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Heise MT, White LJ, Simpson DA, Leonard C, Bernard KA, Meeker RB, Johnston RE. An attenuating mutation in nsP1 of the Sindbis-group virus S.A.AR86 accelerates nonstructural protein processing and up-regulates viral 26S RNA synthesis. J Virol 2003; 77:1149-56. [PMID: 12502831 PMCID: PMC140780 DOI: 10.1128/jvi.77.2.1149-1156.2003] [Citation(s) in RCA: 30] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.4] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/20/2022] Open
Abstract
The Sindbis-group alphavirus S.A.AR86 encodes a threonine at nonstructural protein 1 (nsP1) 538 that is associated with neurovirulence in adult mice. Mutation of the nsP1 538 Thr to the consensus Ile found in nonneurovirulent Sindbis-group alphaviruses attenuates S.A.AR86 for adult mouse neurovirulence, while introduction of Thr at position 538 in a nonneurovirulent Sindbis virus background confers increased neurovirulence (M. T. Heise et al., J. Virol. 74:4207-4213, 2000). Since changes in the viral nonstructural region are likely to affect viral replication, studies were performed to evaluate the effect of Thr or Ile at nsP1 538 on viral growth, nonstructural protein processing, and RNA synthesis. Multistep growth curves in Neuro2A and BHK-21 cells revealed that the attenuated s51 (nsP1 538 Ile) virus had a slight, but reproducible growth advantage over the wild-type s55 (nsP1 538 Thr) virus. nsP1 538 lies within the cleavage recognition domain between nsP1 and nsP2, and the presence of the attenuating Ile at nsP1 538 accelerated the processing of S.A.AR86 nonstructural proteins both in vitro and in infected cells. Since nonstructural protein processing is known to regulate alphavirus RNA synthesis, experiments were performed to evaluate the effect of Ile or Thr at nsP1 538 on viral RNA synthesis. A combination of S.A.AR86-derived reporter assays and RNase protection assays determined that the presence of Ile at nsP1 538 led to earlier expression from the viral 26S promoter without affecting viral minus- or plus-strand synthesis. These results suggest that slower nonstructural protein processing and delayed 26S RNA synthesis in wild-type S.A.AR86 infections may contribute to the adult mouse neurovirulence phenotype of S.A.AR86.
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Affiliation(s)
- Mark T Heise
- Department of Microbiology and Immunology, The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 27599, USA.
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Kääriäinen L, Ahola T. Functions of alphavirus nonstructural proteins in RNA replication. PROGRESS IN NUCLEIC ACID RESEARCH AND MOLECULAR BIOLOGY 2002; 71:187-222. [PMID: 12102555 PMCID: PMC7133189 DOI: 10.1016/s0079-6603(02)71044-1] [Citation(s) in RCA: 97] [Impact Index Per Article: 4.4] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Download PDF] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 12/03/2022]
Abstract
Alphaviruses are enveloped positive-strand RNA viruses transmitted to vertebrate hosts by mosquitoes. Several alphaviruses are pathogenic to humans or domestic animals, causing serious central nervous system infections or milder infections, for example, arthritis, rash, and fever. The structure and replication of Semliki Forest virus (SFV) and Sindbis virus (SIN) have been studied extensively during the past 30 years. Alphaviruses have been important probes in cell biology to study the translation, glycosylation, folding, and transport of membrane glycoproteins, as well as endocytosis and membrane fusion mechanisms. A new organelle, the intermediate compartment, operating between the endoplasmic retieulum and the Golgi complex has been found by the aid of SFV. During the past 10 years, alphavirus replicons have been increasingly used as expression vectors for basic research, for the generation of vaccines, and for the production of recombinant proteins in industrial scale. The main approaches of laboratories in the recent years have been twofold. On one hand, they have discovered and characterized the enzymatic activities of the individual replicase proteins and on the other hand, they have studied the localization, membrane association, and other cell biological aspects of the replication complex.
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Affiliation(s)
- Leevi Kääriäinen
- Institute of Biotechnology, Biocenter Viikki, University of Helsinki, Finland
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Abstract
Sindbis virus (SIN), the type alphavirus, has been studied extensively to identify the viral cis-acting sequences and proteins involved in RNA transcription and replication. However, very little is known about how these processes are coordinated. For example, synthesis of the genomic RNA and the subgenomic mRNA depends on the minus strand. Do these activities occur independently on different templates, or can replication and transcription take place simultaneously on the same template? We describe the appearance of a SIN-specific, plus-sense RNA that is intermediate in size between the genomic and subgenomic RNA species. This RNA, designated RNA II, is observed in a number of different cell lines, both early and late in infection. The number of RNA II species, their sizes, and their abundances are influenced by the subgenomic promoter. We have mapped the 3' end of RNA II to a site within the subgenomic promoter, four nucleotides before the initiation site of the subgenomic mRNA. Our results indicate that the appearance of RNA II is correlated with subgenomic mRNA transcription, such that strong or active promoters tend to increase the abundance of RNA II, relative to weak or less active promoters. RNA II is most abundantly detected with the full promoter and is at much lower abundance with the minimal promoter. The possible origins of RNA II are discussed.
