Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Medical College of Ohio, 3055 Arlington Avenue, Toledo, OH 43614, USA1
Author for correspondence: Stanley Sawicki. Fax +1 419 383 3002. e-mail ssawicki{at}mco.edu
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Abstract |
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Introduction |
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We proposed (Sawicki & Sawicki, 1995 ) a different model, in which the discontinuous step occurred during negative-strand synthesis. This model also proposed that there were two classes of RNA intermediates in MHV-infected cells. One had genome-length templates engaged in replicating the genome or in the production of subgenome-length negative-strand templates, i.e. anti-subgenomes. The other had anti-subgenomes being transcribed into subgenomic mRNA. Because the RNA intermediates active in transcribing subgenomic mRNA are not replicating, we call them TIs and TFs, for transcriptive intermediate and form RNA, respectively. We reserve the terms RI and RF for viral RNA involved in replication.
RI/TIs and RF/TFs would differ in their relative proportion of single-stranded and double-stranded character. Native RF/TFs would be completely or nearly completely double-stranded as a result of having only one or a few polymerases engaged in transcription on each template. Thus, positive and negative strands in native RF/TFs would be mostly equal in length. Native RFs are soluble in high salt solutions such as 2 M LiCl or 1 M NaCl, as are tRNA and DNA (Ammann et al., 1964 ; Montagnier & Sanders, 1963
). RF gives a defined Tm with a sharp melting point (Ammann et al., 1964
; Bishop & Koch, 1967
). The biological significance of native RFs in poliovirus and RNA phages includes functions as short-lived intermediates and as end-products that accumulate when RNA synthesis ceases and the last positive strand is not released (reviewed in Koch & Koch, 1985
). On the other hand, RI was a multi-stranded intermediate active in positive-strand synthesis. Poliovirus RI contained an average of three, or as many as eight to ten, nascent, single-stranded RNA tails (reviewed in Koch & Koch, 1985
; Richards et al., 1984
) and one poly(A) sequence (Yogo & Wimmer, 1975
). This high degree of single-strandedness makes the RI insoluble in high salt solutions, as are messenger and ribosomal RNA (Baltimore, 1966
; Bishop et al., 1969
; Erikson & Gordon, 1966
; Fenwick et al., 1964
). Digestion of RI with controlled levels of RNase degraded the single-stranded regions composed of nascent chains and left an RF core now soluble in 2 M LiCl (reviewed in Koch & Koch, 1985
). While in vivo RI was shown to be predominantly single-stranded (Richards et al., 1984
), isolated poliovirus RF cores contained an intact template strand and short to almost full-length nascent chains base-paired along the length of the template (Baltimore, 1968
). Inhibiting transcription initiation converted poliovirus RI to RF cores.
We undertook an analysis of RNA structures formed in MHV-infected cells to identify the number and abundance of RI/TIs and native RF/TFs and to develop methods to purify individual RI/TIs. A second goal was to attempt to explain the initial failure to find TF cores after RNase treatment and gel filtration chromatography of MHV RI/TIs.
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Methods |
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Labelling of viral RNA and isolation of high-salt-soluble and -insoluble RNA species.
17Cl-1 cells (5x100 mm Petri dishes with 1015x106 cells per dish) were infected with MHV at 50100 p.f.u. per cell at 37 °C. Following infection, the cells were labelled with [3H]uridine or [32P]orthophosphate. For [3H]uridine, the cells were incubated in medium containing 200 µCi/ml of [3H]uridine and 20 µg/ml of dactinomycin in DMEM supplemented with 6% FBS. For 32P, they were labelled with 200 µCi/ml of [32P]orthophosphate and 20 µg/ml of dactinomycin in phosphate-reduced MEM supplemented with dialysed FBS. Cells were solubilized with 5% lithium dodecyl sulfate and 200 µg of proteinase K/ml and deproteinized by extraction with low pH phenol (pH 4·3) followed by chloroform. The RNA was collected by ethanol precipitation. For separation of high-salt-soluble and -insoluble species, the aqueous phase obtained by phenol and chloroform extraction was adjusted to 2 M LiCl, placed on ice for 18 h, and centrifuged at 10000 r.p.m. (15000 g) for 1 h to obtain the supernatant (LiCl-soluble) and precipitated (LiCl-insoluble) fractions (Baltimore, 1968 ; Sawicki & Gomatos, 1976
). LiCl-soluble RNA was collected by ethanol precipitation.
