Biosynthesis of the reverse transcriptase of hepatitis B viruses involves de novo translational initiation not ribosomal frameshifting. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • Retroviruses and many other types of genetic elements replicate by reverse transcription of RNA. Although structurally and biologically very diverse, such elements carry conserved polymerase genes (pol) that encode proteins required for reverse transcription. In most cases, the pol gene is preceded by an overlapping gene encoding one or more nucleocapsid proteins, in a different reading frame. Because both coding regions are represented in a single mRNA, the question arises of how the reverse transcriptase in the alternative reading frame is expressed. In retroviruses and retrotransposons it is expressed as a nucleocapsid-polymerase fusion protein by ribosomal frameshifting during translation of the overlapping region. We have examined the mechanism of polymerase biosynthesis in another family of animal viruses that use reverse transcription, the hepatitis B viruses. Genetic and biochemical studies reveal that these viruses do not use ribosomal frameshifting to generate this enzyme, but instead direct translation initiation at an internal initiation (AUG) codon in the polymerase gene.

publication date

  • January 26, 1989

Research

keywords

  • Hepatitis B virus
  • Peptide Chain Initiation, Translational
  • RNA-Directed DNA Polymerase
  • Ribosomes

Identity

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 0024593741

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1038/337364a0

PubMed ID

  • 2463489

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 337

issue

  • 6205