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Affiliation(s)
- M M Wielgosz
- Department of Molecular Microbiology, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri 63110-1093, USA
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Hertz JM, Huang HV. Utilization of heterologous alphavirus junction sequences as promoters by Sindbis virus. J Virol 1992; 66:857-64. [PMID: 1309918 PMCID: PMC240786 DOI: 10.1128/jvi.66.2.857-864.1992] [Citation(s) in RCA: 34] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.1] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 12/26/2022] Open
Abstract
We used Sindbis virus, an alphavirus, as a model to study the evolution of the recognition of viral cis-acting sequences. During the life cycle of alphaviruses, a full-length minus-strand RNA is made and serves as a template for both genomic RNA replication and subgenomic mRNA transcription. Transcription initiates at an internal promoter site, the junction sequence, to produce a subgenomic mRNA. The junction sequences of alphaviruses are highly conserved, but they do contain a number of base differences. These could have been essentially neutral mutations during evolution, such that any of the contemporary sequences can be recognized efficiently by any of the alphaviruses. Alternately, the changes could have resulted in significant functional divergence, such that the contemporary viruses can no longer recognize heterologous junction sequences as promoters. To distinguish between these possibilities, we constructed Sindbis virus derivatives with two subgenomic mRNA promoters. One is the wild-type Sindbis virus promoter used for expression of the structural proteins. The other is either the minimal Sindbis virus promoter or the corresponding junction sequences from other alphaviruses, which are placed upstream of the bacterial chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) gene. RNA analyses were used to determine the relative promoter strengths of the various junction sequences. The results showed that all but two were recognized as promoters by Sindbis virus. CAT enzyme assays were used to measure the accumulation of CAT protein made from mRNAs transcribed by using the heterologous junction sequences as promoters. Most of the viruses expressed amounts of CAT enzyme within 10-fold of each other. The two viruses with junction sequences that were not recognized as promoters did not give significant CAT expression. We conclude that, with respect to Sindbis virus, the junction sequences are functionally conserved; i.e., most of the contemporary nucleotide differences in the junction sequences are neutral or near-neutral mutations. The functional conservation suggests that neither the cis-acting sequence nor the cognate binding site of the transcription factor can change independently. This type of coupled evolution between cis-acting sequences and their cognate viral protein binding sites may be a general phenomenon. For example, it explains the ubiquitous presence of conserved cis-acting sequences in each of the families of RNA viruses. There are implications of this hypothesis for the design of antiviral drugs.
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Affiliation(s)
- J M Hertz
- Department of Molecular Microbiology, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri 63110-1093
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Peränen J, Rikkonen M, Liljeström P, Kääriäinen L. Nuclear localization of Semliki Forest virus-specific nonstructural protein nsP2. J Virol 1990; 64:1888-96. [PMID: 2139138 PMCID: PMC249342 DOI: 10.1128/jvi.64.5.1888-1896.1990] [Citation(s) in RCA: 98] [Impact Index Per Article: 2.9] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 12/30/2022] Open
Abstract
About 50% of Semliki Forest virus-specific nonstructural protein nsP2 is associated with the nuclear fraction in virus-infected BHK cells. Transport into the nucleus must be specific, since only trace amounts of nsP3 and nsP4 and about 13% of nsP1, all derived from the same polyprotein, were found in the nucleus. Subfractionation of [35S]methionine-labeled Semliki Forest virus-infected cells showed that 80 to 90% of the nuclear nsP2 was associated with the nuclear matrix. Indirect immunofluorescence, with anti-nsP2 antiserum, showed the most intensive staining of structures which by Nomarski optics appeared to be nucleoli. In the presence of 1 to 5 micrograms of dactinomycin per ml the nuclei were stained evenly and no nucleoli could be found. Transport of nsP2 into the nucleus occurred early in infection and was fairly rapid. A cDNA encoding the complete nsP2 was isolated by the polymerase chain reaction technique and ligated into a simian virus 40 expression vector derivative. When BHK cells were transfected with this pSV-NS2 vector by the lipofection procedure, nsP2 was expressed in about 1 to 5% of the cells, as shown by indirect immunofluorescence. In positively transfected cells the immunofluorescence stain was most intensive in the nucleoli. Thus, Semliki Forest virus-specific nsP2 must have information which directs it into the nuclear matrix and, more specifically, into the nucleoli.
