Cargando…

Analysis of the human cytomegalovirus genomic region from UL146 through UL147A reveals sequence hypervariability, genotypic stability, and overlapping transcripts

BACKGROUND: Although the sequence of the human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) genome is generally conserved among unrelated clinical strains, some open reading frames (ORFs) are highly variable. UL146 and UL147, which encode CXC chemokine homologues are among these variable ORFs. RESULTS: The region of the...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Lurain, Nell S, Fox, Andrea M, Lichy, Heather M, Bhorade, Sangeeta M, Ware, Carl F, Huang, Diana D, Kwan, Sau-Ping, Garrity, Edward R, Chou, Sunwen
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2006
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1360065/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16409621
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1743-422X-3-4
_version_ 1782126683391787008
author Lurain, Nell S
Fox, Andrea M
Lichy, Heather M
Bhorade, Sangeeta M
Ware, Carl F
Huang, Diana D
Kwan, Sau-Ping
Garrity, Edward R
Chou, Sunwen
author_facet Lurain, Nell S
Fox, Andrea M
Lichy, Heather M
Bhorade, Sangeeta M
Ware, Carl F
Huang, Diana D
Kwan, Sau-Ping
Garrity, Edward R
Chou, Sunwen
author_sort Lurain, Nell S
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Although the sequence of the human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) genome is generally conserved among unrelated clinical strains, some open reading frames (ORFs) are highly variable. UL146 and UL147, which encode CXC chemokine homologues are among these variable ORFs. RESULTS: The region of the HCMV genome from UL146 through UL147A was analyzed in clinical strains for sequence variability, genotypic stability, and transcriptional expression. The UL146 sequences in clinical strains from two geographically distant sites were assigned to 12 sequence groups that differ by over 60% at the amino acid level. The same groups were generated by sequences from the UL146-UL147 intergenic region and the UL147 ORF. In contrast to the high level of sequence variability among unrelated clinical strains, the sequences of UL146 through UL147A from isolates of the same strain were highly stable after repeated passage both in vitro and in vivo. Riboprobes homologous to these ORFs detected multiple overlapping transcripts differing in temporal expression. UL146 sequences are present only on the largest transcript, which also contains all of the downstream ORFs including UL148 and UL132. The sizes and hybridization patterns of the transcripts are consistent with a common 3'-terminus downstream of the UL132 ORF. Early-late expression of the transcripts associated with UL146 and UL147 is compatible with the potential role of CXC chemokines in pathogenesis associated with viral replication. CONCLUSION: Clinical isolates from two different geographic sites cluster in the same groups based on the hypervariability of the UL146, UL147, or the intergenic sequences, which provides strong evidence for linkage and no evidence for interstrain recombination within this region. The sequence of individual strains was absolutely stable in vitro and in vivo, which indicates that sequence drift is not a mechanism for the observed sequence hypervariability. There is also no evidence of transcriptional splicing, although multiple overlapping transcripts extending into the adjacent UL148 and UL132 open reading frames were detected using gene-specific probes.
