Research Article
1 February 1989

Regulation of poly(A) site selection in adenovirus

Abstract

We have investigated the mechanisms involved in the early-to-late RNA-processing switch which regulates the mRNA species generated from the adenovirus major late transcription unit (MLTU). In particular, polyadenylation choice mechanisms were characterized by using a reconstructed adenovirus E1A gene as a site for insertion of MLTU poly(A) regulation signals (L1 and L3). Adenovirus constructs containing the variant poly(A) recognition elements were used to compare E1A poly(A) signal utilization with wild-type MLTU (L1 to L5) utilization. In both early and late stages of infection, either polyadenylation site (L1 or L3) is capable of being utilized when presented as the only operational poly(A) site. In an early infection, a virus which contains multiple elements presented in tandem (L13) uses the first poly(A) site, L1, preferentially (ratio of L1 to L3, 8:1) in both E1A and MLTU loci. Transcription termination is not involved in restricting the utilization of the downstream L3 site. In a late infection, when each of the five MLTU poly(A) sites is used, a switch also occurs for the E1AL13 construct, with utilization of both the L1 and L3 poly(A) sites. The switch from early to late was not the result of altered processing factors in the late infection, as demonstrated by superinfecting the E1AL13 construct into cells which had already entered a late stage of infection. The superinfecting virus gave an L1-only phenotype; therefore, a cis mechanism is involved in adenovirus poly(A) regulation.

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Published In

cover image Journal of Virology
Journal of Virology
Volume 63Number 2February 1989
Pages: 532 - 541
PubMed: 2562992

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Published online: 1 February 1989

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Authors

E Falck-Pedersen
Hearst Research Foundation, Department of Microbiology, Cornell University Medical College, New York, New York 10021.
J Logan
Hearst Research Foundation, Department of Microbiology, Cornell University Medical College, New York, New York 10021.

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