scholarly journals The Transcriptome Architecture of Polyomaviruses

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jason Nomburg ◽  
Wei Zou ◽  
Thomas C Frost ◽  
Chandreyee Datta ◽  
Shobha Vasudevan ◽  
...  

Polyomaviruses (PyV) are ubiquitous pathogens that can cause devastating human diseases. Due to the small size of their genomes, PyV utilize complex patterns of RNA splicing to maximize their coding capacity. Despite the importance of PyV to human disease, their transcriptome architecture is poorly characterized. Here, we compare short- and long-read RNA sequencing data from eight human and non-human PyV. We provide a detailed transcriptome atlas for BK polyomavirus (BKPyV), an important human pathogen, and the prototype PyV, simian virus 40 (SV40). We identify pervasive wraparound transcription in PyV, wherein transcription runs through the polyA site and circles the genome multiple times. Comparative analyses identify novel, conserved transcripts that increase PyV coding capacity. One of these conserved transcripts encodes superT, a T antigen containing two RB-binding LxCxE motifs. We find that superT-encoding transcripts are abundant in PyV-associated human cancers. Together, we show that comparative transcriptomic approaches can greatly expand known transcript and coding capacity in one of the simplest and most well-studied viral families.

1989 ◽  
Vol 9 (10) ◽  
pp. 4364-4371
Author(s):  
C Delsert ◽  
N Morin ◽  
D F Klessig

Expression of the L1 region of adenovirus is temporally regulated by alternative splicing to yield two major RNAs encoding the 52- to 55-kilodalton (52-55K) and IIIa polypeptides. The distal acceptor site (IIIa) is utilized only during the late phase of infection, whereas the proximal site (52-55K) is used at both early and late times. Several parameters that might affect this alternative splicing were tested by using expression vectors carrying the L1 region or mutated versions of it. In the absence of a virus-encoded or -induced factor(s), only the 52-55K acceptor was used. Decreasing the distance between the donor and the IIIa acceptor had no effect. Removal of the 52-55K acceptor induced IIIa splicing slightly, implying competition between the two acceptors. Fusion of the IIIa exon to the 52-55K intron greatly enhanced splicing of the IIIa junction, suggesting that the IIIa exon does not contain sequences that inhibit splicing. Thus, the lack of splicing to the IIIa acceptor in the absence of a virus-encoded or -induced factor(s) is probably due to the absence of a favorable sequence and/or the presence of a negative element 5' of the IIIa splice junction, or both. The presence of several adenovirus gene products, including VA RNAs, the E2A DNA-binding protein, and the products of E1A and E1B genes, did not facilitate use of the IIIa acceptor. In contrast, the simian virus 40 early proteins, probably large T antigen, induced IIIa splicing. This result, together with those of earlier studies, suggest that T antigen plays a role in modulation of alternative RNA splicing.


1989 ◽  
Vol 9 (10) ◽  
pp. 4364-4371 ◽  
Author(s):  
C Delsert ◽  
N Morin ◽  
D F Klessig

Expression of the L1 region of adenovirus is temporally regulated by alternative splicing to yield two major RNAs encoding the 52- to 55-kilodalton (52-55K) and IIIa polypeptides. The distal acceptor site (IIIa) is utilized only during the late phase of infection, whereas the proximal site (52-55K) is used at both early and late times. Several parameters that might affect this alternative splicing were tested by using expression vectors carrying the L1 region or mutated versions of it. In the absence of a virus-encoded or -induced factor(s), only the 52-55K acceptor was used. Decreasing the distance between the donor and the IIIa acceptor had no effect. Removal of the 52-55K acceptor induced IIIa splicing slightly, implying competition between the two acceptors. Fusion of the IIIa exon to the 52-55K intron greatly enhanced splicing of the IIIa junction, suggesting that the IIIa exon does not contain sequences that inhibit splicing. Thus, the lack of splicing to the IIIa acceptor in the absence of a virus-encoded or -induced factor(s) is probably due to the absence of a favorable sequence and/or the presence of a negative element 5' of the IIIa splice junction, or both. The presence of several adenovirus gene products, including VA RNAs, the E2A DNA-binding protein, and the products of E1A and E1B genes, did not facilitate use of the IIIa acceptor. In contrast, the simian virus 40 early proteins, probably large T antigen, induced IIIa splicing. This result, together with those of earlier studies, suggest that T antigen plays a role in modulation of alternative RNA splicing.


1982 ◽  
Vol 44 (3) ◽  
pp. 963-973 ◽  
Author(s):  
M Lovett ◽  
C E Clayton ◽  
D Murphy ◽  
P W Rigby ◽  
A E Smith ◽  
...  

1990 ◽  
Vol 64 (10) ◽  
pp. 4799-4807 ◽  
Author(s):  
A Höss ◽  
I Moarefi ◽  
K H Scheidtmann ◽  
L J Cisek ◽  
J L Corden ◽  
...  

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