4.5 Article

Identification of host-factors binding to dengue and Zika virus subgenomic RNA by efficient yeast three-hybrid screens of the human ORFeome

Journal

RNA BIOLOGY
Volume 18, Issue 5, Pages 732-744

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/15476286.2020.1868754

Keywords

Subgenomic flavivirus RNA; yeast three-hybrid; RNA-binding proteins; host factors; dengue virus; Zika virus; ORF library

Funding

  1. Research Foundation Flanders (FWO) under the Excellence of Science (EOS) program [VirEOS project] [30981113]
  2. KU Leuven (BE) Internal Funds [Lab of Excellence] [C3/19/057]

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Flaviviruses such as DENV and ZIKV cause millions of infections annually, with sfRNAs being formed inside host cells due to incomplete degradation of viral RNA by XRN1. sfRNAs act as key virulence factors, interacting with RNA-binding proteins to affect cellular processes. The Y3H system offers a promising alternative for proteome-wide screens for RBP.
Flaviviruses such as the dengue (DENV) and the Zika virus (ZIKV) are important human pathogens causing around 100 million symptomatic infections each year. During infection, small subgenomic flavivirus RNAs (sfRNAs) are formed inside the infected host cell as a result of incomplete degradation of the viral RNA genome by cellular exoribonuclease XRN1. Although the full extent of sfRNA functions is to be revealed, these non-coding RNAs are key virulence factors and their detrimental effects on multiple cellular processes seem to consistently involve molecular interactions with RNA-binding proteins (RBPs). Discovery of such sfRNA-binding host-factors has followed established biochemical pull-down approaches skewed towards highly abundant proteins hampering proteome-wide coverage. Yeast three-hybrid (Y3H) systems represent an attractive alternative approach. To facilitate proteome-wide screens for RBP, we revisited and improved existing RNA-Y3H methodology by (1) implementing full-length ORF libraries in combination with (2) efficient yeast mating to increase screening depth and sensitivity, and (3) stringent negative controls to eliminate over-representation of non-specific RNA-binders. These improvements were validated employing the well-characterized interaction between DDX6 (DEAD-box helicase 6) and sfRNA of DENV as paradigm. Our advanced Y3H system was used to screen for human proteins binding to DENV and ZIKV sfRNA, resulting in a list of 69 putative sfRNA-binders, including several previously reported as well as numerous novel RBP host factors. Our methodology requiring no sophisticated infrastructure or analytic pipeline may be employed for the discovery of meaningful RNA-protein interactions at large scale in other fields.

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