Transcriptional analyses of the unique short segment of EHV-1 strain Kentucky A
- 48 Downloads
- 11 Citations
Abstract
The unique short (Us) segment of the genome of equine herpesvirus type 1 (EHV-1) strain KyA is comprised of six open reading frames (ORFs) that encode: a) a homolog of the Us2 protein of herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1); b) a serine threonine protein kinase that is a homolog of the HSV-1 Us3 protein; c) a homolog of pseudorabies virus glycoprotein gX and HSV-2 gG; d) a novel glycoprotein, EUS4, not encoded by other herpesviruses sequenced to date; e) a homolog of HSV-1 gD; and f) a homolog of HSV-1 Us9. The KyA strain is a deletion mutant that lacks Us sequences encoding gI, gE, and a potential 10 kD polypeptide, and thus may be useful as a parent virus for the generation of live virus vaccines. To complete the elucidation of the transcriptional program of the Us segment, Northern blot hybridization and S1 nuclease analyses were performed on poly(A)+-selected RNA isolated from infected cells maintained under early (phosphonoacetic acid-block) and late conditions. The findings revealed that the gene (EUS2 ORF) encoding the protein kinase is expressed as an early 2.9 kb transcript that overlaps and is 3′ coterminal with a 1.6 kb early transcript that encodes the gG/gX homolog (EUS3 ORF). Two transcripts of 1.6 kb and 5.8 kb are 5′ coterminal and may both encode the novel glycoprotein gene EUS4. The 1.6 kb transcript terminates at a poly(A) signal site downstream of the EUS4 ORF, and the 5.8 kb transcript terminates within the inverted repeat (IR) segment. Overall, the transcriptional program of the EHV-1 KyA Us segment is complex and exhibits similarities to that of HSV-1 Us segment: a) transcripts arise from both DNA strands; b) some transcripts, including those mapping at the termini of the Us segment, extend into the IR segments and are 3′ coterminal with the 1.2 kb IR6 transcript; c) at least one transcript reads through a functional polyadenylation signal; d) some transcripts encoding genes that lie in different reading frames exist as a family of overlapping mRNAs, some in an anti-sense manner. Lastly, of the six Us genes of the EHV-1 KyA strain, only those encoding the EHV-1 protein kinase and the HSV-2 gG/gX homolog are members of the early kinetic class.
Key words
herpesvirus transcription equine herpesvirus unique short glycoprotein protein kinasePreview
Unable to display preview. Download preview PDF.
References
- 1.Breeden C.A., Yalamanchili R.R., Colle C.F., and O'Callaghan D.J., Virology191 649–660, 1992.Google Scholar
- 2.Colle C.F., Flowers C.C., and O'Callaghan D.J., Virology188 545–557, 1992.Google Scholar
- 3.Telford E.R., Watson M.S., McBride K., and Davison A.J., Virology189 304–316, 1992.Google Scholar
- 4.Nagesha H.S., Crabb B.S., and Studdert M.J., Arch Virol128 143–154, 1993.Google Scholar
- 5.Flowers C.C., Eastman E.M., and O'Callaghan D.J., Virology180 175–184, 1991.Google Scholar
- 6.Flowers C.C., and O'Callaghan D.J., Virology190 307–315, 1992a.Google Scholar
- 7.Flowers C.C., and O'Callaghan D.J., J Virol66 6451–6460, 1992b.Google Scholar
- 8.O'Callaghan D.J., Cheevers W.P., Gentry G.A., and Randall C.C., Virology36 104–114, 1968.Google Scholar
- 9.Perdue M.L., Kemp M.C., Randall C.C., and O'Callaghan D.J., Virology59 201–216, 1974.Google Scholar
- 10.Tevethia M.J., Spector D.J., Leisure K.M., and Stinski M.F., Virology161 276–285, 1987.Google Scholar
- 11.Harty R.N., Colle C.F., Grundy F.J., and O'Callaghan D.J., J Virol63 5101–5110, 1989.Google Scholar
- 12.Zhang G., Stevens R., and Leader D.P., J Gen Virol71 1757–1765, 1990.Google Scholar
- 13.McGeoch D.J., Dolan A., Donald S., and Rixon F.J., J Mol Biol181 1–13, 1985.Google Scholar
- 14.Rixon F.J., and McGeoch D.J., Nucleic Acids Res13 953–973, 1985.Google Scholar
- 15.Audonnet J.C., Winslow J., Allen G.P., and Paoletti E., J Gen Virol7 2969–2978, 1990.Google Scholar
- 16.McGeoch D.J., in Wagner E.K. (ed).Herpesvirus Transcription and its Regulation. CRC Press, Boca Raton, FL, 1991, pp. 29–47.Google Scholar
- 17.Rixon F.J., and McGeoch D.J., Nucleic Acids Res12 2473–2487, 1984.Google Scholar
- 18.Wagner E.K. in Wagner E.K. (ed).Herpesvirus Transcription and its Regulation. CRC Press, Boca Raton, FL, 1991, pp. 1–15.Google Scholar
- 19.McLauchlan J., Simpson S., and Clements J.B., Cell59 1093–1105, 1989.Google Scholar
- 20.Post L.E. and Roizman B., Cell25 217–232, 1981.Google Scholar
- 21.Longnecker R., and Roizman B., J Virol58 583–591, 1986.Google Scholar
- 22.Petrovskis E.A. and Post L.E., Virology159 193–195, 1987.Google Scholar