Abstract

The positive-strand coronavirus genome of ~30 kilobase in length and subgenomic (sg) mRNAs of shorter lengths, are 5’ and 3’-co-terminal by virtue of a common 5’-capped leader and a common 3’-polyadenylated untranslated region. Here, by ligating head-to-tail viral RNAs from bovine coronavirus-infected cells and sequencing across the ligated junctions, it was learned that at the time of peak viral RNA synthesis [6 hours postinfection (hpi)] the 3’ poly(A) tail on genomic and sgmRNAs is ~65 nucleotides (nt) in length. Surprisingly, this length was found to vary throughout infection from ~45 nt immediately after virus entry (at 0 to 4 hpi) to ~65 nt later on (at 6 h to 9 hpi) and from ~65 nt (at 6 h to 9 hpi) to ~30 nt (at 120-144 hpi). With the same method, poly(U) sequences of the same lengths were simultaneously found on the ligated viral negative-strand RNAs. Functional analyses of poly(A) tail length on specific viral RNA species, furthermore, revealed that translation, in vivo, of RNAs with the longer poly(A) tail was enhanced over those with the shorter poly(A). Although the mechanisms by which the tail lengths vary is unknown, experimental results together suggest that the length of the poly(A) and poly(U) tails is regulated. One potential function of regulated poly(A) tail length might be that for the coronavirus genome a longer poly(A) favors translation. The regulation of coronavirus translation by poly(A) tail length resembles that during embryonal development suggesting there may be mechanistic parallels.

Highlights

  • The~30 kilobase positive-strand coronavirus genome and subgenomic mRNAs of shorter lengths are 5’ capped and 3’ polyadenylated as are most eukaryotic mRNAs [1]

  • Poly(A) tail length on total bovine coronavirus (BCoV) positive-strand RNA varies during infection

  • The ability to ligate positive-strand viral RNAs head-to-tail and determine poly(A) tail length soon after viral infection has enabled us to measure poly(A) tail length differences as a function of time post-infection (Figure 1A) [6,10]

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Summary

Introduction

The~30 kilobase positive-strand coronavirus genome and subgenomic (sg) mRNAs of shorter lengths are 5’ capped and 3’ polyadenylated as are most eukaryotic mRNAs [1]. They share a common leader sequence (65 to 90 nucleotides (nt) in length, depending on the coronavirus species) and a common 3’ untranslated region (~300 nt). Experimental evidence from the current study suggests that coronavirus poly(A) tail length is causally related to RNA translation efficiency.

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