Translational regulation of hepatitis B virus polymerase gene by termination-reinitiation of an upstream minicistron in a length-dependent manner (original) (raw)
Abstract
Hepatitis B virus (HBV) polymerase (P) gene is translated from the bicistronic pregenomic RNAwith the core (C) gene in the first cistron. The P ORF is preceded by the C AUG and three AUG codons within the C region, where a minicistron of 7 amino acids can potentially be translated. Our results indicate that the efficiency of the P gene translation initiation was about 10% of that of the C gene when both genes were fused in-frame to a lacZ reporter in an mRNA similar in structure to the pregenomic RNA. By mutational analysis, about 74% of the translation initiation of HBV P gene was shown to be by ribosomes that reinitiated after terminating translation of this minicistron, while the rest was by two mechanisms: one by ribosomes leaky scanning through every upstream AUG and the other by ribosomal backwards scanning to the P AUG after finishing the translation of the C gene. The efficiency of termination-reinitiation depended on the size of the minicistron, i.e. the reinitiation efficiency decreased about 50% when the size increased from 24 nt to 57 nt. When a 44 nt HBV sequence comprising the minicistron was inserted at the 5′ untranslated region of the cat gene, CAT expression was regulated in a similar way to that of the HBV P gene. Moreover, when transfection occurred with an HBV expression plasmid containing an inactivated minicistron, production of virus-like particles dropped to about one-third of the wild-type level, suggesting that the termination-reinitiation mechanism is indeed important for HBV P gene expression.
- Published Online:01/09/1998
© Society for General Microbiology 1998
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1998-09-01
2025-01-22
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