Abstract

Three different alternative structural features have been shown to be present at the 3' terminus of plant viral RNAs: (a) a poly(A) track, (b) a tRNA-like structure, (c) no special structural or sequence characteristic. We have compared the translational stability after injection into frog oocytes of a representative of each type: (a) the small genomic RNA (M-RNA) of cowpea mosaic virus (CPMV), (b) the subgenomic mRNA for coat protein (RNA 4) of brome mosaic virus (BMV), (c) the subgenomic mRNA for coat protein (RNA 4) of alfalfa mosaic virus (AIMV). It has been shown that CPMV M-RNA exhibits the highest translational stability. However, the stability of AIMV RNA 4 is remarkably high and moreover significantly higher than that of BMV RNA 4. We demonstrate that, for all three viral RNA species considered, the presence of a poly(A) segment at the 3' end of the molecules improves the translational stability. From a comparative investigation in which AIMV RNA 4 was also injected into HeLa cells, it is concluded that the stability of a given non-adenylylated mRNA depends on the nature of the cytoplastic environment.

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