๐ Characterization of the role of hexamer AGUAAA and poly(A) tail in coronavirus polyadenylation
ยฉ 2016 Peng et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. Similar to eukaryotic mRNA, the positive-strand coronavirus genome of โผ30 kilobases is 5'-capped and 3'-polyadenylated. It has been demonstrated that the length of the coronaviral poly(A) tail is not static but regulated during infection; however, little is known regarding the factors involved in coronaviral polyadenylation and its regulation. Here, we show that during infection, the level of coronavirus poly(A) tail lengthening depends on the initial length upon infection and that the minimum length to initiate lengthening may lie between 5 and 9 nucleotides. By mutagenesis analysis, it was found that (i) the hexamer AGUAAA and poly(A) tail are two important elements responsible for synthesis of the coronavirus poly(A) tail and may function in concert to accomplish polyadenylation and (ii) the function of the hexamer AGUAAA in coronaviral polyadenylation is position dependent. Based on these findings, we propose a process for how the coronaviral poly(A) tail is synthesized and undergoes variation. Our results provide the first genetic evidence to gain insight into coronaviral polyadenylation.
keywords
๐ open access (18)
author
๐ค Peng, Yu Hui
๐ค Lin, Ching Houng
๐ค Lin, Chao Nan
๐ค Lo, Chen Yu
๐ค Tsai, Tsung Lin
๐ค Wu, Hung Yi
year
โฐ 2016
journal
๐ PLoS ONE
issn
๐ 19326203
volume
11
number
10
page
citedbycount
2
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