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RNA Granules in Antiviral Innate Immunity: A Kaposi's Sarcoma-Associated Herpesvirus Journey

Journal

FRONTIERS IN MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 12, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2021.794431

Keywords

virus infections; innate immunity; KSHV; ORF57; stress granule (SG); processing bodies (PB); PKR; ago

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RNA granules are important for post-transcriptional gene regulation. KSHV, a DNA virus, counteracts RNA granules through the expression of ORF57 protein, allowing it to evade host antiviral immunity and ensure productive infection.
RNA granules are cytoplasmic, non-membranous ribonucleoprotein compartments that form ubiquitously and are often referred to as foci for post-transcriptional gene regulation. Recent research on RNA processing bodies (PB) and stress granules (SG) has shown wide implications of these cytoplasmic RNA granules and their components in suppression of RNA translation as host intracellular innate immunity against infecting viruses. Many RNA viruses either counteract or co-opt these RNA granules; however, many fundamental questions about DNA viruses with respect to their interaction with these two RNA granules remain elusive. Kaposi's sarcoma-associated herpesvirus (KSHV), a tumor-causing DNA virus, exhibits two distinct phases of infection and encodes similar to 90 viral gene products during the lytic phase of infection compared to only a few (similar to 5) during the latent phase. Thus, productive KSHV infection relies heavily on the host cell translational machinery, which often links to the formation of PB and SG. One major question is how KSHV counteracts the hostile environment of RNA granules for its productive infection. Recent studies demonstrated that KSHV copes with the translational suppression by cellular RNA granules, PB and SG, by expressing ORF57, a viral RNA-binding protein, during KSHV lytic infection. ORF57 interacts with Ago2 and GW182, two major components of PB, and prevents the scaffolding activity of GW182 at the initial stage of PB formation in the infected cells. ORF57 also interacts with protein kinase R (PKR) and PKR-activating protein (PACT) to block PKR dimerization and kinase activation, and thus inhibits eIF2 alpha phosphorylation and SG formation. The homologous immediate-early regulatory protein ICP27 of herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1), but not the EB2 protein of Epstein-Barr virus (EBV), shares this conserved inhibitory function with KSHV ORF57 on PB and SG. Through KSHV ORF57 studies, we have learned much about how a DNA virus in the infected cells is equipped to evade host antiviral immunity for its replication and productive infection. KSHV ORF57 would be an excellent viral target for development of anti-KSHV-specific therapy.

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