Abstract

All known eukaryotic and some viral mRNA capping enzymes (CEs) transfer a GMP moiety of GTP to the 5'-diphosphate end of the acceptor RNA via a covalent enzyme-GMP intermediate to generate the cap structure. In striking contrast, the putative CE of vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV), a prototype of nonsegmented negative-strand (NNS) RNA viruses including rabies, measles, and Ebola, incorporates the GDP moiety of GTP into the cap structure of transcribing mRNAs. Here, we report that the RNA-dependent RNA polymerase L protein of VSV catalyzes the capping reaction by an RNA:GDP polyribonucleotidyltransferase activity, in which a 5'-monophosphorylated viral mRNA-start sequence is transferred to GDP generated from GTP via a covalent enzyme-RNA intermediate. Thus, the L proteins of VSV and, by extension, other NNS RNA viruses represent a new class of viral CEs, which have evolved independently from known eukaryotic CEs.

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