Complete nucleotide sequence of chikungunya virus and evidence for an internal polyadenylation site

AH Khan, K Morita, MC Parquet… - Journal of General …, 2002 - microbiologyresearch.org
AH Khan, K Morita, MC Parquet, F Hasebe, EGM Mathenge, A Igarashi
Journal of General Virology, 2002microbiologyresearch.org
In this study, the complete genomic sequence of chikungunya virus (CHIK; S27 African
prototype) was determined and the presence of an internal polyadenylation [I-poly (A)] site
was confirmed within the 3'non-translated region (NTR) of this strain. The complete genome
was 11805 nucleotides in length, excluding the 5'cap nucleotide, an I-poly (A) tract and the
3'poly (A) tail. It comprised two long open reading frames that encoded the non-structural
(2474 amino acids) and structural polyproteins (1244 amino acids). The genetic location of …
In this study, the complete genomic sequence of chikungunya virus (CHIK; S27 African prototype) was determined and the presence of an internal polyadenylation [I-poly(A)] site was confirmed within the 3’ non-translated region (NTR) of this strain. The complete genome was 11805 nucleotides in length, excluding the 5’ cap nucleotide, an I-poly(A) tract and the 3’ poly(A) tail. It comprised two long open reading frames that encoded the non-structural (2474 amino acids) and structural polyproteins (1244 amino acids). The genetic location of the non-structural and structural proteins was predicted by comparing the deduced amino acid sequences with the known cleavage sites of other alphaviruses, located at the C-terminal region of their virus-encoded proteins. In addition, predicted secondary structures were identified within the 5’ NTR and repeated sequence elements (RSEs) within the 3’ NTR. Amino acid sequence homologies, phylogenetic analysis of non-structural and structural proteins and characteristic RSEs revealed that although CHIK is closely related to o’nyong-nyong virus, it is in fact a distinct virus. The existence of I-poly(A) fragments with different lengths (e.g. 19, 36, 43, 91, 94 and 106 adenine nucleotides) at identical initiation positions for each clone strongly suggests that the polymerase of the alphaviruses has a capacity to create poly(A) by a template-dependant mechanism such as ‘polymerase slippage’, as has been reported for vesicular stomatitis virus.
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