Alphavirus genome replication is a multistep asymmetric process.
Several lines of evidence suggest that the template preference
of the RNA replicase is regulated by proteolytic cleavage of
the viral nonstructural polyprotein. Cis-acting RNA
elements in the viral genome also play crucial roles in regulating
genome replication and subgenomic RNA transcription. In this
report, a series of RNA templates were analyzed in vitro and
in vivo to define functional elements in the 5′ end of
the genome. The 5′ UTR was shown to contain distinct core
promoter elements for both minus- and plus-strand synthesis.
In addition, two conserved stem-loop structures within the nsP1
coding sequence enhanced RNA replication but were not required.
Studies with chimeric templates and trans-competition experiments
suggest that the 5′ determinant for minus-strand initiation
can differ among alphaviruses and binds to one or more limiting
replicase components. The results provide compelling evidence
that the 5′ and 3′ ends of alphavirus genome RNAs
must interact to initiate replication and we propose one model
for how this interaction might occur. In addition to providing
new insight into the initiation of alphavirus genome replication,
these results have implications for the development of improved
alphavirus vector systems with reduced recombination potential.