Faculty Opinions recommendation of Cellular La protein shields nonsegmented negative-strand RNA viral leader RNA from RIG-I and enhances virus growth by diverse mechanisms.

Author(s):  
Barney Graham
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yue Xiao ◽  
Wenyu Zhang ◽  
Minglei Pan ◽  
David L. V. Bauer ◽  
Yuhai Bi ◽  
...  

The influenza A virus genome is comprised of eight single-stranded negative-sense viral RNA (vRNA) segments. Each of the eight vRNA segments contains segment-specific nonconserved noncoding regions (NCRs) of similar sequence and length in different influenza A virus strains. However, in the subtype-determinant segments, encoding haemagglutinin (HA) and neuraminidase (NA), the segment-specific noncoding regions are subtype-specific, varying significantly in sequence and length at both the 3´ and 5´ termini among different subtypes. The significance of these subtype-specific noncoding regions (ssNCR) in the influenza virus replication cycle is not fully understood. In this study, we show that truncations of the 3´-end H1-subtype-specific noncoding region (H1-ssNCR) resulted in recombinant viruses with decreased HA vRNA replication and attenuated growth phenotype, although the vRNA replication was not affected in single-template RNP reconstitution assays. The attenuated viruses were unstable and point mutations at nucleotide position 76 or 56 in the adjacent coding region of HA vRNA were found after serial passage. The mutations restored the HA vRNA replication and reversed the attenuated virus growth phenotype. We propose that the terminal noncoding and adjacent coding regions act synergistically to ensure optimal levels of HA vRNA replication in a multi-segment environment. These results, provide novel insights into the role of the 3´-end nonconserved noncoding regions and adjacent coding regions on template preference in multiple-segmented negative-strand RNA viruses. IMPORTANCE While most influenza A virus vRNA segments contain segment-specific nonconserved noncoding regions of similar length and sequence, these regions vary considerably both in length and sequence in the segments encoding HA and NA, the two major antigenic determinants of influenza A viruses. In this study, we investigated the function of the 3´-end H1-ssNCR and observed a synergistic effect between the 3´-end H1-ssNCR nucleotides and adjacent coding nucleotide(s) of HA segment on template preference in a multi-segment environment. The results unravel an additional level of complexity in the regulation of RNA replication in multiple-segmented negative-strand RNA viruses.


2008 ◽  
Vol 82 (16) ◽  
pp. 7977-7987 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vira Bitko ◽  
Alla Musiyenko ◽  
Mark A. Bayfield ◽  
Richard J. Maraia ◽  
Sailen Barik

ABSTRACT The La antigen (SS-B) associates with a wide variety of cellular and viral RNAs to affect gene expression in multiple systems. We show that La is the major cellular protein found to be associated with the abundant 44-nucleotide viral leader RNA (leRNA) early after infection with respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), a nonsegmented negative-strand RNA virus. Consistent with this, La redistributes from the nucleus to the cytoplasm in RSV-infected cells. Upon RNA interference knockdown of La, leRNA is redirected to associate with the RNA-binding protein RIG-I, a known activator of interferon (IFN) gene expression, and this is accompanied by the early induction of IFN mRNA. These results suggest that La shields leRNA from RIG-I, abrogating the early viral activation of type I IFN. We mapped the leRNA binding function to RNA recognition motif 1 of La and showed that while wild-type La greatly enhanced RSV growth, a La mutant defective in RSV leRNA binding also did not support RSV growth. Comparative studies of RSV and Sendai virus and the use of IFN-negative Vero cells indicated that La supports the growth of nonsegmented negative-strand RNA viruses by both IFN suppression and a potentially novel IFN-independent mechanism.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document