4.7 Article

Six RNA Viruses and Forty-One Hosts: Viral Small RNAs and Modulation of Small RNA Repertoires in Vertebrate and Invertebrate Systems

Journal

PLOS PATHOGENS
Volume 6, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1000764

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Burroughs Wellcome Fund [CABS1006173]
  2. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [SFB571]
  3. Fritz Thyssen Foundation
  4. NIH [AI071068, K08-AI079406-01, 1S10RR022982-01, AI069000, R01 AI052447, AI052324, U54 AI057160, ROI GM37706]
  5. UAMS Foundation
  6. Burroughs Wellcome Fund Clinical Scientist Award in Translational Research [RO1 DK066793, RO1 DK064223]
  7. Pacific Southwest Regional Center of Excellence, PI Alan Barbour [NIAID-U54065359]

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We have used multiplexed high-throughput sequencing to characterize changes in small RNA populations that occur during viral infection in animal cells. Small RNA-based mechanisms such as RNA interference (RNAi) have been shown in plant and invertebrate systems to play a key role in host responses to viral infection. Although homologs of the key RNAi effector pathways are present in mammalian cells, and can launch an RNAi-mediated degradation of experimentally targeted mRNAs, any role for such responses in mammalian host-virus interactions remains to be characterized. Six different viruses were examined in 41 experimentally susceptible and resistant host systems. We identified virus-derived small RNAs (vsRNAs) from all six viruses, with total abundance varying from vanishingly rare'' (less than 0.1% of cellular small RNA) to highly abundant (comparable to abundant micro-RNAs miRNAs''). In addition to the appearance of vsRNAs during infection, we saw a number of specific changes in host miRNA profiles. For several infection models investigated in more detail, the RNAi and Interferon pathways modulated the abundance of vsRNAs. We also found evidence for populations of vsRNAs that exist as duplexed siRNAs with zero to three nucleotide 39 overhangs. Using populations of cells carrying a Hepatitis C replicon, we observed strand-selective loading of siRNAs onto Argonaute complexes. These experiments define vsRNAs as one possible component of the interplay between animal viruses and their hosts.

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