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Affiliation(s)
- J Peränen
- Institute of Biotechnology, University of Helsinki, Finland
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Sawicki D, Barkhimer DB, Sawicki SG, Rice CM, Schlesinger S. Temperature sensitive shut-off of alphavirus minus strand RNA synthesis maps to a nonstructural protein, nsP4. Virology 1990; 174:43-52. [PMID: 2136781 DOI: 10.1016/0042-6822(90)90052-s] [Citation(s) in RCA: 57] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.7] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 12/30/2022]
Abstract
Minus strand RNA synthesis by the positive strand alphaviruses, Sindbis and Semliki Forest viruses, normally occurs early in infection, is coupled to synthesis of viral nonstructural proteins and to formation of viral replication complexes, and terminates and does not occur late in infection. Previously, ts24 of the A complementation group of Sindbis virus RNA-negative mutants was found to possess, among its other temperature sensitive defects, a temperature sensitivity in the normal cessation of minus strand synthesis which enabled minus strands to be synthesized late in infection at 40 degrees in the absence of protein synthesis. Revertants of ts24 (ts24R1, ts24R2) retained the defect in the shutoff of minus strand synthesis, indicating the lesion was not conditionally lethal and could map outside the A cistron. The studies reported here used an infectious clone of Sindbis virus to identify the mutation responsible for this phenotype. Hybrid viruses were prepared from constructs containing restriction fragments of the cDNA of ts24R1 in place of the corresponding fragments in the infectious SIN HR clone and screened for their ability to synthesize minus strands at 40 degrees in the presence of cycloheximide. A unique base change of an A for a C residue at nt 6339, predicting a change from glutamine to lysine at amino acid 195 in nsP4, was found in genomes of ts24, ts24R1, and ts24R2. Other nucleotide changes present at the 5' and 3' termini did not affect minus strand synthesis. The substitution of the parental Sindbis virus sequence that encompassed nt 6339 in an infectious clone of the ts24R1 revertant eliminated the mutant phenotype. We conclude that the ability to continue minus strand synthesis at 40 degrees exhibited by ts24 and its revertants is caused by an alteration in nsP4, which is the alphavirus replicase or an essential component of the replicase. We hypothesize that this domain of nsP4 functions to fix the minus strand as the stable template of alphavirus replication complexes.
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Affiliation(s)
- D Sawicki
- Department of Microbiology, Medical College of Ohio, Toledo 43699
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Abstract
During the replication cycle of Sindbis virus minus-strand synthesis stops normally at the time that plus-strand synthesis reaches a maximum rate. We have isolated and characterized revertants of ts24, a member of the A complementation group of Sindbis HR mutants, that we had demonstrated previously to have a temperature-sensitive defect in the regulation of minus-strand synthesis. These revertants of ts24 replicated efficiently at 40 degrees but nevertheless retained the temperature sensitive defect in the regulation of minus-strand synthesis: they continued to synthesize minus strands late in the replication cycle at 40 degrees but not at 30 degrees and in the presence or absence of protein synthesis. Although failure to regulate the synthesis of minus strands resulted in continuous minus-strand synthesis and in the accumulation of minus strands, the rate of plus-strand synthesis was not increased concertedly. Minus strands synthesized after the rate of plus-strand synthesis had become constant were demonstrated to be utilized as templates for 26 S mRNA synthesis. Thus, the change from an increasing to a constant rate of plus-strand synthesis during the alphavirus replication cycle cannot be governed solely by the number of minus strands that accumulate in infected cells. We present a model for the preferential utilization of minus strands as a mechanism for the cessation of minus-strand synthesis that occurs normally during alphavirus replication.
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Abstract
The 10 members of the A complementation group of temperature-sensitive (ts) mutants of SIN HR, the heat-resistant strain of Sindbis virus, were divided into two phenotypic subgroups. Subgroup I mutants (ts15, ts17, ts21, ts24, and ts133) demonstrated temperature-sensitive 26 S mRNA synthesis, whereas subgroup II mutants (ts4, ts14, ts16, ts19, and ts138) did not; both ts4 and ts19 demonstrated defective 26 S mRNA synthesis at 30 degrees. None of the A group mutants demonstrated temperature-sensitive 49 S plus-strand synthesis. Temperature-sensitive cleavage of ns230 was demonstrated by subgroup I mutants, except ts21, but not by subgroup II mutants. A revertant of ts133 that grew at 40 degrees retained temperature-sensitive 26 S mRNA synthesis but lost temperature-sensitive cleavage of ns230 and the RNA-negative phenotype. Only ts4, like ts11 of the B complementation group, demonstrated temperature-sensitive minus-strand RNA synthesis. In addition to ts24, cells infected with ts17 or ts133 continued to synthesize minus strands after shiftup in the absence of continued protein synthesis, and resumed synthesis of minus strands if shifted to the nonpermissive temperature after minus-strand synthesis had ceased at the permissive temperature.
