4.5 Article

An RNA-centric dissection of host complexes controlling flavivirus infection

Journal

NATURE MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 4, Issue 12, Pages 2369-2382

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/s41564-019-0518-2

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Funding

  1. NIH [DP2 AI104557, R01 AI141970, U19 AI109662, R37 AI047365, R01 AI069000, R01 AI051622]
  2. Burroughs Wellcome Investigators in the Pathogenesis of Infectious Disease
  3. David and Lucile Packard Foundation
  4. Stanford Dean's Fellowship
  5. Child Health Research Institute Stanford
  6. Damon Runyon Cancer Research Foundation
  7. NSF-GRF
  8. Howard Hughes Medical Institute
  9. Intramural Research Program of the NIAID

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Flaviviruses, including dengue virus (DENV) and Zika virus (ZIKV), cause severe human disease. Co-opting cellular factors for viral translation and viral genome replication at the endoplasmic reticulum is a shared replication strategy, despite different clinical outcomes. Although the protein products of these viruses have been studied in depth, how the RNA genomes operate inside human cells is poorly understood. Using comprehensive identification of RNA-binding proteins by mass spectrometry (ChIRP-MS), we took an RNA-centric viewpoint of flaviviral infection and identified several hundred proteins associated with both DENV and ZIKV genomic RNA in human cells. Genome-scale knockout screens assigned putative functional relevance to the RNA-protein interactions observed by ChIRP-MS. The endoplasmic-reticulum-localized RNA-binding proteins vigilin and ribosome-binding protein 1 directly bound viral RNA and each acted at distinct stages in the life cycle of flaviviruses. Thus, this versatile strategy can elucidate features of human biology that control the pathogenesis of clinically relevant viruses.

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