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. 1984 Apr;50(1):92-9.
doi: 10.1128/JVI.50.1.92-99.1984.

Nucleotide sequence of the gene encoding respiratory syncytial virus matrix protein

Nucleotide sequence of the gene encoding respiratory syncytial virus matrix protein

M Satake et al. J Virol. 1984 Apr.

Abstract

The amino acid sequence of the matrix protein of the human respiratory syncytial virus (RS virus) was deduced from the sequence of a cDNA insert in a recombinant plasmid harboring an almost full-length copy of this gene. It specifically hybridized to a single 1,050-base mRNA from infected cells. The recombinant containing 944 base pairs of RS viral matrix protein gene sequence lacked five nucleotides corresponding to the 5' end of the mRNA. The nucleotide sequence of the 5' end of the mRNA was determined by the dideoxy sequencing method and found to be 5' NGGGC, wherein the C residue is one nucleotide upstream of the cloned viral sequence. The initiator ATG codon for the matrix protein is embedded in an AATATGG sequence similar to the canonical PXXATGG sequence present around functional eucaryotic translation initiation codons. There is no conserved sequence upstream of the polyadenylate tail, unlike vesicular stomatitis virus and Sendai virus, in which four nucleotides upstream of the polyadenylate tail are conserved in all genes. There is no equivalent of the eucaryotic polyadenylation signal AAUAAA upstream of the polyadenylate tail. The matrix protein of 28,717 daltons has 256 amino acids. It is relatively basic and moderately hydrophobic. There are two clusters of hydrophobic amino acid residues in the C-terminal third of the protein that could potentially interact with the membrane components of the infected cell. The matrix protein has no homology with the matrix proteins of other negative-strand RNA viruses, implying that RS virus has undergone extensive evolutionary divergence. A second open reading frame potentially encoding a protein of 75 amino acids and partially overlapping the C terminus of the matrix protein was also identified.

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