Ribonuclease protection assays to measure negative-strand synthesis.
Viral RNA was denatured by heating at 100 °C in 1 mM EDTA, quick cooled at 0 °C, and reannealed in the presence of an excess of virion positive strands and 0·4 M NaCl at 68 °C for 30 min followed by 25 °C for 30 min, as described (Sawicki & Sawicki, 1986a ). One half of each sample was analysed directly for acid-precipitable radioactivity; the other half was digested with 5 µg/ml of RNase A in 0·4 M NaCl for 30 min at 37 °C before acid-precipitation.
Chromatography.
Columns (1·5x90 cm) of Sepharose 2B or Sephacryl S-1000 (Pharmacia) were equilibrated in 0·1 M NaCl, 10 mM TrisHCl, pH 7·4, 20 mM EDTA and 0·2% SDS, as described earlier for Sepharose 2B (Sawicki & Gomatos, 1976 ). Briefly, RNA to be chromatographed was dissolved in the column buffer and applied to the column in small volumes. The buffer head was reapplied and the column allowed to run under the recommended pressure and at a flow rate of 1013 ml/h. Fractions of 1·01·3 ml (Sepharose 2B total RNA and LiCl-soluble RNA) or 0·65 ml (Sepharose 2B LiCl-insoluble RNA) or 0·5 ml (Sephacryl S-1000) were collected. The RNA was precipitated in the presence of 50100 µg of carrier yeast tRNA with ethanol.
Ribonuclease digestion.
For determination of the ribonuclease-resistance of RI/TIs and native RF/TFs and fractions, RNA samples were digested with RNase T1 (Ambion) at 30 units per sample in 0·3 M NaCl at 30 °C for 30 min or with RNase A (affinity purified; Ambion) at 5 µg/ml in 0·3 M NaCl, 30 mM sodium citrate (2x SSC) at 37 °C for 30 min. Trichloroacetic acid was added to 5%, and the precipitated RNA collected on glass fibre filters and counted by liquid scintillation spectroscopy. We routinely used 30 units of RNase T1 to digest 30 µg of RNA, the amount in 1x106 cells.
Velocity sedimentation and agarose gel electrophoresis.
Solubilized cell extracts were passed through a 27 gauge needle and layered onto 1530% sucrose gradients and centrifuged at 20 °C in a Beckmann SW28 rotor at 28000 r.p.m. for 18 h, which pelleted the 60S viral genome RNA. Gel electrophoresis was in 0·8% or 1% agarose in TBE buffer with 0·2% SDS for 370 V-h, after which the gels were washed in water to remove excess SDS, stained with ethidium bromide, and processed for fluorography.
Chromatography on oligo(dT) beads.
Oligo(dT)25 beads were obtained from Dynal (Dynabeads) or from Novagen (Magnetight particles) and were used according to the instructions of the manufacturers. Immediately before use, the beads were washed in binding buffer twice before addition of the sample. Usually 100 µl of cell lysate or RNA in water was heated for 2 min at 75 °C and then added to 200 µl of washed oligo(dT)25 beads resuspended in 100 µl of binding buffer. After rotating at 25 °C for 5 min, the magnet was applied and the supernatant (unbound fraction) was removed. The beads were washed twice with washing buffer (wash fractions) before incubation in 1020 µl of 10 mM TrisHCl, pH 7·4, and heating at 75 °C for 2 min to elute the poly(A)+ RNA or bound fraction.
