Abstract

Turnip yellow mosaic virus (TYMV) possesses a monopartite single-stranded (+) sense RNA genome in which the coat protein (cp) gene is 3′ proximal and is expressed in vivo via a subgenomic RNA. Evidence is presented here that this subgenomic RNA is synthesized in vivo by internal initiation of replication on (−) RNA strands of genomic length. The double-stranded RNAs (dsRNAs) from TYMV-infected plants have been isolated, purified, and characterized. Under native conditions, no dsRNAs (replicative intermeadites and/or replicative forms) of subgenomic length corresponding to subgenomic cp RNA can be detected by ethidium bromide staining of RNA-sizing gels or by Northern blot hybridization using RNA probes. The presence of nascent subgenomic cp (+) RNA strands on the dsRNA of genomic length has been demonstrated using two different approaches: (1) Northern blot hybridization using (−) RNA probes under denaturing conditions and (2) characterization of the 5′ ends of nascent (+) RNA strands upon labeling by vaccinia virus nucleoside-2′-methyltransferase.

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