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Sawicki SG, Sawicki DL, Kääriäinen L, Keränen S. A Sindbis virus mutant temperature-sensitive in the regulation of minus-strand RNA synthesis. Virology 1981; 115:161-72. [PMID: 7292988 DOI: 10.1016/0042-6822(81)90098-2] [Citation(s) in RCA: 59] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.4] [Reference Citation Analysis] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/24/2023]
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Sawicki DL, Sawicki SG, Keränen S, Kääriäinen L. Specific Sindbis virus-coded function for minus-strand RNA synthesis. J Virol 1981; 39:348-58. [PMID: 7277580 PMCID: PMC171343 DOI: 10.1128/jvi.39.2.348-358.1981] [Citation(s) in RCA: 88] [Impact Index Per Article: 2.0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/24/2023] Open
Abstract
The synthesis of minus-strand RNA was studied in cell cultures infected with the heat-resistant strain of Sindbis virus and with temperature-sensitive (ts) belonging to complementation groups A, B, F, and G, all of which exhibited an RNA-negative (RNA-) phenotype when infection was initiated and maintained at 39 degrees C, the nonpermissive temperature. When infected cultures were shifted from 28 degrees C (the permissive temperature) to 39 degrees C at 3 h postinfection, the synthesis of viral minus-strand RNA ceased in cultures infected with ts mutants of complementation groups B and F, but continued in cultures infected with the parental virus and mutans of complementation groups A and G. In cultures infected with ts11 of complementation group B, the synthesis of viral minus-strand RNA ceased, whereas the synthesis of 42S and 26S plus-strand RNAs continued for at least 5 h after the shift to 39 degrees C. However, when ts11-infected cultures were returned to 28 degrees C 1 h after the shift to 39 degrees C, the synthesis of viral minus-strand RNA resumed, and the rate of viral RNA synthesis increased. The recovery of minus-strand synthesis translation of new proteins. We conclude that at least one viral function is required for alphavirus minus-strand synthesis that is not required for plus-strand synthesis. In cultures infected with ts6 of complementation group F, the syntheses of both viral plus-strand and minus-strand RNAs were drastically reduced after the shift to 39 degrees C. Since ts6 failed to synthesize both plus-strand and minus-strand RNAs after the shift to 39 degrees C, at least one common viral component appears to be required for the synthesis of both minus-strand and plus-strand RNAs.
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Abstract
Semliki Forest virus (SFV)-infected BHK-21, Vero, and HeLa cells incorporated [3H]uridine into 42S and 26S plus-strand RNA and into viral minus-strand RNA (complementary to the 42S virion RNA) early in the infectious cycle. Between 3 and 4 h postinfection, the synthesis of minus-strand RNA ceased in these cultures, although the synthesis of plus-strand RNA continued at a maximal rate. At the time of cessation of minus-strand RNA synthesis, two changes in the pattern of viral protein synthesis were detected: a decrease in the translation of nonstructural proteins and an increase in the translation of the viral structural proteins. Addition of cycloheximide and puromycin to cultures of SFV-infected BHK cells actively synthesizing both viral plus- and minus-strand RNA resulted within 15 to 30 min in the selective shutoff of minus-strand RNA synthesis. Removal of the cycloheximide-containing medium led to the resumption of minus-strand synthesis and to an increased rate of viral RNA synthesis. We conclude that the minus-strand polymerase regulates the rate of SFV plus-strand RNA synthesis by determining the number of minus-strand templates and that the synthesis of the minus-strand templates is regulated at the level of translation by a mechanism which utilizes one or more short-lived polymerase proteins.
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Keränen S, Kääriäinen L. Functional defects of RNA-negative temperature-sensitive mutants of Sindbis and Semliki Forest viruses. J Virol 1979; 32:19-29. [PMID: 541824 PMCID: PMC353522 DOI: 10.1128/jvi.32.1.19-29.1979] [Citation(s) in RCA: 64] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.4] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 12/23/2022] Open
Abstract
Defects in RNA and protein synthesis of seven Sindbis virus and seven Semliki Forest virus RNA-negative, temperature-sensitive mutants were studied after shift to the restrictive temperature (39 degrees C) in the middle of the growth cycle. Only one of the mutants, Ts-6 of Sindbis virus, a representative of complementation group F, was clearly unable to continue RNA synthesis at 39 degrees C, apparently due to temperature-sensitive polymerase. The defect was reversible and affected the synthesis of both 42S and 26S RNA equally, suggesting that the same polymerase component(s) is required for the synthesis of both RNA species. One of the three Sindbis virus mutants of complementation group A, Ts-4, and one RNA +/- mutant of Semliki Forest virus, ts-10, showed a polymerase defect even at the permissive temperature. Seven of the 14 RNA-negative mutants showed a preferential reduction in 26S RNA synthesis. The 26S RNA-defective mutants of Sindbis virus were from two different complementation groups, A and G, indicating that functions of two viral nonstructural proteins ("A" and "G") are required in the regulation of the synthesis of 26S RNA. Since the synthesis of 42S RNA continued, these functions of proteins A and G are not needed for the polymerization of RNA late in infection. The RNA-negative phenotype of 26S RNA-deficient mutants implies that proteins regulating the synthesis of this subgenomic RNA must have another function vital for RNA synthesis early in infection or in the assembly of functional polymerase. Several of the mutants having a specific defect in the synthesis of 26S RNA showed an accumulation of a large nonstructural precursor protein with a molecular weight of about 200,000. One even larger protein was demonstrated in both Semliki Forest virus- and Sindbis virus-infected cells which probably represents the entire nonstructural polyprotein.
