Infectious human respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) was produced by the intracellular coexpression of five plasmid-borne cDNAs. One cDNA encoded a complete positive-sense version of the RSV genome (corresponding to the replicative intermediate RNA or antigenome), and each of the other four encoded a separate RSV protein, namely, the major nucleocapsid N protein, the nucleocapsid P phosphoprotein, the major polymerase L protein, or the protein from the 5' proximal open reading frame of the M2 mRNA [M2(0RF1)]. RSV was not produced if any of the five plasmids was omitted. The requirement for the M2(0RF1) protein is consistent with its recent identification as a transcription elongation factor and contirms its importance for RSV gene expression. It should thus be possible to introduce defined changes into infectious RSV. This should be useful for basic studies of RSV molecular biology and pathogenesis; in addition, there are immediate applications to the development of live attenuated vaccine strains bearing predetermined defined attenuating mutations.Human respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is the most important pediatric viral respiratory pathogen worldwide (1-3). This ubiquitous highly infectious agent emerges each year in seasonal epidemics and nearly everyone is infected at least once within the first 2 years of life. RSV disease is responsible for considerable morbidity and mortality and lacks an approved vaccine or highly effective antiviral therapy. Research on RSV is impeded by its poor growth in tissue culture, the instability of the virion, and the lack of a highly permissive experimental animal other than the chimpanzee.Resistance to RSV reinfection induced by natural infection is incomplete but increases incrementally with repeated exposure. Thus, RSV can infect multiple times during childhood and later life, but serious disease usually is limited to the first and sometimes second infections of life. The minimum goal of RSV immunoprophylaxis is to induce sufficient resistance to prevent serious disease associated with the first or second infection.RSV is a member of the pneumovirus genus of the paramyxovirus family (1, 4 The development of methods for introducing designed changes into genomic RNA of nonsegmented negative-strand RNA viruses was impeded by the lack of homologous viral recombination and the lack of infectivity of naked genomic RNA. The supposition that the minimum unit of infectivity for this type of virus is a nucleocapsid competent for RNA synthesis suggested a different strategy to produce infectious virus from viral cDNA. This involved the intracellular coexpression, from separate transfected plasmids, of cDNAencoded genomic or antigenomic RNA and those viral proteins necessary to generate a transcribing and replicating nucleocapsid. cDNA expression would be driven by T7 RNA polymerase supplied by a vaccinia recombinant virus. This approach was developed first by using short internally deleted analogs of genomic or antigenomic RNA ("minigenomes") that were shown to participate in...
RNA synthesis by the paramyxovirus respiratory syncytial virus, a ubiquitous human pathogen, was found to be more complex than previously appreciated for the nonsegmented negative-strand RNA viruses. Intracellular RNA replication of a plasmid-encoded "minigenome" analog of viral genomic RNA was directed by coexpression of the N, P, and L proteins. But, under these conditions, the greater part of mRNA synthesis terminated prematurely. This difference in processivity between the replicase and the transcriptase was unanticipated because the two enzymes ostensively shared the same protein subunits and template. Coexpression of the M2 gene at a low level of input plasmid resulted in the efficient production of full-length mRNA and, in the case of a dicistronic minigenome, sequential transcription. At a higher level, coexpression of the M2 gene inhibited transcription and RNA replication. The M2 mRNA contains two overlapping translational open reading frames (ORFs), which were segregated for further analysis. Expression of the upstream ORFI, which encoded the previously described 22-kDa M2 protein, was associated with transcription elongation. A model involving this protein in the balance between transcription and replication is proposed. ORF2, which lacks an assigned protein, was associated with inhibition of RNA synthesis. We propose that this activity renders nucleocapsids synthetically quiescent prior to incorporation into virions.The paramyxovirus human respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is a nonsegmented negative-strand RNA virus (1). Information on the molecular biology of this large group of viruses is based mainly on the rhabdovirus vesicular stomatitis virus and the paramyxovirus Sendai virus (2-5). The RNA genomes of these prototype viruses are tightly encapsidated by the major nucleocapsid N or NP protein and also are associated with the nucleocapsid phosphoprotein P and the large L polymerase protein. Transcription initiates at the 3' extragenic leader region of genomic RNA and proceeds by a sequential, polar, stop-start mechanism that produces subgenomic mRNAs. RNA replication involves a switch to readthrough synthesis to produce a genome-length positive strand replicative intermediate (antigenome), which also is tightly encapsidated and serves as the template for production of progeny genomes.The genome of RSV is 15,222 nt long. It encodes 10 major species of mRNA and 10 major viral proteins, compared with 5-7 mRNAs for the prototype nonsegmented negative-strand RNA viruses. Several RSV proteins lack known counterparts in most or all other nonsegmented negative-strand virusesnamely, two The publication costs of this article were defrayed in part by page charge payment. This article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. §1734 solely to indicate this fact.in the middle of the molecule (see Fig. 4); the upstream ORF1 encodes the M2(ORF1) protein and the downstream ORF2 lacks an assigned protein (6). Other RSV proteins, such as N, P, and L, appear to have dire...
