Studies of defective interfering RNAs of Sindbis virus with and without tRNAAsp sequences at their 5' termini.

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Three of six independently derived defective interfering (DI) particles of Sindbis virus generated by high-multiplicity passaging in cultured cells have tRNAAsp sequences at the 5' terminus of their RNAs (Monroe and Schlesinger, J. Virol. 49:865-872, 1984). In the present work, we found that the 5'-terminal sequences of the three tRNAAsp-negative DI RNAs were all derived from viral genomic RNA. One DI RNA sample had the same 5'-terminal sequence as the standard genome. The DI RNAs from another DI particle preparation were heterogeneous at the 5' terminus, with the sequence being either that of the standard 5' end or rearrangements of regions near the 5' end. The sequence of the 5' terminus of the third DI RNA sample consisted of the 5' terminus of the subgenomic 26S mRNA with a deletion from nucleotides 24 to 67 of the 26S RNA sequence. These data showed that the 5'-terminal nucleotides can undergo extensive variations and that the RNA is still replicated by virus-specific enzymes. DI RNAs of Sindbis virus evolve from larger to smaller species. In the two cases in which we followed the evolution of DI RNAs, the appearance of tRNAAsp-positive molecules occurred at the same time as did the emergence of the smaller species of DI RNAs. In pairwise competition experiments, one of the tRNAAsp-positive DI RNAs proved to be the most effective DI RNA, but under identical conditions, a second tRNAAsp-positive DI RNA was unable to compete with the tRNAAsp-negative DIs. Therefore, the tRNAAsp sequence at the 5' terminus of a Sindbis DI RNA is not the primary factor in determining which DI RNA becomes the predominant species in a population of DI RNA molecules.

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