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Stollar V. Inhibition of Sindbis virus replication in Aedes albopictus cells deprived of methionine. Virology 1978; 91:504-7. [PMID: 741661 DOI: 10.1016/0042-6822(78)90400-2] [Citation(s) in RCA: 23] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.5] [Reference Citation Analysis] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 12/24/2022]
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Mento SJ, Stollar V. Effect of ouabain on sindbis virus replication in ouabain-sensitive and ouabain-resistant Aedes albopictus cells (Singh). Virology 1978; 87:58-65. [PMID: 664253 DOI: 10.1016/0042-6822(78)90157-5] [Citation(s) in RCA: 18] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.4] [Reference Citation Analysis] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 12/23/2022]
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Abstract
UV irradiation of chicken fibroblasts infected with Semliki Forest or Sindbis virus has been used to investigate the mechanism of synthesis of 42S and 26S RNA, the major plus-strand virus-specified RNAs formed during the multiplication of standard virus particles. From an analysis of the kinetics of UV inactivation of the synthesis of these two RNAs, we conclude (i) that 26S RNA is formed by internal transcriptive initiation from a point about two-thirds of the way from the 3' end of the 42S negative-strand template; (ii) that there exists a population of plus-strand synthesizing complexes whose members are each capable of synthesizing both 42S and 26S RNA; and (iii) that, on a time-averaged basis, each complex in wild-type virus-infected cells contains one virus polymerase mediating 42S RNA synthesis and three mediating 26S RNA synthesis. The RNA phenotypes of 15 RNA(-)ts mutants of Sindbis virus have been examined after temperature shift to the restrictive temperature. Under these conditions, cells infected with three mutants, N2, N7, and E268, synthesized four to six times as much 42S RNA (relative to 26S RNA) as wild-type virus-infected cells. These studies were extended by examining, in detail, the RNA and polypeptide phenotypes of mutants N2 and E268. These experiments showed that, in N2- and E268-infected cells, one of the virus-specified nonstructural (NS) polypeptides (NS p89; H. Brzeski and S. I. T. Kennedy, J. Virol. 22:420-429, 1977) is thermolabile after shift up to restrictive temperature. This finding, together with the observation that, after shift, the 26S/42S RNA ratio in N2-infected cells changes markedly in favor of 42S RNA synthesis, leads us to conclude that, of the three NS polypeptides, NS p89 modulates 26S RNA synthesis.
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Sawicki DL, Kaariainen L, Lambek C, Gomatos PJ. Mechanism for control of synthesis of Semliki Forest virus 26S and 42s RNA. J Virol 1978; 25:19-27. [PMID: 621775 PMCID: PMC353896 DOI: 10.1128/jvi.25.1.19-27.1978] [Citation(s) in RCA: 43] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.9] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 12/23/2022] Open
Abstract
When cells infected with the Semliki Forest virus (SFV) mutant ts-4 were shifted to the nonpermissive temperature, synthesis of 26S RNA ceased, whereas synthesis of 42S RNA continued normally. These two single-stranded SFV RNAs are synthesized in two types of replicative intermediate (RI), 26S RNA in RI(b) and 42S RNA in RI(a). Cessation of 26S RNA synthesis after shift up in temperature was accompanied by loss of RI(b). When infected cells were shifted back down to 27 degrees C, 26S RNA synthesis resumed, coincident with the reappearance of RI(b). In both types of RI, the 42S minus-strand RNA is template for synthesis of plus-strand RNA. In pulse-chase experiments, we obtained RIs labeled only in their minus-strand RNA, and thus could follow the fate of RIs assembled at 27 degrees C when they were shifted to 39 degrees C. Our results show that, after shift up to 39 degrees C, there was a quantitative conversion of RIs in which 26S RNA had been synthesized to RIs in which 42S RNA was synthesized. This conversion of RI(b) to RI(a) was reversible, since RIs in which 26S RNA was synthesized reappeared when the infected cultures were shifted back down to 27 degrees C. We propose that, associated with RI(b), in which 26S RNA is synthesized, there is a virus-specific protein that functions to promote initiation of 26S RNA transcription at an internal site on the 42S minus-strand RNA and to block transcription on the minus strand in this region by the SFV RNA polymerase that had bound and was copying the minus-strand RNA from its 3' end. A ribonuclease-sensitive region would thus result in the sequence adjacent to the one that was complementary to 26S RNA. This virus-specific protein is not a component of the SFV RNA polymerase that continues to transcribe 42S RNA, and it is temperature sensitive in ts-4 mutant-infected cells. When this virus-specific protein is not present on RIs, the SFV polymerase transcribes the whole 42S minus-strand RNA and yields 42S plus-strand RNA.
