Evidence that the polymerase of respiratory syncytial virus initiates RNA replication in a nontemplated fashion

Abstract
RNA virus polymerases must initiate replicative RNA synthesis with extremely high accuracy to maintain their genome termini and to avoid generating defective genomes. For the single-stranded negative-sense RNA viruses, it is not known how this accuracy is achieved. To investigate this question, mutations were introduced into the 3' terminal base of a respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) template, and the RNA products were examined to determine the impact of the mutation. To perform the assay, RNA replication was reconstituted using a modified minireplicon system in which replication was limited to a single step. Importantly, this system allowed analysis of RSV RNA generated intracellularly, but from a defined template that was not subject to selection by replication. Sequence analysis of RNA products generated from templates containing 1U-C and 1U-A substitutions showed that, in both cases, replication products were initiated with a nontemplated, WT A residue, rather than a templated G or U residue, indicating that the polymerase selects the terminal NTP independently of the template. Examination of a template in which the position 1 nucleotide was deleted supported these findings. This mutant directed efficient replication at approximately 60% of WT levels, and its product was found to be initiated at the WT position (-1 relative to the template) with a WT A residue. These findings show that the RSV replicase selects ATP and initiates at the correct position, independently of the first nucleotide of the template, suggesting a mechanism by which highly accurate replication initiation is achieved.