The observation that cells restrict the nuclear
export of incompletely spliced transcripts via the canonical
nuclear mRNA export pathway implies that all retroviruses
should have evolved a way to direct the unspliced form
of their genomic RNA into an alternate export pathway.
While the Crm1-dependent pathway used by complex retroviruses
to export incompletely spliced viral transcripts is now
fairly well understood, less is known about how simple
retroviruses accomplish this task. However, the Mason–Pfizer
monkey virus (MPMV) has been shown to encode a structured
RNA sequence, termed the constitutive transport element
(CTE), that recruits a cellular RNA export factor termed
Tap. Here we demonstrate that a CTE previously proposed
to be present in the avian sarcoma/leukemia (ASV/ALV) family
of retroviruses indeed functions as a potent RNA export
signal. We have mapped single- and double-stranded regions
present in the ASV/ALV CTE in vitro and report that this
CTE is predicted to fold into a structure bearing three
distinct RNA stem-loops. However, only the central stem-loop
is critical for CTE function and this 69-nt structure is,
in fact, sufficient when present as a dimer. While the
ASV/ALV CTE is shown to function independently of Crm1,
as also previously reported for the MPMV CTE, it lacks
any evident sequence homology to the highly conserved MPMV
CTE sequence. Together, these data define the secondary
structure and biological activity of an avian CTE sequence
that may access a novel nuclear RNA export pathway.