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Keränen S. Complementation in 26 S RNA synthesis between temperature-sensitive mutants of Semliki Forest virus. FEBS Lett 1977; 80:164-8. [PMID: 560998 DOI: 10.1016/0014-5793(77)80431-6] [Citation(s) in RCA: 2] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 12/23/2022]
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Keränen S. Interference of wild type virus replication by an RNA negative temperature-sensitive mutant of Semliki Forest virus. Virology 1977; 80:1-11. [PMID: 878309 DOI: 10.1016/0042-6822(77)90376-2] [Citation(s) in RCA: 13] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.3] [Reference Citation Analysis] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 12/24/2022]
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Brzeski H, Kennedy SI. Synthesis of Sindbis virus nonstructural polypeptides in chicken embryo fibroblasts. J Virol 1977; 22:420-9. [PMID: 559103 PMCID: PMC515733 DOI: 10.1128/jvi.22.2.420-429.1977] [Citation(s) in RCA: 35] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.7] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 12/23/2022] Open
Abstract
The identification of eight previously undescribed polypeptides in chicken embryo cells infected with Sindbis virus is reported. Seven of these polypeptides were distinguishable from the virus structural polypeptides and their precursors by their molecular weights and tryptic peptide maps. The eighth was closely related to pE2 (Schlesinger and Schlesinger, 1973), a precursor to one of the virus particle glycoproteins. Pulse-chase experiments and the use of an inhibitor of proteolytic cleavage allowed a division of the seven nonstructural (NS) polypeptides into three stable end products (NS p89, NS p82, and NS p60) and four precursors (p230, p215, p150, and p76). The labeling kinetics after synchronous initiation of translation indicated that synthesis of the NS polypeptides started at a single site and showed that the order of the genes coding for the NS polypeptides was (5' leads to 3') NS p60, NS p89, and NS p82. Short-pulse experiments under conditions of both synchronized and nonsynchronized translation suggested that cleavage of the primary translation product of the NS genes occurred only after its synthesis was completed and that the first cleavage removed the C-terminal polypeptide. From these and other experiments, we propose a detailed scheme for the synthesis and processing of Sindbis virus NS polypeptides.
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Bracha M, Leone A, Schlesinger MJ. Formation of a Sindbis virus nonstructural protein and its relation of 42S mRNA function. J Virol 1976; 20:612-20. [PMID: 994299 PMCID: PMC355038 DOI: 10.1128/jvi.20.3.612-620.1976] [Citation(s) in RCA: 29] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.6] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 12/25/2022] Open
Abstract
Chicken embryo fibroblasts infected with an RNA- temperature-sensitive mutant (ts24) of Sindbis virus accumulated a large-molecular-weight protein (p200) when cells were shifted from the permissive to nonpermissive temperature. Appearance of p200 was accompanied by a decrease in the synthesis of viral structural proteins, but [35S]methionine tryptic peptides from p200 were different from those derived from a 140,000-molecular-weight polypeptide that contains the amino acid sequences of viral structural proteins. Among three other RNA- ts mutants that were tested for p200 formation, only one (ts21) produced this protein. The accumulation of p200 in ts24- and ts21-infected cells could be correlated with a shift in the formation of 42S and 26S viral RNA that led to an increase in the relative amounts of 42S RNA. These data indicate that p200 is translated from the nonstructural genes of the virion 42S RNA and further suggest that this RNA does not function effectively in vivo as an mRNA for the Sindbis virus structural proteins.
