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Mol. Cell. Biol., Apr 1997, 2127-2135, Vol 17, No. 4
JM Scott and MJ Imperiale
The presence of two polyadenylation signals in the primary transcript of
the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) provirus leads to a
requirement for regulation of 3'-end processing. To ensure that viral
genome replication and gene expression occur, polyadenylation must occur at
the poly(A) site transcribed from the 3' long terminal repeat (LTR) but not
the 5' LTR. Models that have been proposed to explain this regulation
include (i) inhibition of the 5' site as a result of proximity to the
promoter and (ii) enhancement of the 3' site by U3 sequences that are
transcribed upstream of only the 3' poly(A) site. In previous studies
designed to investigate these models, a reduction in the levels of
steady-state RNA was observed when the HIV-1 poly(A) site was placed within
500 nucleotides of the cap site. Although these findings were interpreted
to be the result of promoter proximity effects on 3'-end processing, in
vitro studies demonstrated that the HIV-1 poly(A) site was equally
functional in promoter-proximal and promoter-distal positions. These
results led to the hypothesis that, in vivo, the poly(A) site is fully
active at this close distance but the short transcripts produced are highly
unstable in the nucleus and undergo rapid degradation, precluding their
appearance as abundant mRNAs in the steady-state pool. To investigate the
biogenesis of these short RNAs in vivo, experiments were performed to
examine directly the nuclear processing rates of the HIV-1 poly(A) site in
intact cells. By using recombinant adenoviruses as expression vectors, it
is now demonstrated conclusively that the HIV-1 poly(A) site is indeed
processed at equivalent levels independent of its distance from the
promoter. Although transcripts containing the promoter-proximal poly(A)
site are processed efficiently, most undergo degradation in the nucleus
instead of nucleocytoplasmic transport.
Copyright © 1997, American Society for Microbiology
Promoter-proximal poly(A) sites are processed efficiently, but the RNA products are unstable in the nucleus
Department of Microbiology and Immunology, University of Michigan Medical School, Ann Arbor 48109-0620, USA.
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