4.8 Article

Reinitiated viral RNA-dependent RNA polymerase resumes replication at a reduced rate

Journal

NUCLEIC ACIDS RESEARCH
Volume 36, Issue 22, Pages 7059-7067

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/nar/gkn836

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Funding

  1. Nanoned, The Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research
  2. European Science Foundation
  3. Finish Center of Excellence Program 2006-2011 [1213467]
  4. Academy of Finland and Nanotechnology [700036]
  5. Helsinki Graduate School of Biotechnology and Molecular Biology

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RNA-dependent RNA polymerases (RdRP) form an important class of enzymes that is responsible for genome replication and transcription in RNA viruses and involved in the regulation of RNA interference in plants and fungi. The RdRP kinetics have been extensively studied, but pausing, an important regulatory mechanism for RNA polymerases that has also been implicated in RNA recombination, has not been considered. Here, we report that RdRP experience a dramatic, long-lived decrease in its elongation rate when it is reinitiated following stalling. The rate decrease has an intriguingly weak temperature dependence, is independent of both the nucleotide concentration during stalling and the length of the RNA transcribed prior to stalling; however it is sensitive to RNA structure. This allows us to delineate the potential factors underlying this irreversible conversion of the elongation complex to a less active mode.

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