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Keränen S, Kääriäinen L. Isolation and basic characterization of temperature-sensitive mutants from Semliki Forest virus;. ACTA PATHOLOGICA ET MICROBIOLOGICA SCANDINAVICA. SECTION B: MICROBIOLOGY AND IMMUNOLOGY 1974; 82:810-20. [PMID: 4533222 DOI: 10.1111/j.1699-0463.1974.tb02378.x] [Citation(s) in RCA: 21] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.4] [Reference Citation Analysis] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/11/2023]
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Abstract
Homologous interference during Sindbis virus infection has been investigated. Prior infection of either chicken embryo fibroblast or BHK(21) cell cultures results in reduced yields of progeny virions of the superinfecting genotype. This reduction in yield results from a reduction in the number of cells in the cultures capable of producing the superinfecting genotype. The development of interference parallels the attachment kinetics of Sindbis virus. Interference requires an active viral genome since the activity is sensitive to inactivation by ultraviolet light, and an RNA(-) mutant, ts-24, fails to induce interference under nonpermissive conditions. However, ts-6, an RNA(-) mutant belonging to a different complementation group, and the RNA(+) mutants, ts-2 and ts-20, interfere at both permissive and nonpermissive temperatures.
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24
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Cancedda R, Swanson R, Schlesinger MJ. Effects of different RNAs and components of the cell-free system on in vitro synthesis of Sindbis viral proteins. J Virol 1974; 14:652-63. [PMID: 4851742 PMCID: PMC355560 DOI: 10.1128/jvi.14.3.652-663.1974] [Citation(s) in RCA: 39] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.8] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/12/2023] Open
Abstract
Cell-free extracts from Krebs ascites cells and rabbit reticulocytes synthesized a variety of viral-specific proteins when programmed with several different kinds of Sindbis viral RNAs. The RNAs included purified virion RNA (42S) and two species (26S and "33S") of purified intracellular viral messenger RNAs from viral-infected BHK cells. Proteins formed in vitro were analyzed by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, rate-zonal centrifugation in urea-sucrose gradients, two-dimensional tryptic peptide fingerprints, and immunoprecipitation with rabbit anti-Sindbis virus serum. The only major identifiable protein formed in vitro was viral capsid, but the relative amount of capsid produced was determined by the mRNA, the source of cell-free extract, and the components of the cell-free system. Virion RNA directed synthesis of larger-molecular-weight proteins than did intracellular viral RNAs, and some of this protein was distinct from that formed by the smaller viral RNAs. Indirect evidence is presented for in vitro synthesis of viral envelope proteins.
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25
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Hunt JM, Marcus PI. Mechanism of Sindbis virus-induced intrinsic interference with vesicular stomatitis virus replication. J Virol 1974; 14:99-109. [PMID: 4365326 PMCID: PMC355482 DOI: 10.1128/jvi.14.1.99-109.1974] [Citation(s) in RCA: 15] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.3] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/10/2023] Open
Abstract
Heterologous viral interference is induced by Sindbis virus against vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) in a manner analogous to intrinsic interference with Newcastle disease virus replication. Interference in both systems (i) depends upon early expression of the inducing virus genome, (ii) shows similar kinetics of induction, (iii) does not involve interferon action, and (iv) appears to be manifest as an all-or-none effect. VSV can be added to the list of viruses blocked by intrinsic interference. Sindbis virus-induced intrinsic interference with VSV replication is not mediated through homotypic interference by defective interfering particles; rather, T-particle and B-particle synthesis is inhibited. Significantly, intrinsic interference has no effect on primary transcription directed by the virion-associated transcriptase in VSV-challenged cells. However, Sindbis virus appears to induce interference with the VSV-RNA synthesized subsequent to primary transcription, namely, that which is dependent on protein synthesis. Thus, the target of intrinsic interference appears to be a reaction subsequent to primary transcription but prior to the appearance of protein synthesis-dependent VSV RNA, secondary transcription.
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26
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27
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Igarashi A, Sasao F, Fukai K. Intracellular components associated with Chikungunya virus-specific ribonucleic acids in infected BHK21 cells. JAPANESE JOURNAL OF MICROBIOLOGY 1973; 17:401-8. [PMID: 4203090 DOI: 10.1111/j.1348-0421.1973.tb00791.x] [Citation(s) in RCA: 2] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/09/2023]
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Abstract
Polysomes were prepared from Sindbis virus-infected BHK cells. The major species of RNA in these polysomes was identified as 26S RNA (interjacent RNA) by (i) disrupting the polysomes with EDTA; (ii) treating the infected cells with puromycin; and (iii) isolating polysomes from cells infected with a temperature-sensitive mutant that does not form nucleocapsids. Small amounts of 42S RNA and 33S RNA were also found in polysomes.
