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    Virus Genes. 2001 Jan;22(1):47-52.

    Conserved and non-conserved regions in the Sendai virus genome: evolution of a gene possessing overlapping reading frames.

    Fujii Y, Kiyotani K, Yoshida T, Sakaguchi T.

    Department of Bacteriology, Hiroshima University School of Medicine, Japan.

    We have sequenced the entire genome of a virulent field isolate of Sendai virus, the Hamamatsu strain, and compared the sequence with that of a distant related strain, the Z strain. Calculation of synonymous and non-synonymous (amino acid changing) nucleotide substitutions revealed regions where changes were permissive and non-permissive, and the experimentally determined functional region were found to be conserved, showing that important regions for function were conserved during evolution. In the cistron-overlapping regions in the P gene, one reading frame was conserved, whereas the other overlapping frame was flexible. The priority of one frame could be a strategy for evolution of an overlapping gene of RNA viruses. We found that the carboxyl two thirds of the C protein was conserved over the amino-terminal one third, possessing priority to the overlapping P polypeptide. This suggests that the carboxyl two thirds of the C protein have a functional importance. We also found a highly variable region between the L coding frame and the 5' trailer sequence. The relevance of these findings to actual viral replication should be clarified in the future.

    PMID: 11210938 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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