A mechanism for initiating RNA-dependent RNA polymerization

In most RNA viruses, genome replication and transcription are catalysed by a viral RNA-dependent RNA polymerase. Double-stranded RNA viruses perform these operations in a capsid (the polymerase complex), using an enzyme that can read both single- and double-stranded RNA. Structures have been solved...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature (London) 2001-03, Vol.410 (6825), p.235-240
Hauptverfasser: Butcher, Sarah J., Grimes, Jonathan M., Makeyev, Eugeny V., Bamford, Dennis H., Stuart, David I.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:In most RNA viruses, genome replication and transcription are catalysed by a viral RNA-dependent RNA polymerase. Double-stranded RNA viruses perform these operations in a capsid (the polymerase complex), using an enzyme that can read both single- and double-stranded RNA. Structures have been solved for such viral capsids, but they do not resolve the polymerase subunits in any detail 1 , 2 . Here we show that the 2 Å resolution X-ray structure of the active polymerase subunit from the double-stranded RNA bacteriophage φ6 (refs 3 , 4 ) is highly similar to that of the polymerase of hepatitis C virus, providing an evolutionary link between double-stranded RNA viruses and flaviviruses. By crystal soaking and co-crystallization, we determined a number of other structures, including complexes with oligonucleotide and/or nucleoside triphosphates (NTPs), that suggest a mechanism by which the incoming double-stranded RNA is opened up to feed the template through to the active site, while the substrates enter by another route. The template strand initially overshoots, locking into a specificity pocket, and then, in the presence of cognate NTPs, reverses to form the initiation complex; this process engages two NTPs, one of which acts with the carboxy-terminal domain of the protein to prime the reaction. Our results provide a working model for the initiation of replication and transcription.
ISSN:0028-0836
1476-4687
DOI:10.1038/35065653