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A mechanism for prime-realignment during influenza A virus replication

Published version
Peer-reviewed

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Authors

te Velthuis, AJW 
Oymans, J 

Abstract

The influenza A virus genome consists of eight segments of single-stranded RNA. These segments are replicated and transcribed by a viral RNA-dependent RNA polymerase (RdRp) that is made up of the influenza virus proteins PB1, PB2 and PA. To copy the viral RNA (vRNA) genome segments and the complementary RNA (cRNA) segments, the replicative intermediate of viral replication, the RdRp must use two promoters and two different de novo initiation mechanisms. On the vRNA promoter, the RdRp initiates on the 3’ terminus, while on the cRNA promoter the RdRp initiates internally and subsequently realigns the nascent vRNA product to ensure that the template is copied in full. In particular the latter process, which is also used by other RNA viruses, is not understood. Here we provide mechanistic insight into prime-realignment during influenza virus replication and show that it is controlled by the priming loop and a helix-loop-helix motif of the PB1 subunit of the RdRp. Overall, these observations advance our understanding of how the influenza A virus initiates viral replication and amplifies the genome correctly.

Description

Keywords

influenza A virus, RNA-dependent RNA polymerase, viral replication, priming loop, realignment, ApG

Journal Title

Journal of Virology

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0022-538X
1098-5514

Volume Title

92

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology
Sponsorship
Wellcome Trust (206579/Z/17/Z)
This work was funded by Wellcome Trust grants 098721/Z/12/Z and 206579/Z/17/Z (to A.J.W.T.V.), grant 825.11.029 from the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (to A.J.W.T.V.), and an Erasmus+ mobility grant (to J.O.).