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Experimental evidence for occurrence of putative copy-choice recombination between two Senecavirus A genomes

Authors :
Fuxiao Liu
Qi Wang
Hailan Meng
Di Zhao
Xiaojing Hao
Shuren Zhang
Jinfeng Lu
Hu Shan
Source :
Veterinary microbiology. 271
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Senecavirus A (SVA), formerly known as Seneca Valley virus, belongs to the genus Senecavirus in the family Picornaviridae. SVA has a single-stranded, positive-sense RNA genome, which is actually an mRNA that initiates translation via its own internal ribosome entry site (IRES). The SVA IRES has been demonstrated to be the hepatitis C virus (HCV)-like IRES, containing eight stem-loop domains: domain (D)II, DIIIa, DIIIb, DIIIc, DIIId1, DIIId2, DIIIe and DIIIf. In this study, stem-forming motifs (SFMs) in the eight domains were independently subjected to site-directed mutagenesis (SDM) to construct eight SVA minigenomes for dual-luciferase reporter assay. The result suggested that except the DII, the other seven domains were closely evolved in the IRES activity. Subsequently, a full-length SVA cDNA clone tagged with a reporter gene was genetically modified to construct eight SFM-mutated ones, separately transfected into BSR-T7/5 cells in an attempt to rescue replication-competent SVAs. Nevertheless, no virus was successfully rescued from its own cDNA clone, implying each of the putative domains necessary in SVA IRES for viral replication. Further, we attempted to rescue replication-competent SVA via pairwise transfection of cDNA clones. Out of 28 combinations of co-transfection, four were demonstrated to be able to rescue replication-competent SVAs. Sanger sequencing showed that all four viruses had the wild-type IRES genotype, suggesting the occurrence of putative copy-choice recombination between two IRES-modifying genomes.

Details

ISSN :
18732542
Volume :
271
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Veterinary microbiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....168e55f074206382188b0731b87b6c30