Abstract

Eggplant latent viroid (ELVd) is a relatively small non-coding circular RNA that induces asymptomatic infections in eggplants (Solanum melongena L.). Like other viroid species that belong to the family Avsunviroidae, ELVd contains hammerhead ribozymes in the strands of both polarities that self-cleave RNAs producing terminal 5′-hydroxyl and 2′,3′-cyclic phosphodiester groups. Available experimental data indicate that ELVd replicates in the chloroplasts of infected cells through a symmetric rolling-circle mechanism, in which RNA circularization is catalyzed by the chloroplastic isoform of the tRNA ligase. In this work, a mutational analysis was performed to gain insight into the sequence and structural requirements of the tRNA ligase-mediated circularization of ELVd RNAs. In the predicted minimum free energy conformation of the monomeric linear ELVd RNA intermediate of plus (+) polarity, the ligation site is located in the lower part of an opened internal loop, which is present in a quasi-rod-like structure that occupies the center of the molecule. The mutations analyzed herein consisted of punctual nucleotide substitutions and deletions surrounding the ligation site on the upper and lower strands of the ELVd quasi-double-stranded structure. Computational predictions of the mutated ELVd conformations indicated different degrees of distortions compared to the minimum free energy conformation of the wild-type ELVd linear monomer of + polarity. When these mutant RNAs were expressed in Escherichia coli, they were all circularized by the eggplant tRNA ligase with approximately the same efficiency as the wild-type ELVd, except for those that directly affected the ribozyme domain. These results suggest that the viroid ribozyme domains, in addition to self-cleavage, are also involved in the tRNA ligase-mediated circularization of the monomeric linear replication intermediates.

Highlights

  • Viroids are a very unique type of plant infectious agents as they are exclusively constituted by a relatively small (246–401 nt) non-coding circular RNA

  • The more than 30 viroid species known to date are classified into two families, Pospiviroidae and Avsunviroidae, depending on the presence of particular domains in the viroid molecule; a central conserved region (CCR) that is present in all members of the family Pospiviroidae, but is missing in those of the Avsunviroidae, and hammerhead ribozymes that are exclusive of this last family (Flores et al, 2015; Daròs, 2016b; Steger and Perreault, 2016; Brass et al, 2017; Giguère and Perreault, 2017)

  • To study in-depth the sequence and structural requirements of the Eggplant latent viroid (ELVd) RNA circularization by the eggplant tRNA ligase, we used an E. coli-based co-expression system to analyze the effect of mutations on this loop

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Summary

Introduction

Viroids are a very unique type of plant infectious agents as they are exclusively constituted by a relatively small (246–401 nt) non-coding circular RNA. Viroids replicate through an RNA-based rolling circle mechanism in which viroid circular RNAs serve as templates for reiterative transcription to produce multimeric RNAs of opposite polarity. Analyses of the replication mechanisms in different viroid species have indicated that members of both families follow two different variants of the rolling circle, termed asymmetric and symmetric (Branch and Robertson, 1984; Flores et al, 2008). Potato spindle tuber viroid (PSTVd), and possibly all members of the family Pospiviroidae, follow the asymmetric variant in which the minus (−) multimeric RNAs directly serve as templates for the transcription of multimeric + RNAs, which are cleaved into monomeric linear viroid RNAs, and are circularized acquiring their mature form (Branch et al, 1988). These viroid molecules, which are distinctive of this family, serve as templates in a second (symmetric) rolling circle for the transcription of multimeric + RNAs, which once again, are processed into monomeric circular RNAs of + polarity (Hutchins et al, 1985; Daròs et al, 1994)

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