), 5492-502
- https://doi.org/10.1128/jvi.76.11.5492-5502.2002
Abstract
Ambisense Sendai virus (SeV) was prepared in order to study the control of viral RNA synthesis. In these studies, we found that the relative ratios of genomes/antigenomes formed during infection are largely determined by the relative strengths of the replication promoters, independent of the presence of a functional mRNA start site. We also found that the ability of the viral polymerase (vRdRP) to respond to an mRNA editing site requires prior (re)initiation at an mRNA start site, similar to the acquisition of vRdRP processivity in the absence of nascent chain coassembly. During these studies, the inherent instability of ambisense SeV upon passage in embryonated chicken eggs was noted and was found to be associated with a point mutation in the ambisense mRNA (ambi-mRNA) start site that severely limited its expression. Since the interferon (IFN)-induced antiviral state is mediated in part via double-stranded RNA (dsRNA), the efficiency of the ambi-mRNA poly(A)/stop site was examined. This site was found to operate in a manner similar to that of other SeV mRNA poly(A)/stop sites, i.e., at ∼95% efficiency. This modest level of vRdRP read-through is apparently tolerable for natural SeV because the potential to form dsRNA during infection remains limited. However, when mRNAs are expressed from ambisense SeV antigenomes, vRdRP read-through of the ambi-mRNA poly(A)/stop site creates a capped transcript that can potentially extend the entire length of the antigenome, since there are no further poly(A)/stop sites here. In support of this hypothesis, loss of ambi-mRNA expression during passage of ambisense SeV stocks in eggs is also characterized by conversion of virus that grows poorly in IFN-sensitive cultures and is relatively IFN sensitive to virus that grows well even in IFN-pretreated cells that restrict vesicular stomatitis virus replication, i.e., the wild-type SeV phenotype. The selection of mutants unable to express ambi-mRNA on passage in chicken eggs is presumably due to increased levels of dsRNA during infection. How natural ambisense viruses may deal with this dilemma is discussed.Keywords
This publication has 27 references indexed in Scilit:
- Longer and Shorter Forms of Sendai Virus C Proteins Play Different Roles in Modulating the Cellular Antiviral ResponseJournal of Virology, 2001
- Polymerase Slippage at Vesicular Stomatitis Virus Gene Junctions To Generate Poly(A) Is Regulated by the Upstream 3′-AUAC-5′ Tetranucleotide: Implications for the Mechanism of Transcription TerminationJournal of Virology, 2001
- The virus battles: IFN induction of the antiviral state and mechanisms of viral evasionCytokine & Growth Factor Reviews, 2001
- The S RNA Segment of Tomato Spotted Wilt Virus has an Ambisense CharacterJournal of General Virology, 1990
- Measles virus editing provides an additional cysteine-rich proteinCell, 1989
- Two mRNAs that differ by two nontemplated nucleotides encode the amino coterminal proteins P and V of the paramyxovirus SV5Cell, 1988
- N protein of vesicular stomatitis virus selectively encapsidates leader RNA in vitroCell, 1983
- Interaction of VSV leader RNA and nucleocapsid protein may control VSV genome replicationCell, 1981
- Plus and minus strand leader rnas in negative strand virus-infected cellsCell, 1979
- Antigenomes in Sendai virions and Sendai virus-infected cellsVirology, 1975