Bioinformatic analysis suggests that the Cypovirus 1 major core protein cistron harbours an overlapping gene

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Abstract

Members of the genus Cypovirus (family Reoviridae) are common pathogens of insects. These viruses have linear dsRNA genomes divided into 10-11 segments, which have generally been assumed to be monocistronic. Here, bioinformatic evidence is presented for a short overlapping coding sequence (CDS) in the cypovirus genome segment encoding the major core capsid protein VP1, overlapping the 5′-terminal region of the VP1 ORF in the +1 reading frame. In Cypovirus type 1 (CPV-1), a 62-codon AUG-initiated open reading frame (hereafter ORFX) is present in all four available segment 1 sequences. The pattern of base variations across the sequence alignment indicates that ORFX is subject to functional constraints at the amino acid level (even when the constraints due to coding in the overlapping VP1 reading frame are taken into account; MLOGD software). In fact the translated ORFX shows greater amino acid conservation than the overlapping region of VP1. The genomic location of ORFX is consistent with translation via leaky scanning. A 62-64 codon AUG-initiated ORF is present in a corresponding location and reading frame in other available cypovirus sequences (2 CPV-14, 1 CPV-15) and an 87-codon ORFX homologue may also be present in Aedes pseudoscutellaris reovirus. The ORFX amino acid sequences are hydrophilic and basic, with between 12 and 16 Arg/Lys residues in each though, at 7.5-10.2 kDa, the putative ORFX product is too small to appear on typical published protein gels. © 2008 Firth and Atkins; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.

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Firth, A. E., & Atkins, J. F. (2008). Bioinformatic analysis suggests that the Cypovirus 1 major core protein cistron harbours an overlapping gene. Virology Journal, 5. https://doi.org/10.1186/1743-422X-5-62

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