Conserved Motifs and Domains in Members of Pospiviroidae

Cells. 2022 Jan 11;11(2):230. doi: 10.3390/cells11020230.

Abstract

In 1985, Keese and Symons proposed a hypothesis on the sequence and secondary structure of viroids from the family Pospiviroidae: their secondary structure can be subdivided into five structural and functional domains and "viroids have evolved by rearrangement of domains between different viroids infecting the same cell and subsequent mutations within each domain"; this article is one of the most cited in the field of viroids. Employing the pairwise alignment method used by Keese and Symons and in addition to more recent methods, we tried to reproduce the original results and extent them to further members of Pospiviroidae which were unknown in 1985. Indeed, individual members of Pospiviroidae consist of a patchwork of sequence fragments from the family but the lengths of fragments do not point to consistent points of rearrangement, which is in conflict with the original hypothesis of fixed domain borders.

Keywords: JAli; NucAln; RY motif; hairpin I (HPI); hairpin II (HPII); loop E; pairwise sequence identity; terminal conserved hairpin (TCH); terminal conserved region (TCR); vmatch.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Base Sequence
  • Consensus Sequence*
  • Nucleic Acid Conformation
  • Nucleotide Motifs / genetics*
  • Viroids / chemistry*
  • Viroids / genetics