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A composite polyadenylation signal with TATA box function.

Authors :
Paran N
Ori A
Haviv I
Shaul Y
Source :
Molecular and cellular biology [Mol Cell Biol] 2000 Feb; Vol. 20 (3), pp. 834-41.
Publication Year :
2000

Abstract

A variant polyadenylation signal, which is conserved and employed by mammalian hepadnaviruses, has a sequence resembling that of the TATA box. We report here that this composite box manifests all the promoter characteristics. It binds effectively TATA-binding protein with TFIIB and TFIIA in a synergistic manner. This capacity, however, is lost when the box is converted to a canonical and simple poly(A) signal. Furthermore, we show that it has promoter activity and supports transcription of reporter genes preferentially in liver-derived cells, a characteristic behavior of the hepatitis B virus (HBV) promoters. In addition, we show that the HBV noncanonical poly(A) signal supports transcription initiation from the viral genome, suggesting that it is a genuine promoter, possibly of the polymerase/reverse transcriptase gene. Finally, we found that this deviant poly(A) signal is crucial for HBV replication since a viral mutant with a canonical poly(A) box is impaired in replication. Our data, therefore, raise the interesting and novel possibility that a composite poly(A) box might have a dual function. At the level of DNA it functions as a promoter to initiate transcription, whereas at the level of RNA it serves as a poly(A) signal to process RNA. An interesting outcome of this strategy of gene expression is that it provides a novel mechanism for the synthesis of an approximately genome length transcript.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0270-7306
Volume :
20
Issue :
3
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Molecular and cellular biology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
10629040
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1128/MCB.20.3.834-841.2000