Journal article

Identification and characterization of short leader and trailer RNAs synthesized by the Ebola virus RNA polymerase


Authors listBach, S; Demper, JC; Klemm, P; Schlereth, J; Lechner, M; Schoen, A; Kämper, L; Weber, F; Becker, S; Biedenkopf, N; Hartmann, RK

Publication year2021

JournalPLoS Pathogens

Volume number17

Issue number10

ISSN1553-7366

eISSN1553-7374

Open access statusGold

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1010002

PublisherPublic Library of Science


Abstract

Transcription of non-segmented negative sense (NNS) RNA viruses follows a stop-start mechanism and is thought to be initiated at the genome's very 3'-end. The synthesis of short abortive leader transcripts (leaderRNAs) has been linked to transcription initiation for some NNS viruses. Here, we identified the synthesis of abortive leaderRNAs (as well as trailer RNAs) that are specifically initiated opposite to (anti)genome nt 2; leaderRNAs are predominantly terminated in the region of nt similar to 60-80. LeaderRNA synthesis requires hexamer phasing in the 3'-leader promoter. We determined a steady-state NP mRNA:leaderRNA ratio of similar to 10 to 30-fold at 48 h after Ebola virus (EBOV) infection, and this ratio was higher (70 to 190-fold) for minigenome-transfected cells. LeaderRNA initiation at nt 2 and the range of termination sites were not affected by structure and length variation between promoter elements 1 and 2, nor the presence or absence of VP30. Synthesis of leaderRNA is suppressed in the presence of VP30 and termination of leaderRNA is not mediated by cryptic gene end (GE) signals in the 3'-leader promoter. We further found different genomic 3'-end nucleotide requirements for transcription versus replication, suggesting that promoter recognition is different in the replication and transcription mode of the EBOV polymerase. We further provide evidence arguing against a potential role of EBOV leaderRNAs as effector molecules in innate immunity. Taken together, our findings are consistent with a model according to which leaderRNAs are abortive replicative RNAs whose synthesis is not linked to transcription initiation. Rather, replication and transcription complexes are proposed to independently initiate RNA synthesis at separate sites in the 3'-leader promoter, i.e., at the second nucleotide of the genome 3'-end and at the more internally positioned transcription start site preceding the first gene, respectively, as reported for Vesicular stomatitis virus.




Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleBach, S., Demper, J., Klemm, P., Schlereth, J., Lechner, M., Schoen, A., et al. (2021) Identification and characterization of short leader and trailer RNAs synthesized by the Ebola virus RNA polymerase, PLoS Pathogens, 17(10), Article e1010002. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1010002

APA Citation styleBach, S., Demper, J., Klemm, P., Schlereth, J., Lechner, M., Schoen, A., Kämper, L., Weber, F., Becker, S., Biedenkopf, N., & Hartmann, R. (2021). Identification and characterization of short leader and trailer RNAs synthesized by the Ebola virus RNA polymerase. PLoS Pathogens. 17(10), Article e1010002. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1010002


Last updated on 2025-10-06 at 11:32