Arm-specific cleavage and mutation during reverse transcription of 2,5-branched RNA by Moloney murine leukemia virus reverse transcriptase

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Abstract

Branchpoint nucleotides of intron lariats induce pausing of DNA synthesis by reverse transcriptases (RTs), but it is not known yet how they direct RT RNase H activity on branched RNA (bRNA). Here, we report the effects of the two arms of bRNA on branchpoint-directed RNA cleavage and mutation produced by Moloney murine leukemia virus (M-MLV) RT during DNA polymerization. We constructed a long-chained bRNA template by splinted-ligation. The bRNA oligonucleotide is chimeric and contains DNA to identify RNA cleavage products by probe hybridization. Unique sequences surrounding the branchpoint facilitate monitoring of bRNA purification by terminal-restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis. We evaluate the M-MLV RT-generated cleavage and mutational patterns. We find that cleavage of bRNA and misprocessing of the branched nucleotide proceed arm-specifically. Bypass of the branchpoint from the 2-arm causes single-mismatch errors, whereas bypass from the 3-arm leads to deletion mutations. The non-template arm is cleaved when reverse transcription is primed from the 3-arm but not from the 2-arm. This suggests that RTs flip ∼180 at branchpoints and RNases H cleave the non-template arm depending on its accessibility. Our observed interplay between M-MLV RT and bRNA would be compatible with a bRNA-mediated control of retroviral and related retrotransposon replication.

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Döring, J., & Hurek, T. (2017). Arm-specific cleavage and mutation during reverse transcription of 2,5-branched RNA by Moloney murine leukemia virus reverse transcriptase. Nucleic Acids Research, 45(7), 3967–3984. https://doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkx073

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