RNA Structure Modulates Splicing Efficiency at the Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Major Splice Donor

  • Abbink T
  • Berkhout B
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Abstract

The untranslated leader of the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) RNA genome encodes essential sequence and structural motifs that control various replication steps. The 5′ splice site or splice donor (SD) is embedded in a semistable hairpin, but the function of this structure is unknown. We stabilized this SD hairpin by creating an additional base pair and demonstrated a severe HIV-1 replication defect. A splicing defect was apparent in RNA analyses of virus-infected cells and cells transfected with appropriate reporter constructs. We selected multiple virus revertants in search for interesting second-site escape pathways. Most revertants acquired an additional mutation that modulated the stability of the mutant SD hairpin. One revertant acquired a single nucleotide change in the upstream DIS hairpin. We demonstrate that a novel SD site is created by this upstream mutation, which obviously reduces the number of leader nucleotides that are included in spliced HIV-1 transcripts. These results suggest a novel role of RNA structure in the regulation of HIV-1 splicing.

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Abbink, T. E. M., & Berkhout, B. (2008). RNA Structure Modulates Splicing Efficiency at the Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Major Splice Donor. Journal of Virology, 82(6), 3090–3098. https://doi.org/10.1128/jvi.01479-07

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