Previously, a cDNA was constructed so that transcription by T7 RNA polymerase yielded a ϳ1-kb negativesense analog of genomic RNA of human respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) containing the gene for chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) under the control of putative RSV transcription motifs and flanked by the RSV genomic termini. When transfected into RSV-infected cells, this minigenome was ''rescued,'' as evidenced by high levels of CAT expression and the production of transmissible particles which propagated and expressed high levels of CAT expression during serial passage (P. L. Collins, M. A. Mink, and D. S. Stec, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA, 88:9663-9667, 1991). Here, this cDNA, together with a second one designed to yield an exact-copy positive-sense RSV-CAT RNA antigenome, were each modified to contain a self-cleaving hammerhead ribozyme for the generation of a nearly exact 3 end. Each cDNA was transfected into cells infected with a vaccinia virus recombinant expressing T7 RNA polymerase, together with plasmids encoding the RSV N, P, and L proteins, each under the control of a T7 promoter. When the plasmid-supplied template was the mini-antigenome, the minigenome was produced. When the plasmid-supplied template was the minigenome, the products were mini-antigenome, subgenomic polyadenylated mRNA and progeny minigenome. Identification of progeny minigenome made from the plasmid-supplied minigenome template indicates that the full RSV RNA replication cycle occurred. RNA synthesis required all three RSV proteins, N, P, and L, and was ablated completely by the substitution of Asn for Asp at position 989 in the L protein. Thus, the N, P, and L proteins were sufficient for the synthesis of correct minigenome and antigenome, but this was not the case for subgenomic mRNA, indicating that the requirements for RNA replication and transcription are not identical. Complementation with N, P, and L alone yielded an mRNA pattern containing a large fraction of molecules of incomplete, heterogeneous size. In contrast, complementation with RSV (supplying all of the RSV gene products) yielded a single discrete mRNA band. Superinfection with RSV of cells staging N/P/L-based RNA synthesis yielded the single discrete mRNA species. Some additional factor supplied by RSV superinfection appeared to be involved in transcription, the most obvious possibility being one or more additional RSV gene products.
Preceding and following each gene of respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) are two conserved sequences, the gene-start (GS) and gene-end (GE) motifs, respectively, which are thought to be transcription signals. The functions and boundaries of these signals and the process of sequential transcription were analyzed with cDNA-encoded RNA analogs (minigenomes) of nonsegmented negative-sense RSV genomic RNA. Two minigenomes were used. The monocistronic RSV-CAT minigenome consists of the chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) translational open reading frame (ORF) bordered by the GS and GE motifs and flanked by the 3 leader and 5 trailer extragenic regions of genomic RNA. The dicistronic RSV-CAT-LUC minigenome is a derivative of RSV-CAT into which the ORF for luciferase (LUC), bordered by GS and GE motifs, was inserted downstream of the CAT gene with an intergenic region positioned between the two genes. Each minigenome was synthesized in vitro and transfected into RSV-infected cells, where it was replicated and transcribed to yield the predicted polyadenylated subgenomic mRNA(s). The only RSV sequences required for efficient transcription and RNA replication were the 44-nucleotide 3 leader region, the last 40 nucleotides of the 5 trailer region, and the 9-to 10-nucleotide GS and 12-to 13-nucleotide GE motifs. The GS and GE motifs functioned as self-contained, transportable transcription signals which could be attached to foreign sequences to direct their transcription into subgenomic mRNAs. Removal of the GS motif greatly reduced transcription of its gene, and the requirement for this element was particularly strict for the gene in the downstream position. Ablation of the promoter-proximal GS signal was not associated with increased antigenome synthesis. Consistent with its proposed role in termination and polyadenylation, removal of the CAT GE signal in RSV-CAT resulted in the synthesis of a nonpolyadenylated CAT mRNA, and in RSV-CAT-LUC the same mutation resulted in readthrough transcription to yield a dicistronic CAT-LUC mRNA. The latter result showed that a downstream GS signal is not recognized for reinitiation by the polymerase if it is already engaged in mRNA synthesis; instead, it is recognized only if the polymerase first terminates transcription at an upstream termination signal. This result also showed that ongoing transcription did not open the downstream LUC gene for internal polymerase entry. Removal of both the GS and GE signals of the upstream CAT gene in RSV-CAT-LUC silenced expression of both genes, confirming that independent polymerase entry at an internal gene is insignificant. Remarkably, whereas both genes were silent when the CAT GS and GE signals were both absent, restoration of the CAT GE signal alone restored a significant level (approximately 10 to 12% of the wild-type level) of synthesis of both subgenomic mRNAs. This analysis identified a component of sequential transcription that was independent of the promoter-proximal GS signal and appeared to involve readthrough from the leader region.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
hi@scite.ai
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.