m 6 A Methylation of Transcription Leader Sequence of SARS-CoV-2 Impacts Discontinuous Transcription of Subgenomic mRNAs

The SARS-CoV-2 genome has been shown to be m A methylated at several positions in vivo. Strikingly, a DRACH motif, the recognition motif for adenosine methylation, resides in the core of the transcriptional regulatory leader sequence (TRS-L) at position A74, which is highly conserved and essential f...

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Veröffentlicht in:Chemistry : a European journal 2024-07, Vol.30 (42), p.e202401897
Hauptverfasser: Becker, Matthias A, Meiser, Nathalie, Schmidt-Dengler, Martina, Richter, Christian, Wacker, Anna, Schwalbe, Harald, Hengesbach, Martin
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The SARS-CoV-2 genome has been shown to be m A methylated at several positions in vivo. Strikingly, a DRACH motif, the recognition motif for adenosine methylation, resides in the core of the transcriptional regulatory leader sequence (TRS-L) at position A74, which is highly conserved and essential for viral discontinuous transcription. Methylation at position A74 correlates with viral pathogenicity. Discontinuous transcription produces a set of subgenomic mRNAs that function as templates for translation of all structural and accessory proteins. A74 is base-paired in the short stem-loop structure 5'SL3 that opens during discontinuous transcription to form long-range RNA-RNA interactions with nascent (-)-strand transcripts at complementary TRS-body sequences. A74 can be methylated by the human METTL3/METTL14 complex in vitro. Here, we investigate its impact on the structural stability of 5'SL3 and the long-range TRS-leader:TRS-body duplex formation necessary for synthesis of subgenomic mRNAs of all four viral structural proteins. Methylation uniformly destabilizes 5'SL3 and long-range duplexes and alters their relative equilibrium populations, suggesting that the m A74 modification acts as a regulator for the abundance of viral structural proteins due to this destabilization.
ISSN:0947-6539
1521-3765
DOI:10.1002/chem.202401897