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29
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Abstract
The structural proteins of wild-type Sindbis virus were shown to arise by posttranslational cleavage of larger precursors. The proteins synthesized in wildtype infection were compared with those specified by ts-11, a temperature-sensitive mutant unable to synthesize viral RNA at the restrictive temperature. Abnormally large, virus-specific proteins were found in the mutant-infected cells after the shift from 28 C to 41.5 C. These large polypeptides were presumably precursors which were cleaved too rapidly to be detected in the wild-type infection. The largest had a molecular weight of 133,000 and was the same size as the apparent precursor detected during infection with a group of Sindbis mutants which could not form nucleocapsids at the nonpermissive temperature. The stability of ts-11-specific RNA synthesis, after shift from permissive to restrictive conditions, differed from that in cells infected by wild-type virus, indicating that the virus had a genetic lesion in an enzyme involved in RNA synthesis. This mutation might have caused the precursor to fold incorrectly so that it could not be cleaved. The possibility cannot be excluded, however, that a second lesion in an uncharacterized viral function, such as a protease, was the cause of the accumulation of the precursors.
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31
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Grimley PM, Levin JG, Berezesky IK, Friedman RM. Specific membranous structures associated with the replication of group A arboviruses. J Virol 1972; 10:492-503. [PMID: 4672392 PMCID: PMC356491 DOI: 10.1128/jvi.10.3.492-503.1972] [Citation(s) in RCA: 81] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.6] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/11/2023] Open
Abstract
INTRACYTOPLASMIC MEMBRANOUS STRUCTURES OF A UNIQUE TYPE WERE ASSOCIATED WITH THE REPLICATION OF THREE GROUP A ARBOVIRUSES: Semliki Forest virus (SFV), Sindbis virus, or Western equine encephalomyelitis virus. The structures, referred to as type 1 cytopathic vacuoles (CPV-1), were membrane-limited and characteristically lined by regular membranous spherules measuring 50 nm in diameter. The membranous spherules typically contained a fine central density, but were neither virus cores nor virions. Detection of CPV-1 by electron microscopy at 3 to 6 hr postinfection coincided with the time of rapid virus growth and preceded the accumulation of virus nucleocapsids. A range of 20 to 100 CPV-1 profiles were counted per 100 ultrathin cell sections at 6 to 9 hr postinfection when viruses were grown in chick embryo, baby hamster kidney, or mouse L cells. Maximum counts remained in the same range even when the multiplicity of infection was varied over 100-fold. Inhibition of cellular ribonucleic acid (RNA) and protein synthesis by actinomycin D during SFV infection did not decrease the counts of CPV-1; however, biogenesis of CPV-1 was decreased when viral replication was limited by inhibitors of viral RNA synthesis (guanidine) or of viral protein synthesis (cycloheximide). On the basis of present and earlier findings, we concluded that formation of CPV-1 must result from a virus-specified modification of pre-existing host cell macromolecules.
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32
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Abstract
We investigated the metabolic requirements for the decrease in phospholipid synthesis previously observed by Pfefferkorn and Hunter in primary cultures of chick embryo fibroblasts infected with Sindbis virus. The incorporation of (32)PO(4) into all classes of phospholipids was found to decline at the same rate and to the same extent; thus, incorporation of (14)C-choline into acid-precipitable form provided a convenient measure of phospholipid synthesis that was used in subsequent experiments. Experiments with temperature-sensitive mutants suggested that some viral ribonucleic acid (RNA) synthesis was essential for the inhibition of choline incorporation, but that functional viral structural proteins were not required. The reduction in phospholipid synthesis was probably a secondary effect of infection resulting from viral inhibition of the cellular RNA and protein synthesis. All three inhibitory effects required about the same amount of viral RNA synthesis; the inhibition of host RNA and protein synthesis began sooner than the decline in phospholipid synthesis; and both actinomycin D and cycloheximide inhibited (14)C-choline incorporation in uninfected cells. In contrast, incorporation of (14)C-choline into BHK-21 cells was not decreased by 10 hr of exposure to actinomycin D and declined only slowly after cycloheximide treatment. Growth of Sindbis virus in BHK cells did not cause the marked stimulation of phospholipid synthesis seen in picornavirus infections of other mammalian cells; however, inhibition was seen only late in infection.
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33
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Abstract
The effect of guanidine on the replication of the group A arboviruses, Sindbis virus, and Semliki Forest virus (SFV) was studied. Guanidine rapidly, but reversibly, inhibited SFV ribonucleic acid (RNA) synthesis. The synthesis of all species of viral RNA was inhibited, but that of ribonuclease-resistant forms was least affected. This inhibition occurred when the drug was added at any point during the log phase of virus growth. The growth of SFV was also markedly inhibited, but Sindbis virus growth was unimpaired. Infection of guanidine-treated cells with the viruses together resulted in a significant inhibition of the yields of both. It appears that, in the case of Sindbis virus, viral RNA is ordinarily produced in such excess that inhibition of its synthesis does not reduce virus yields. In the case of SFV, guanidine also markedly distorts the pattern of RNA synthesis by greatly decreasing the production of the 26S interjacent RNA form. This may account for the observed inhibition of SFV growth in the presence of guanidine.
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