A model of functional elements critical for replication
and infectivity of the potato spindle tuber viroid (PSTVd)
was proposed earlier: a thermodynamically metastable structure
containing a specific hairpin (HP II) in the (−)-strand
replication intermediate is essential for template activity
during (+)-strand synthesis. We present here a detailed
kinetic analysis on how PSTVd (−)-strands fold during
synthesis by sequential folding into a variety of metastable
structures that rearrange only slowly into the structure
distribution of the thermodynamic equilibrium. Synthesis
of PSTVd (−)-strands was performed by T7-RNA-polymerase;
the rate of synthesis was varied by altering the concentration
of nucleoside triphosphates to mimic the in vivo synthesis
rate of DNA-dependent RNA polymerase II. With dependence
on rate and duration of the synthesis, the structure distributions
were analyzed by temperature-gradient gel electrophoresis
(TGGE). Metastable structures are generated preferentially
at low transcription rates—similar to in vivo rates—or
at short transcription times at higher rates. Higher transcription
rates or longer transcription times lead to metastable
structures in low or undetectable amounts. Instead different
structures do gradually appear having a more rod-like shape
and higher thermodynamic stability, and the thermodynamically
optimal rod-like structure dominates finally. It is concluded
that viroids are able to use metastable as well as stable
structures for their biological functions.