4.8 Review

Unconventional viral gene expression mechanisms as therapeutic targets

Journal

NATURE
Volume 593, Issue 7859, Pages 362-371

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-021-03511-5

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Burroughs Wellcome Fund [1017892]
  2. NIH/NIAID [U01AI150748]
  3. Chan Zuckerberg Initiative [2018-191895]

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Viruses have evolved unique strategies for gene expression by altering conventional gene-protein production line steps with dedicated viral enzymes or host factors. Targeting these unique enzymatic activities and host factors can expose vulnerabilities of a virus, providing a paradigm for novel antiviral therapies. Understanding the mechanisms of unconventional gene and protein expression in viruses could guide translational efforts aimed at viral eradication.
Unlike the human genome that comprises mostly noncoding and regulatory sequences, viruses have evolved under the constraints of maintaining a small genome size while expanding the efficiency of their coding and regulatory sequences. As a result, viruses use strategies of transcription and translation in which one or more of the steps in the conventional gene-protein production line are altered. These alternative strategies of viral gene expression (also known as gene recoding) can be uniquely brought about by dedicated viral enzymes or by co-opting host factors (known as host dependencies). Targeting these unique enzymatic activities and host factors exposes vulnerabilities of a virus and provides a paradigm for the design of novel antiviral therapies. In this Review, we describe the types and mechanisms of unconventional gene and protein expression in viruses, and provide a perspective on how future basic mechanistic work could inform translational efforts that are aimed at viral eradication.

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