Kl. Bransom et al., CODING DENSITY OF THE TURNIP YELLOW MOSAIC-VIRUS GENOME - ROLES OF THE OVERLAPPING COAT PROTEIN AND P206-READTHROUGH CODING REGIONS, Virology, 206(1), 1995, pp. 403-412
More than one-third of the turnip yellow mosaic virus (TYMV) genome si
multaneously encodes two ORFs. We have investigated the functions of t
he overlapping coat protein ORF and readthrough domain of ORF-206 in t
he 3' region of the genome. TYMC-206 RNA, in which a second stop codon
has been positioned to prevent ORF-206 readthrough, induced infection
s in protoplasts and plants that were indistinguishable from wild type
. ORF-206 readthrough is thus nonessential. Nevertheless, TYMV-221 RNA
, in which the ORF-206 stop codon was replaced with a tyrosine codon t
o force readthrough, was infectious to protoplasts, suggesting that a
role for ORF-206 readthrough under certain conditions is possible. TYM
V RNA variants that produce truncated or no coat protein were used to
show that the coat protein is dispensable for local movement but neces
sary for systemic spread of virus in plants. Studies in protoplasts sh
owed that (-) RNA levels are normal in the absence of coat protein, bu
t (+) strand levels are decreased about 10-fold relative to wild-type
infections. A mutant with a short C-terminal coat protein extension th
at formed virions less stable than normal demonstrated the protective
role of capsids toward genomic RNA. The evolutionary implications of t
he dense information content of the TYMV genome are discussed. (C) 199
5 Academic Press, Inc.