Parsons_1990_Virology_175_69

Reference

Title : Transcription of orthopoxvirus telomeres at late times during infection - Parsons_1990_Virology_175_69
Author(s) : Parsons BL , Pickup DJ
Ref : Virology , 175 :69 , 1990
Abstract :

The telomeres of orthopoxvirus DNAs consists largely of short repeated sequences organized into at least two separate sets. Although the sequence composition of the orthopoxvirus telomeres is highly conserved, these regions do not appear to encode any proteins. At late times during infection, the telomeres of vaccinia virus are transcribed. A promoter in the region between the two sets of repeats directs transcription towards the hairpin-loop end of the viral DNA. This promoter resembles the promoters of other poxvirus late genes, and directs the synthesis of RNAs whose structure is consistent with the presence of 5' poly(A) sequences typical of late RNAs. The lengths of these late transcripts suggest that some transcription extends through the hairpin-loop region. This might occur either when the genome is in a monomeric form or when the genome is in the concatemeric form of the DNA replication intermediate. The function of late transcription of the telomeres is unclear, but similar transcription of the telomeres of vaccinia virus, cowpox virus, and raccoonpox virus suggests that such transcription may have a role in viral replication.

PubMedSearch : Parsons_1990_Virology_175_69
PubMedID: 2309453
Gene_locus related to this paper: cowvi-M5L

Related information

Gene_locus cowvi-M5L

Citations formats

Parsons BL, Pickup DJ (1990)
Transcription of orthopoxvirus telomeres at late times during infection
Virology 175 :69

Parsons BL, Pickup DJ (1990)
Virology 175 :69