Structural insight into cap-snatching and RNA synthesis by influenza polymerase
Author(s) -
Stefan Reich,
Delphine Guilligay,
A. Pflug,
Hélène Malet,
Imre Berger,
Thibaut Crépin,
Darren J. Hart,
T. Lunardi,
Max H. Nanao,
Rob W.H. Ruigrok,
Stephen Cusack
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
nature
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 15.993
H-Index - 1226
eISSN - 1476-4687
pISSN - 0028-0836
DOI - 10.1038/nature14009
Subject(s) - polymerase , biology , primer (cosmetics) , rna polymerase , rna , microbiology and biotechnology , virology , chemistry , dna , genetics , gene , organic chemistry
Influenza virus polymerase uses a capped primer, derived by 'cap-snatching' from host pre-messenger RNA, to transcribe its RNA genome into mRNA and a stuttering mechanism to generate the poly(A) tail. By contrast, genome replication is unprimed and generates exact full-length copies of the template. Here we use crystal structures of bat influenza A and human influenza B polymerases (FluA and FluB), bound to the viral RNA promoter, to give mechanistic insight into these distinct processes. In the FluA structure, a loop analogous to the priming loop of flavivirus polymerases suggests that influenza could initiate unprimed template replication by a similar mechanism. Comparing the FluA and FluB structures suggests that cap-snatching involves in situ rotation of the PB2 cap-binding domain to direct the capped primer first towards the endonuclease and then into the polymerase active site. The polymerase probably undergoes considerable conformational changes to convert the observed pre-initiation state into the active initiation and elongation states.
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