The nature and biological significance of linear potato spindle tuber viroid molecules.

Virology

Department of Plant Pathology, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York 14853-5908, USA.

Published: March 1987

"Naturally occurring" linear potato spindle tuber viroid (PSTVL) was shown to be as infectious as circular PSTV (PSTVc). The occurrence of PSTVL was shown not to be (a) an artifact of the extraction procedure per se; (b) due to the presence of metal ions in extraction buffers; or (c) related to the host species used for propagation, to a particular PSTV strain, or to the duration of infection. From labeling and blot-hybridization experiments, it was concluded that in infected tissue PSTVc appears first followed by PSTVL, which is produced as the result of cleavage of PSTVc at specific sites. One of the sites of cleavage of PSTVc was delineated by 5'-end labeling PSTVL, digesting it with RNase T1, separating the fragments by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis, and sequencing the major RNase T1-resistant fragments. The major site of in vitro labeling was shown to be variable, but was confined to the right-hand loop of PSTVc, i.e., between nucleotides 177 and 182. Furthermore, the right-hand end stem and loop of PSTVc contains sequences which are similar to a rDNA gene promoter sequence, and thus we suggest that DNA-dependent RNA polymerase I may be involved in viroid biosynthesis. Other cleavage sites in PSTV were determined by primer extension cDNA synthesis and by dideoxynucleotide chain termination, and were shown to correspond to nucleotides 113-114 and 80-81 and to sequences in the region of 334-340, 300-312, and 271-275. The significance of these cleavage sites is discussed.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0042-6822(87)90329-1DOI Listing

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