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Results |
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About 100 fractions were collected into 20 pools of about five fractions each and numbered in the order of elution. RNA in pools 1 to 18 was treated with RNase T1 and analysed on gels to identify the location of RI/TIs (Fig. 3E). Pool 1 (fractions 5662) contained most of the RI, TIs II and III, and pools 67 (fractions 8185 and 8690) were enriched in TIs IV, V, VI and VII. The presence of large amounts of RNA in pool 1, and possibly larger fragments derived from RNA-1 by RNase T1 digestion, may account for the smear of labelled material. We found the seven species of RI/TIs fractionated similarly to native RF/TFs on Sepharose 2B and each eluted ahead of its single-stranded RNA counterpart. To approximate the relative numbers of RI/TIs to native RF/TFs, radiolabelled RNA recovered as RNase A-resistant cores after Sepharose 2B for each was calculated. The 2 M LiCl-insoluble RI/TIs accounted for 67% of all labelled, double-stranded RNA accumulating in infected cells early (1·55·5 h p.i.). This is the period when rates of syntheses of both negative-strand and positive-stranded RNA were increasing and viral RNA was accumulating exponentially (Sawicki & Sawicki, 1986a
).
Ribonuclease-sensitivity of coronavirus RI/TI and RF/TF species
Essentially all of the [3H]uridine incorporated into the LiCl-soluble native RF/TFs was acid-precipitable after digestion with RNase T1 or A (Table 1). In contrast, RNase A digestion of LiCl-insoluble, Sepharose 2B-fractionated RNA showed RNA in pool 1 was mostly double-stranded (49%), and RNA in pools 520 was mostly single-stranded, 1·5% or less was resistant to RNase (Table 1
). Our next experiment showed both native form and intermediate structures, while double-stranded, can be degraded with excessive RNase A. We treated the purified, LiCl-soluble, native RF/TFs (Fig. 3B
, pools 1 and 3 were combined to restore the population of seven species) and LiCl-insoluble RI/TIs (Fig. 3E
, pools 1 and 5 were combined together) with RNase T1 or A, using several concentrations of each. RNase T1 at concentrations of 10100 units per sample converted RI/TIs to RF/TF cores and left intact all seven native RF/TFs as judged by their electrophoretic migration in agarose gels (Fig. 4A
; data not shown). However, treatment with as little as 1 µg/ml of RNase A destroyed the intact structure of larger, native RF/TFs species and higher amounts also degraded the smaller TFs (Fig. 4B
). The RI/TIs were also degraded by these concentrations of RNase A (Fig. 4C
). For the volumes used, a concentration of 1 µg/ml represents on a µg basis a 400:1 RNA to RNase ratio.
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Discussion |
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At the time of maximum RNA synthesis rates, the multi-stranded RI and TIs were the vast majority of replication and transcription intermediates. Less than 30% were present as native RF/TFs. This is comparable to other positive-stranded RNA animal and bacterial viruses (reviewed in Koch & Koch, 1985 ). RI/TIs represent replication and transcription intermediates on which viral RNA-dependent RNA polymerases are repeatedly initiating positive-strand synthesis. The relative abundance of each RI/TIs or native RF/TFs species was similar and proportional to the relative abundance of the viral positive strands. Native RF was originally defined by its property of solubility in high salt, a property shared by both native RF and TFs of MHV. That this indeed reflected their completely or nearly completely double-stranded nature was confirmed by finding essentially all of the labelled MHV native RF/TF RNA was acid-precipitable after RNase A digestion. No single-stranded labelled RNA was found when this population was analysed directly by electrophoresis. In contrast, high-salt-insoluble viral RNA contained genomes and subgenomic mRNA as well as RI/TIs and only 3% of it was resistant to RNase A. Viral genome and subgenomic mRNA and positive-strand components of RI/TIs possessed a poly(A) sequence capable of binding to oligo(dT) sequences, showing that coronavirus RI/TIs resemble RIs formed by other positive-stranded RNA viruses (Ammann et al., 1964
; Baltimore, 1966
, 1968
; Erikson & Gordon, 1966
; Koch & Koch, 1985
; Montagnier & Sanders, 1963
; Richards et al., 1984
; Sawicki & Gomatos, 1976
; Yogo et al., 1977
). Binding of native MHV RF/TF species to oligo(dT)25 suggests that if a polyuridylate is present at the 5' ends of MHV negative strands, it is shorter than the poly(A) in its positive-strand counterpart. Bovine coronavirus was reported to have a poly(U) of about 926 nt, compared to a positive-strand poly(A) of 100130 nt (Hofmann & Brian, 1991
).
