Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3429251 Virus Research 2010 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

Increasing evidence suggest that the long “untranslated” region (UTR) between the matrix (M) and the fusion (F) proteins of morbilliviruses has a functional role. In canine distemper virus (CDV), the F 5′ UTR was recently shown to code for a long F signal peptide (Fsp). Subsequently, it was reported that the M/F UTRs combined with the long Fsp were synergistically regulating the F mRNA and protein expression, thereby modulating virulence. Unique to CDV, a short putative open reading frame (ORF) has been identified within the wild-type CDV-M 3′ UTR (termed M2). Here, we investigated whether M2 was expressed from the genome of the virulent and demyelinating A75/17-CDV strain. An expression plasmid encoding the M2 ORF tagged both at its N-terminal (HA) and C-terminal domains (RFP), was first constructed. Then, a recombinant virus with its putative M2 ORF replaced by HA-M2-RFP was successfully recovered from cDNA (termed recA75/17green-HA-M2-RFP). M2 expression in cells transfected or infected with these mutants was studied by immunoprecipitation, immunofluorescence, immunoblot and flow cytometry analyses. Although fluorescence was readily detected in HA-M2-RFP-transfected cells, absence of red fluorescence emission in several recA75/17green-HA-M2-RFP-infected cell types suggested lack of M2 biosynthesis, which was confirmed by the other techniques. Consistent with these data, no functional role of the short polypeptide was revealed by infecting various cell types with HA-M2-RFP over-expressing or M2-knockout recombinant viruses. Thus, in sharp contrast to the CDV-F 5′ UTR reported to translate a long Fsp, our data provided evidence that the CDV-M 3′ UTR does not express any polypeptides.

Research highlights▶ In canine distemper virus, a long region within the genome remains untranslated (between the M and F genes). ▶ Bioinformatics tools revealed a putative open reading frame within this region (M2). ▶ Here, it was investigated whether M2 was synthesized in infected cells. ▶ Our data provide evidence that M2 is not translated, at least not in the various system used.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Immunology and Microbiology Virology
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