Das A T, Klaver B, Berkhout B
Department of Human Retrovirology, Academic Medical Center, University of Amsterdam, 1105 AZ Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
J Virol. 1999 Jan;73(1):81-91. doi: 10.1128/JVI.73.1.81-91.1999.
Some retroviruses with an extended repeat (R) region encode the polyadenylation signal within the R region such that this signal is present at both the 5' and 3' ends of the viral transcript. This necessitates differential regulation to either repress recognition of the 5' polyadenylation signal or enhance usage of the 3' signal. The human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) genome encodes an inherently efficient polyadenylation signal within the 97-nucleotide R region. Polyadenylation at the 5' HIV-1 polyadenylation site is inhibited by downstream splicing signals, and usage of the 3' polyadenylation site is triggered by an upstream enhancer element. In this paper, we demonstrate that this on-off switch of the HIV-1 polyadenylation signal is controlled by a secondary RNA structure that occludes part of the AAUAAA hexamer motif, which we have termed the polyA hairpin. Opening the 5' hairpin by mutation triggered premature polyadenylation and caused reduced synthesis of viral RNA, indicating that the RNA structure plays a pivotal role in repression of the 5' polyadenylation site. Apparently, the same hairpin structure does not interfere with efficient usage of the 3' polyadenylation site, which may be due to the presence of the upstream enhancer element. However, when the 3' hairpin was further stabilized by mutation, we measured a complete loss of 3' polyadenylation. Thus, the thermodynamic stability of the polyA hairpin is delicately balanced to allow nearly complete repression of the 5' site yet efficient activation of the 3' site. This is the first report of regulated polyadenylation that is mediated by RNA secondary structure. A similar hairpin motif that occludes the polyadenylation signal can be proposed for other lentiviruses and members of the spumaretroviruses, suggesting that this represents a more general gene expression strategy of complex retroviruses.
一些具有延伸重复(R)区域的逆转录病毒在R区域内编码聚腺苷酸化信号,使得该信号存在于病毒转录本的5'和3'末端。这就需要进行差异调节,以抑制对5'聚腺苷酸化信号的识别或增强对3'信号的利用。人类免疫缺陷病毒1型(HIV-1)基因组在97个核苷酸的R区域内编码一个内在高效的聚腺苷酸化信号。5' HIV-1聚腺苷酸化位点的聚腺苷酸化受到下游剪接信号的抑制,而3'聚腺苷酸化位点的利用则由上游增强子元件触发。在本文中,我们证明HIV-1聚腺苷酸化信号的这种开关是由一种二级RNA结构控制的,该结构遮盖了部分AAUAAA六聚体基序,我们将其称为聚A发夹。通过突变打开5'发夹会引发过早的聚腺苷酸化,并导致病毒RNA合成减少,这表明RNA结构在抑制5'聚腺苷酸化位点中起关键作用。显然,相同的发夹结构不会干扰3'聚腺苷酸化位点的有效利用,这可能是由于上游增强子元件的存在。然而,当通过突变进一步稳定3'发夹时,我们测得3'聚腺苷酸化完全丧失。因此,聚A发夹的热力学稳定性被精确平衡,以允许几乎完全抑制5'位点而有效激活3'位点。这是关于由RNA二级结构介导的调控聚腺苷酸化的首次报道。可以为其他慢病毒和泡沫逆转录病毒成员提出一种类似的遮盖聚腺苷酸化信号的发夹基序,这表明这代表了复杂逆转录病毒更普遍的基因表达策略。