The VS catalytic RNA replicates by reverse transcription as a satellite of a retroplasmid

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Abstract

The mitochondria of certain natural isolates of Neurospora contain both the Varkud plasmid, which encodes a reverse transcriptase, and a small unrelated RNA (VS RNA) that performs RNA-mediated self-cleavage and ligation reactions. Here, we show that VS RNA is transcribed from a VS plasmid DNA template by the Neurospora mitochondrial RNA polymerase using a promoter located immediately upstream of the RNA self-cleavage site that generates monomeric transcripts. VS RNA is then reverse transcribed by the Varkud plasmid reverse transcriptase to yield a full-length (-) strand cDNA, a predicted replication intermediate. Combined with previous genetic evidence, our results indicate that the VS plasmid replicates by reverse transcription as a satellite of the Varkud plasmid. This mode of replication, unprecedented for a satellite RNA, likely reflects the promiscuity of the Varkud plasmid reverse transcriptase, which does not require a specific primer to initiate cDNA synthesis. Our findings indicate how primitive reverse transcriptases with similar relaxed specificity could have facilitated the evolution of new retroelements.

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APA

Kennell, J. C., Saville, B. J., Moht, S., Kuiper, M. T. R., Sabourin, J. R., Collins, R. A., & Lambowitz, A. M. (1995). The VS catalytic RNA replicates by reverse transcription as a satellite of a retroplasmid. Genes and Development, 9(3), 294–303. https://doi.org/10.1101/gad.9.3.294

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