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Nucleic Acids Research 26, 2426 - 2432 (1998)
Analysis
of sequences and predicted structures required for viral satellite RNA
accumulation by in vivo genetic selection
Clifford D. Carpenter and Anne E. Simon*
*Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, University of
Massachusetts, Amherst, MA 01003, USA
Received January 13, 1998; Revised and Accepted March 23, 1998
In vivo genetic selection was used to study the sequences and
structures required for accumulation of subviral sat-RNA C associated
with turnip crinkle virus (TCV). This technique is advantageous over
site-specific mutagenesis by allowing side-by-side selection from
numerous sequence possibilities as well as sequence evolution. A 22
base hairpin and 6 base single-stranded tail located at the
3'-terminus of sat-RNA C were previously identified as the promoter
for minus strand synthesis. Approximately 50% of plants co-inoculated
with TCV and sat-RNA C containing randomized sequence in place of the
22 base hairpin accumulated sat-RNA in uninoculated leaves. The 22
base region differed in sat-RNA accumulating in all infected plants,
but nearly all were predicted to fold into a hairpin structure that
maintained the 6 base tail as a single-stranded sequence. Two
additional rounds of sat-RNA amplification led to four sequence family
'winners', with three families containing multiple variants,
indicating that evolution of these sequences was occurring in plants.
Three of the four sequence family winners had the same 3 bp at the
base of the stem as wild-type sat-RNA C. Two of the winners shared 15
of 22 identical bases, including the entire stem region and extending
two bases into the loop. These results demonstrate the utility of the
in vivo selection approach by showing that both sequence and structure
contribute to a more active 3'-end region for accumulation of sat-RNA
C. |