Identification of novel RNA polymerase III promoters in bovine leukemia virus miRNA cluster by cross-taxa analysis of small non-coding RNAs.
Aneta Pluta, Casey Droscha
Abstract
Open AccessBACKGROUND: Bovine leukemia virus (BLV) is an oncogenic deltaretrovirus that induces enzootic bovine leukosis. A defining feature of BLV is its viral miRNA cluster, which is transcribed atypically by RNA polymerase III via internal type 2 promoters rather than through the canonical Pol II pathway. These miRNAs accumulate to high levels within infected lymphocytes and can alter expression of a variety of host genes involved in lymphocyte proliferation and impose leukemogenic processes. RESULTS: Here, we present a comprehensive in silico characterization of new A-box and B-box promoter motifs within the BLV miRNA-coding region. As the first step, a taxonomically diverse dataset of small non-coding RNAs (tRNAs, SINEs, and other ncRNAs) was assembled to derive position-weight matrices and corresponding IUPAC consensus sequences for type 2 internal Pol III promoter motifs. Using these models, all available BLV miRNA cluster sequences were scanned to identify and map A-box-like and B-box-like elements and to reconstruct the underlying promoter architecture. Our analyses reveal a noncanonical BLV promoter organization: overlapping degenerate A-box variants-most frequently three distinct elements-reside within the pre-miRNA hairpin region, whereas B-box elements were positioned downstream of the Pol III termination signal, effectively excluded from the mature transcript. CONCLUSIONS: Despite motif degeneration, critical nucleotide positions remained strongly conserved, indicating evolutionary pressure to preserve Pol III recruitment while accommodating viral genome constraints. These findings fill a crucial gap in understanding of BLV Pol III promoter architecture and provide a foundation for future studies on how unconventional promoter configurations regulate viral miRNA expression and virus-host interactions.