Abstract
Influenza virus mRNA synthesis is primed by a capped oligonucleotide which is cleaved off from a cellular mRNA by a viral protein. The dinucleotide A3'p5'G can be used as a primer for the viral RNA polymerase mediated RNA synthesis in a cell-free system. Analogues of A3'p5'G have therefore been synthesized using the phosphotriester approach, and their priming ability for the influenza virus mRNA synthesis has been determined. An absence of the 2'-hydroxyl function in the guanosine residue in the dinucleotide, as in A3'p5'dG, drastically decreased its priming ability. Similarly, an alteration of the 3'----5' phosphate linkage to a 2'----5' phosphodiester linkage affected the priming ability quite severely. However a dinucleotide, with the 2'-hydroxyl function omitted in the adenosine moiety, as in dA3'p5'G, could still stimulate the mRNA synthesis. None of the modified dinucleotides inhibited A3'p5'G or globin mRNA primed influenza mRNA synthesis.
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