Fitness of a Turnip Crinkle Virus Satellite RNA Correlates with a Sequence-Nonspecific Hairpin and Flanking Sequences That Enhance Replication and Repress the Accumulation of Virions

AUTOR(ES)
FONTE

American Society for Microbiology

RESUMO

satC, a satellite RNA associated with Turnip crinkle virus (TCV), enhances the ability of the virus to colonize plants by interfering with stable virion accumulation (F. Zhang and A. E. Simon, unpublished data). Previous results suggested that the motif1-hairpin (M1H), a replication enhancer on minus strands, forms a plus-strand hairpin flanked by CA-rich sequence that may be involved in enhancing systemic infection (G. Zhang and A. E. Simon, J. Mol. Biol. 326:35-48, 2003). In this study, sequence and structural requirements of the M1H were further assayed by replacing the 28-base M1H with 10 random bases and then subjecting the pool of satellite RNA to functional selection in plants. Unlike previous results with 28-base replacement sequences (G. Zhang and A. E. Simon, J. Mol. Biol. 326:35-48, 2003), only a few of the 10-base SELEX (systematic evolution of ligands by exponential enrichment) assay winners contained short motifs in their minus-sense orientation that were similar to TCV replication elements. However, all second- and third-round winning replacement sequences folded into hairpins flanked by CA-rich sequence predicted to be more stable on plus strands than minus strands. Plus strands of several of the most fit satellite RNAs contained insertions of CA-rich sequence at the base of their hairpins whose presence correlated with enhanced replication and reduced detection of virions. Deletion of the M1H resulted in no detectable virions despite very low satellite accumulation. These results support the hypothesis that a sequence-nonspecific plus-strand hairpin brings together flanking CA-rich sequences in the M1H region that confers fitness to satC by reducing the accumulation of stable virions.

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