The Alphavirus 3'-nontranslated region: Size heterogeneity and arrangement of repeated sequence elements

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Abstract

The 3'-nontranslated region (NTR) of representative strains of all known alphavirus species was amplified by reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction. For 23 of them, the 3'-NTR sequence was determined. Together with previously published data, this allowed an analysis of the 3'-NTR of the viruses in the genus Alphavirus. The length of the 3'-NTRs varied from 77 nt for Pixuna virus to 609 nt for Bebaru virus. The 19-nt conserved sequence element directly adjacent to the poly(A) tract was found in all viruses, supporting the hypothesis that this region is a cis-acting sequence element during viral replication and essential for virus growth in vitro. Within the 3'-NTR of all alphaviruses, repeated sequence elements of various numbers and lengths were found. Their composition was very consistent in both the Venezuelan equine encephalitis (VEE) and the Sindbis-like viruses, although their number was constant only within the latter group. For the VEE viruses, our data suggested that insertion events rather than deletions from an ancestor with a long 3'-NTR created the various number of repeated sequence elements. Among the remaining viruses, both the number and the composition of repeated sequence elements varied remarkedly.

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Pfeffer, M., Kinney, R. M., & Kaaden, O. R. (1998). The Alphavirus 3’-nontranslated region: Size heterogeneity and arrangement of repeated sequence elements. Virology, 240(1), 100–108. https://doi.org/10.1006/viro.1997.8907

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