Initial failure to find subgenomic TIs led to the leader-primed transcription model (Baric et al., 1983 ). The present results indicate this failure was due most likely to technical error and not to any aberrant behaviour of these molecules on gel filtration chromatography. Each of seven RI/TIs and native or core RF/TF species fractionated as predicted on each of the two different matrices. In addition to detecting and characterizing seven species of RI/TIs and RF/TFs in experiments duplicating that of earlier investigators, it was also important to attempt to explain their failure to find TI/TFs. While MHV A59 RI and RF are resistant to concentrations of RNase A of 0·33 µg/ml (Sawicki & Sawicki, 1990
), the concentrations of ribonuclease A of 10 µg/ml (Baric et al., 1983
) and 20 µg/ml (Lai et al., 1982b
) used would have degraded RI/TIs and native RF/TFs, leaving only short fragments of the original structures. Moreover, this and other studies (Baric & Yount, 2000
; Sawicki & Sawicki, 1990
) found native RF/TFs and double-stranded cores of RI/TIs migrated on gels slower than RNA-1, not faster as was claimed (Baric et al., 1983
). This means that not even authentic RF was recovered in earlier studies (Baric et al., 1983
; Lai et al., 1982b
).
Another issue has to do with recovery of particular RNase T1 oligonucleotides assigned to viral mRNA and found in fractions thought to contain only RI (Baric et al., 1983 ; Lai et al., 1982b
). Finding RNase T1-resistant oligonucleotides #10 and #19 in RI-containing fractions after Sepharose 2B chromatography led others (Baric et al., 1983
) to claim the genome-length RI was utilized for the synthesis of subgenomic mRNA. At the time, the authors (Baric et al., 1983
) expressed surprise at not finding oligonucleotide #3a that was unique to subgenomic mRNA-5 and oligonucleotide #19a that was unique to subgenomic mRNA-6 (Lai et al., 1982a
, 1983
). Subgenomic mRNA-6 is almost as abundant as subgenomic mRNA-7. We can explain their results in the light of our finding the TIs for subgenomic mRNA-2 and -3, together with the RI, in the excluded fraction after Sepharose 2B chromatography. Oligonucleotide #10, which is derived from the leader sequence present only once at the 5' end of the genome and of each subgenomic mRNA, and oligonucleotide #19, present in sequences from the leaderbody junction regions of the genome and mRNA-2, -3 and -7, were found in the excluded fraction of Sepharose 2B (Baric et al., 1983
). We found this fraction actually contained the genome and some mRNA-2 and -3, in addition to the RI and TIs II and III. This readily accounts for the presence of oligonucleotides #10 and #19. Absence of oligonucleotides #3a and #19a is explained by our finding TIs for subgenomic mRNA-5 and -6, respectively, in the included volume, not in the excluded volume. If genome-length, RI negative strands were being used to synthesize subgenomic mRNA-6, oligonucleotide #19a would have been present in the excluded column volume. Rather than favouring leader-primed transcription, the results of Baric et al. (1983)
actually argued against it.
