Viral RNA Modulation of Host Gene Expression

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Title Viral RNA Modulation of Host Gene Expression
Creator Cazalla, D.
Subject Diffusion of Innovation; RNA, Viral; RNA, Messenger; MicroRNAs; RNA Stability; Base Pairing; Gene Expression Regulation; Host-Pathogen Interactions; Gene Silencing; Viruses; Virus Physiological Phenomena; Cell Death; Lymphoma; Leukemia; Knowledge Discovery
Keyword Immunology, Inflammation, Infectious Disease
Image Caption Model of viral HSUR2 RNA function. HSUR2 base-pairs with both host target mRNAs and miRNAs (miR-142-3p and miR-16), tethering them together and inhibiting target mRNA stability and expression.
Description Viruses depend on and modulate their hosts' cellular environments to maximize replication. Studies of viruses can therefore reveal important aspects of host-pathogen interactions and fundamental cell biology. Viruses often modulate host pathways using proteins, but can also express non-coding RNAs whose functions and mechanisms are mostly unknown. Cazalla and colleagues studied the small RNAs from H. saimiri, a herpesvirus that establishes latency in the T cells of New World primates and can cause aggressive leukemias and lymphomas in non-natural hosts. They showed these RNAs, called HSURs, modulate host gene expression and inhibit host cell death using a novel mechanism in which the HSURs inhibit host mRNAs by tethering them to host miRNAs and the associated degradation and translation inhibition machinery. This mechanism is a completely novel process, not previously observed in cells, and but which promises to lead to a fuller understanding of gene regulation in both infected and uninfected cells.
Relation is Part of 2017
Publisher Spencer S. Eccles Health Sciences Library, University of Utah
Date Digital 2020
Date 2017
Type Image
Format image/jpeg
Rights Management Copyright © 2021, University of Utah, All Rights Reserved
Language eng
ARK ark:/87278/s6gz01kj
References 1.) A viral Sm-class RNA base-pairs with mRNAs and recruits microRNAs to inhibit apoptosis. Gorbea C, Mosbruger T, Cazalla D. Nature. 2017 Oct;550(7675):275. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28976967/
Press Releases and Media Science Signaling Papers of Note https://stke.sciencemag.org/content/10/501/eaar1923.full; A Viral "Bait and Switch" Boosts Infection https://uofuhealth.utah.edu/newsroom/news/2017/10/cazalla-nature.php
Setname ehsl_50disc
ID 1589382
Reference URL https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6gz01kj
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