๐ Interplay between coronavirus, a cytoplasmic RNA virus, and nonsense-mediated mRNA decay pathway
Coronaviruses (Co. Vs), including severe acute respiratory syndrome CoV and Middle East respiratory syndrome CoV, are enveloped RNA viruses that carry a large positive-sense single-stranded RNA genome and cause a variety of diseases in humans and domestic animals. Very little is known about the host pathways that regulate the stability of CoV mRNAs, which carry some unusual features. Nonsense-mediated decay (NMD) is a eukaryotic RNA surveillance pathway that detects mRNAs harboring aberrant features and targets them for degradation. Although CoV mRNAs are of cytoplasmic origin, the presence of several NMD-inducing features (including multiple ORFs with internal termination codons that create a long 3' untranslated region) in CoV mRNAs led us to explore the interplay between the NMD pathway and Co. Vs. Our study using murine hepatitis virus as a model CoV showed that CoV mRNAs are recognized by the NMD pathway as a substrate, resulting in their degradation. Furthermore, CoV replication induced the inhibition of the NMD pathway, and N protein (a viral structural protein) had an NMD inhibitory function that protected viral mRNAs from rapid decay. Our data further suggest that the NMD pathway interferes with optimal viral replication by degrading viral mRNAs early in infection, before sufficient accumulation of N protein. Our study presents clear evidence for the biological importance of the NMD pathway in controlling the stability of mRNAs and the efficiency of replication of a cytoplasmic RNA virus.
keywords
๐ severe acute (1373)
๐ hepatitis virus (437)
๐ murine hepatitis (71)
๐ respiratory syndrome (2004)
๐ acute respiratory (1734)
๐ viral replication (258)
author
๐ค Wada, Masami
๐ค Lokugamage, Kumari G.
๐ค Nakagawa, Keisuke
๐ค Narayanan, Krishna
๐ค Makino, Shinji
year
โฐ 2018
issn
๐ 10916490 00278424
volume
115
number
43
page
E10157-E10166
citedbycount
3
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