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A Look into Bunyavirales Genomes: Functions of Non-Structural (NS) Proteins

Journal

VIRUSES-BASEL
Volume 13, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/v13020314

Keywords

bunyavirales; non-structural proteins; peribunyaviridae; nairoviridae; hantaviridae; phenuiviridae; interferon antagonist

Categories

Funding

  1. Intramural Research Program, NIAID, NIH

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The Bunyavirales order, established in 2016, encompasses diverse viruses from 13 families, with four families known to contain human pathogens sharing a similar genomic organization. The non-structural proteins encoded by these families play crucial roles in immune evasion, host responses, and viral pathogenesis, highlighting their importance in understanding disease progression and developing interventions.
In 2016, the Bunyavirales order was established by the International Committee on Taxonomy of Viruses (ICTV) to incorporate the increasing number of related viruses across 13 viral families. While diverse, four of the families (Peribunyaviridae, Nairoviridae, Hantaviridae, and Phenuiviridae) contain known human pathogens and share a similar tri-segmented, negative-sense RNA genomic organization. In addition to the nucleoprotein and envelope glycoproteins encoded by the small and medium segments, respectively, many of the viruses in these families also encode for non-structural (NS) NSs and NSm proteins. The NSs of Phenuiviridae is the most extensively studied as a host interferon antagonist, functioning through a variety of mechanisms seen throughout the other three families. In addition, functions impacting cellular apoptosis, chromatin organization, and transcriptional activities, to name a few, are possessed by NSs across the families. Peribunyaviridae, Nairoviridae, and Phenuiviridae also encode an NSm, although less extensively studied than NSs, that has roles in antagonizing immune responses, promoting viral assembly and infectivity, and even maintenance of infection in host mosquito vectors. Overall, the similar and divergent roles of NS proteins of these human pathogenic Bunyavirales are of particular interest in understanding disease progression, viral pathogenesis, and developing strategies for interventions and treatments.

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