Elsevier

Virology

Volume 431, Issues 1–2, 15–30 September 2012, Pages 50-57
Virology

Rotavirus RNA polymerases resolve into two phylogenetically distinct classes that differ in their mechanism of template recognition

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.virol.2012.05.011Get rights and content
Under an Elsevier user license
open archive

Abstract

Rotaviruses (RVs) are segmented double-stranded RNA viruses that cause gastroenteritis in mammals and birds. Within the RV genus, eight species (RVA–RVH) have been proposed. Here, we report the first RVF and RVG sequences for the viral RNA polymerase (VP1)-encoding segments and compare them to those of other RV species. Phylogenetic analyses indicate that the VP1 RNA segments and proteins resolve into two major clades, with RVA, RVC, RVD and RVF in clade A, and RVB, RVG and RVH in clade B. Plus-strand RNA of clade A viruses, and not clade B viruses, contain a 3′-proximal UGUG cassette that serves as the VP1 recognition signal. VP1 structures for a representative of each RV species were predicted using homology modeling. Structural elements involved in interactions with the UGUG cassette were conserved among VP1 of clade A, suggesting a conserved mechanism of viral RNA recognition for these viruses.

Highlights

► VP1, the rotavirus RNA polymerase, specifically recognizes viral (+)RNA. ► We report and analyze VP1-encoding sequences for species F and G rotaviruses. ► Rotavirus species cluster phylogenetically into two distinct clades. ► Clade A VP1 structures and homology models differ from those of clade B. ► The mechanism of viral (+)RNA recognition appears conserved for clade A VP1.

Keywords

Rotavirus
RNA polymerase
VP1
Polymerase structure
Double-stranded RNA virus

Cited by (0)