Transcriptional slippage in the positive‐sense RNA virus family Potyviridae

  • Olspert A
  • Chung B
  • Atkins J
  • et al.
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Abstract

© 2015 The Authors. Published under the terms of the CC BY 4.0 license. The family Potyviridae encompasses ∼30% of plant viruses and is responsible for significant economic losses worldwide. Recently, a small overlapping coding sequence, termed pipo, was found to be conserved in the genomes of all potyvirids. PIPO is expressed as part of a frameshift protein, P3N-PIPO, which is essential for virus cell-to-cell movement. However, the frameshift expression mechanism has hitherto remained unknown. Here, we demonstrate that transcriptional slippage, specific to the viral RNA polymerase, results in a population of transcripts with an additional "A" inserted within a highly conserved GAAAAAA sequence, thus enabling expression of P3N-PIPO. The slippage efficiency is ∼2% in Turnip mosaic virus and slippage is inhibited by mutations in the GAAAAAA sequence. While utilization of transcriptional slippage is well known in negative-sense RNA viruses such as Ebola, mumps and measles, to our knowledge this is the first report of its widespread utilization for gene expression in positive-sense RNA viruses.

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Olspert, A., Chung, B. Y., Atkins, J. F., Carr, J. P., & Firth, A. E. (2015). Transcriptional slippage in the positive‐sense RNA virus family Potyviridae. EMBO Reports, 16(8), 995–1004. https://doi.org/10.15252/embr.201540509

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