4.6 Article

Juxtaposition of Two Distant, Serine-Arginine-Rich Protein-Binding Elements Is Required for Optimal Polyadenylation in Rous Sarcoma Virus

Journal

JOURNAL OF VIROLOGY
Volume 85, Issue 21, Pages 11351-11360

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/JVI.00721-11

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Funding

  1. National Cancer Institute [R01 CA78709]

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The Rous sarcoma virus (RSV) polyadenylation site (PAS) is very poorly used in vitro due to suboptimal upstream and downstream elements, and yet similar to 85% of viral transcripts are polyadenylated in vivo. The mechanisms that orchestrate polyadenylation at the weak PAS are not completely understood. It was previously shown that serine-arginine (SR)-rich proteins stimulate RSV PAS use in vitro and in vivo. It has been proposed that viral RNA polyadenylation is stimulated through a nonproductive splice complex that forms between a pseudo 5 ' splice site (5 ' ss) within the negative regulator of splicing (NRS) and a downstream 3 ' ss, which repositions NRS-bound SR proteins closer to the viral PAS. This repositioning is thought to be important for long-distance poly(A) stimulation by the NRS. We report here that a 308-nucleotide deletion downstream of the env 3 ' ss decreased polyadenylation efficiency, suggesting the presence of an additional element required for optimal RSV polyadenylation. Mapping studies localized the poly(A) stimulating element to a region coincident with the Env splicing enhancer, which binds SR proteins, and inactivation of the enhancer and SR protein binding decreased polyadenylation efficiency. The positive effect of the Env enhancer on polyadenylation could be uncoupled from its role in splicing. As with the NRS, the Env enhancer also stimulated use of the viral PAS in vitro. These results suggest that a critical threshold of SR proteins, achieved by juxtaposition of SR protein binding sites within the NRS and Env enhancer, is required for long-range polyadenylation stimulation.

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