format Text
id pubmed-1360065
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2006
publisher BioMed Central
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-13600652006-02-02 Analysis of the human cytomegalovirus genomic region from UL146 through UL147A reveals sequence hypervariability, genotypic stability, and overlapping transcripts Lurain, Nell S Fox, Andrea M Lichy, Heather M Bhorade, Sangeeta M Ware, Carl F Huang, Diana D Kwan, Sau-Ping Garrity, Edward R Chou, Sunwen Virol J Research BACKGROUND: Although the sequence of the human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) genome is generally conserved among unrelated clinical strains, some open reading frames (ORFs) are highly variable. UL146 and UL147, which encode CXC chemokine homologues are among these variable ORFs. RESULTS: The region of the HCMV genome from UL146 through UL147A was analyzed in clinical strains for sequence variability, genotypic stability, and transcriptional expression. The UL146 sequences in clinical strains from two geographically distant sites were assigned to 12 sequence groups that differ by over 60% at the amino acid level. The same groups were generated by sequences from the UL146-UL147 intergenic region and the UL147 ORF. In contrast to the high level of sequence variability among unrelated clinical strains, the sequences of UL146 through UL147A from isolates of the same strain were highly stable after repeated passage both in vitro and in vivo. Riboprobes homologous to these ORFs detected multiple overlapping transcripts differing in temporal expression. UL146 sequences are present only on the largest transcript, which also contains all of the downstream ORFs including UL148 and UL132. The sizes and hybridization patterns of the transcripts are consistent with a common 3'-terminus downstream of the UL132 ORF. Early-late expression of the transcripts associated with UL146 and UL147 is compatible with the potential role of CXC chemokines in pathogenesis associated with viral replication. CONCLUSION: Clinical isolates from two different geographic sites cluster in the same groups based on the hypervariability of the UL146, UL147, or the intergenic sequences, which provides strong evidence for linkage and no evidence for interstrain recombination within this region. The sequence of individual strains was absolutely stable in vitro and in vivo, which indicates that sequence drift is not a mechanism for the observed sequence hypervariability. There is also no evidence of transcriptional splicing, although multiple overlapping transcripts extending into the adjacent UL148 and UL132 open reading frames were detected using gene-specific probes. BioMed Central 2006-01-12 /pmc/articles/PMC1360065/ /pubmed/16409621 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1743-422X-3-4 Text en Copyright © 2006 Lurain et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Lurain, Nell S
Fox, Andrea M
Lichy, Heather M
Bhorade, Sangeeta M
Ware, Carl F
Huang, Diana D
Kwan, Sau-Ping
Garrity, Edward R
Chou, Sunwen
Analysis of the human cytomegalovirus genomic region from UL146 through UL147A reveals sequence hypervariability, genotypic stability, and overlapping transcripts
title Analysis of the human cytomegalovirus genomic region from UL146 through UL147A reveals sequence hypervariability, genotypic stability, and overlapping transcripts
title_full Analysis of the human cytomegalovirus genomic region from UL146 through UL147A reveals sequence hypervariability, genotypic stability, and overlapping transcripts
title_fullStr Analysis of the human cytomegalovirus genomic region from UL146 through UL147A reveals sequence hypervariability, genotypic stability, and overlapping transcripts
title_full_unstemmed Analysis of the human cytomegalovirus genomic region from UL146 through UL147A reveals sequence hypervariability, genotypic stability, and overlapping transcripts
title_short Analysis of the human cytomegalovirus genomic region from UL146 through UL147A reveals sequence hypervariability, genotypic stability, and overlapping transcripts
title_sort analysis of the human cytomegalovirus genomic region from ul146 through ul147a reveals sequence hypervariability, genotypic stability, and overlapping transcripts
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1360065/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16409621
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1743-422X-3-4
work_keys_str_mv AT lurainnells analysisofthehumancytomegalovirusgenomicregionfromul146throughul147arevealssequencehypervariabilitygenotypicstabilityandoverlappingtranscripts
AT foxandream analysisofthehumancytomegalovirusgenomicregionfromul146throughul147arevealssequencehypervariabilitygenotypicstabilityandoverlappingtranscripts
AT lichyheatherm analysisofthehumancytomegalovirusgenomicregionfromul146throughul147arevealssequencehypervariabilitygenotypicstabilityandoverlappingtranscripts
AT bhoradesangeetam analysisofthehumancytomegalovirusgenomicregionfromul146throughul147arevealssequencehypervariabilitygenotypicstabilityandoverlappingtranscripts
AT warecarlf analysisofthehumancytomegalovirusgenomicregionfromul146throughul147arevealssequencehypervariabilitygenotypicstabilityandoverlappingtranscripts
AT huangdianad analysisofthehumancytomegalovirusgenomicregionfromul146throughul147arevealssequencehypervariabilitygenotypicstabilityandoverlappingtranscripts
AT kwansauping analysisofthehumancytomegalovirusgenomicregionfromul146throughul147arevealssequencehypervariabilitygenotypicstabilityandoverlappingtranscripts
AT garrityedwardr analysisofthehumancytomegalovirusgenomicregionfromul146throughul147arevealssequencehypervariabilitygenotypicstabilityandoverlappingtranscripts
AT chousunwen analysisofthehumancytomegalovirusgenomicregionfromul146throughul147arevealssequencehypervariabilitygenotypicstabilityandoverlappingtranscripts