Is leader-priming used at any time during nidovirus replication? Our results and those of Baric & Yount (2000) for MHV and van Marle et al. (1999)
for EAV would argue not. Recently, a study suggested leader-primed transcription occurred immediately after infection. An et al. (1998)
detected subgenomic defective interfering (DI) mRNA but not its negative-strand template at the very earliest times after infection, although shortly thereafter subgenomic DI negative strands became detectable. Because there are about 100 times fewer negative-strand templates compared to its products, it would be difficult to rule out the possibility that formation of the negative-strand template for the subgenomic DI did not precede formation of the subgenomic mRNA. An et al. (1998)
did in fact confirm that negative-strand templates for subgenomic DI mRNA were detectable very early after infection and at levels reflective of subgenomic DI mRNA levels. If leader-primed transcription was required to produce subgenomic DI mRNA at early but not later times, we are left with the question of why two, redundant mechanisms, one requiring a primer and one not, are used to produce subgenomic positive strands?
MHV TIs behaved during metabolic labelling as authentic transcription intermediates. Kinetics of their labelling with [3H]uridine were similar to that observed for the RI. Also, kinetics of negative-strand synthesis for smaller TIs were the same as for the RI, and all populations of RI/TIs incorporated [3H]uridine mostly into positive strands late in infection when negative-strand, but not positive-strand, synthesis was declining. Kinetic labelling experiments similar to those reported in this study have been published by others (Baric & Yount, 2000 ; Schaad & Baric, 1994
). These support our hypothesis that complementary negative strands function as templates for subgenomic mRNA synthesis during coronavirus infection. The ability to isolate the full set of seven viral RI/TIs and seven native RF/TFs from infected cells and to explain the initial failures (Baric et al., 1983
; Lai et al., 1982b
) to find them invalidates the original basis for proposing the leader-primed model. Furthermore, the initial failure (Lai et al., 1982b
) to find MHV subgenome-length negative strands was most likely also due to a technical error. The authors used as a probe to detect negative strands 32P viral RNA obtained from infected cells grown in [32P]orthophosphate. Such a probe would not have sufficiently high specific activity to detect negative strands by Northern blot. Contrary to their claim, and with our results, it is now clear that authentic negative strands were not detected.
At this time, our model (Sawicki & Sawicki, 1995 ) identifying the discontinuous transcription event as the step or process generating the 5' nested set of negative strands that serve as templates for subgenomic mRNA synthesis best explains all available experimental data. Because subgenomic negative strands in coronavirus-infected cells contain anti-leader sequences (Sawicki & Sawicki, 1995
; Sethna et al., 1991
), they directly serve to template the 3' nested set of viral mRNA. However, with MHV, in order for positive strands to serve as templates for negative strands, i.e. to replicate, sequences downstream of the 5' genomic leader sequence are required (Masters et al., 1994
). Therefore, coronavirus subgenomic mRNA and their negative-strand templates do not replicate. The exact mechanism by which coronaviruses, and the related arteriviruses, generate a 5' nested set of negative-strand templates that are complementary copies of the subgenomic mRNA remains to be elucidated. Whatever the unique and intriguing mechanism, it is used probably by all members of the Nidovirales (Snijder & Meulenberg, 1998
). It would determine and regulate relative numbers of each of the variously sized negative-strand templates. With the Nidovirales, the synthesis of genomes and subgenomic mRNAs would be determined by the number of each negative-strand template formed during infection. Details of this mechanism and identification of the RNA sequences/structures and essential viral proteins are only now being investigated at the molecular level (van Dinten et al., 2000
; van Marle et al., 1999
). The endeavour will benefit greatly from availability of infectious clones for arteriviruses (van Dinten et al., 1997
) and more recently for coronaviruses (Almazan et al., 2000
; V. Thiel, J. Herold, B. Schelle & S. G. Siddell, unpublished data).
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Acknowledgments |
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References |
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Received 31 August 2000;
accepted 27 October 2000.