Mutant ts10 is an RNA-negative temperature-sensitive mutant of Mahoney type 1 poliovirus. Mutant ts10 3D(pol) was purified from infected cells and was shown to be rapidly heat-inactivated at 45° when compared to wild-type polymerase. Sequencing of mutant ts10 genomic RNA revealed a U to C transition at nt 7167 resulting in an amino acid change of methionine 394 of 3D(pol) to threonine. The 3D-M394T mutation was engineered into a wild-type infectious clone of poliovirus type 1. The resultant mutant virus, 3D-105, had a temperature-sensitive phenotype in plaque assays. The translation and replication of wild-type, ts10, and 3D-105 virion RNAs were all characterized in HeLa S10 translation-RNA replication reactions in vitro. The optimum temperatures for the replication of the wild-type and mutant viral RNAs in the HeLa S10 translation-replication reactions were 37 and 34°, respectively. To characterize the temperature-sensitive defect in the replication of the mutant RNA, we used preinitiation RNA replication complexes which were formed in HeLa S10 in vitro reactions containing guanidine HCl. Negative-strand RNA synthesis in 3D-M394T mutant preinitiation replication complexes was normal at 34° but was rapidly and irreversibly inhibited at 39.5°. To differentiate between the initiation and elongation steps in RNA replication, we compared the elongation rates in mutant and wild-type replication complexes at 39.5°. The results showed that the elongation rates for nascent negative strands in both the mutant and wild-type replication complexes were identical. Therefore, the results indicate that the heat-sensitive step in negative-strand synthesis exhibited by the 3D-M394T replication complexes is in the initiation of RNA synthesis and not in the elongation of nascent chains.
CITATION STYLE
Barton, D. J., Morasco, B. J., Eisner-Smerage, L., Collis, P. S., Diamond, S. E., Hewlett, M. J., … Flanegan, J. B. (1996). Poliovirus RNA polymerase mutation 3D-M394T results in a temperature-sensitive defect in RNA synthesis. Virology, 217(2), 459–469. https://doi.org/10.1006/viro.1996.0140
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.