4.6 Review

Nuclear Imprisonment: Viral Strategies to Arrest Host mRNA Nuclear Export

Journal

VIRUSES-BASEL
Volume 5, Issue 7, Pages 1824-1849

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/v5071824

Keywords

virus; influenza virus; vesicular stomatitis virus; VSV; NS1; matrix protein; nuclear export; nucleo-cytoplasmic trafficking; mRNA export; NXF1; TAP; CRM1; Rae1

Categories

Funding

  1. NIH [R01 GM07159, R01 AI079110, R01AI089539, T32AI070116-06]

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Viruses possess many strategies to impair host cellular responses to infection. Nuclear export of host messenger RNAs (mRNA) that encode antiviral factors is critical for antiviral protein production and control of viral infections. Several viruses have evolved sophisticated strategies to inhibit nuclear export of host mRNAs, including targeting mRNA export factors and nucleoporins to compromise their roles in nucleo-cytoplasmic trafficking of cellular mRNA. Here, we present a review of research focused on suppression of host mRNA nuclear export by viruses, including influenza A virus and vesicular stomatitis virus, and the impact of this viral suppression on host antiviral responses.

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