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RNA Structure Duplication in the Dengue Virus 3′ UTR: Redundancy or Host Specificity?

Flaviviruses include a diverse group of medically important viruses that cycle between mosquitoes and humans. During this natural process of switching hosts, each species imposes different selective forces on the viral population. Using dengue virus (DENV) as model, we found that paralogous RNA stru...

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Autores principales: de Borba, Luana, Villordo, Sergio M., Marsico, Franco L., Carballeda, Juan M., Filomatori, Claudia V., Gebhard, Leopoldo G., Pallarés, Horacio M., Lequime, Sebastian, Lambrechts, Louis, Sánchez Vargas, Irma, Blair, Carol D., Gamarnik, Andrea V.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Society for Microbiology 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6325252/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30622191
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mBio.02506-18
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author de Borba, Luana
Villordo, Sergio M.
Marsico, Franco L.
Carballeda, Juan M.
Filomatori, Claudia V.
Gebhard, Leopoldo G.
Pallarés, Horacio M.
Lequime, Sebastian
Lambrechts, Louis
Sánchez Vargas, Irma
Blair, Carol D.
Gamarnik, Andrea V.
author_facet de Borba, Luana
Villordo, Sergio M.
Marsico, Franco L.
Carballeda, Juan M.
Filomatori, Claudia V.
Gebhard, Leopoldo G.
Pallarés, Horacio M.
Lequime, Sebastian
Lambrechts, Louis
Sánchez Vargas, Irma
Blair, Carol D.
Gamarnik, Andrea V.
author_sort de Borba, Luana
collection PubMed
description Flaviviruses include a diverse group of medically important viruses that cycle between mosquitoes and humans. During this natural process of switching hosts, each species imposes different selective forces on the viral population. Using dengue virus (DENV) as model, we found that paralogous RNA structures originating from duplications in the viral 3′ untranslated region (UTR) are under different selective pressures in the two hosts. These RNA structures, known as dumbbells (DB1 and DB2), were originally proposed to be enhancers of viral replication. Analysis of viruses obtained from infected mosquitoes showed selection of mutations that mapped in DB2. Recombinant viruses carrying the identified variations confirmed that these mutations greatly increase viral replication in mosquito cells, with low or no impact in human cells. Use of viruses lacking each of the DB structures revealed opposite viral phenotypes. While deletion of DB1 reduced viral replication about 10-fold, viruses lacking DB2 displayed a great increase of fitness in mosquitoes, confirming a functional diversification of these similar RNA elements. Mechanistic analysis indicated that DB1 and DB2 differentially modulate viral genome cyclization and RNA replication. We found that a pseudoknot formed within DB2 competes with long-range RNA-RNA interactions that are necessary for minus-strand RNA synthesis. Our results support a model in which a functional diversification of duplicated RNA elements in the viral 3′ UTR is driven by host-specific requirements. This study provides new ideas for understanding molecular aspects of the evolution of RNA viruses that naturally jump between different species.
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spelling pubmed-63252522019-01-11 RNA Structure Duplication in the Dengue Virus 3′ UTR: Redundancy or Host Specificity? de Borba, Luana Villordo, Sergio M. Marsico, Franco L. Carballeda, Juan M. Filomatori, Claudia V. Gebhard, Leopoldo G. Pallarés, Horacio M. Lequime, Sebastian Lambrechts, Louis Sánchez Vargas, Irma Blair, Carol D. Gamarnik, Andrea V. mBio Research Article Flaviviruses include a diverse group of medically important viruses that cycle between mosquitoes and humans. During this natural process of switching hosts, each species imposes different selective forces on the viral population. Using dengue virus (DENV) as model, we found that paralogous RNA structures originating from duplications in the viral 3′ untranslated region (UTR) are under different selective pressures in the two hosts. These RNA structures, known as dumbbells (DB1 and DB2), were originally proposed to be enhancers of viral replication. Analysis of viruses obtained from infected mosquitoes showed selection of mutations that mapped in DB2. Recombinant viruses carrying the identified variations confirmed that these mutations greatly increase viral replication in mosquito cells, with low or no impact in human cells. Use of viruses lacking each of the DB structures revealed opposite viral phenotypes. While deletion of DB1 reduced viral replication about 10-fold, viruses lacking DB2 displayed a great increase of fitness in mosquitoes, confirming a functional diversification of these similar RNA elements. Mechanistic analysis indicated that DB1 and DB2 differentially modulate viral genome cyclization and RNA replication. We found that a pseudoknot formed within DB2 competes with long-range RNA-RNA interactions that are necessary for minus-strand RNA synthesis. Our results support a model in which a functional diversification of duplicated RNA elements in the viral 3′ UTR is driven by host-specific requirements. This study provides new ideas for understanding molecular aspects of the evolution of RNA viruses that naturally jump between different species. American Society for Microbiology 2019-01-08 /pmc/articles/PMC6325252/ /pubmed/30622191 http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mBio.02506-18 Text en Copyright © 2019 de Borba et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) .
spellingShingle Research Article
de Borba, Luana
Villordo, Sergio M.
Marsico, Franco L.
Carballeda, Juan M.
Filomatori, Claudia V.
Gebhard, Leopoldo G.
Pallarés, Horacio M.
Lequime, Sebastian
Lambrechts, Louis
Sánchez Vargas, Irma
Blair, Carol D.
Gamarnik, Andrea V.
RNA Structure Duplication in the Dengue Virus 3′ UTR: Redundancy or Host Specificity?
title RNA Structure Duplication in the Dengue Virus 3′ UTR: Redundancy or Host Specificity?
title_full RNA Structure Duplication in the Dengue Virus 3′ UTR: Redundancy or Host Specificity?
title_fullStr RNA Structure Duplication in the Dengue Virus 3′ UTR: Redundancy or Host Specificity?
title_full_unstemmed RNA Structure Duplication in the Dengue Virus 3′ UTR: Redundancy or Host Specificity?
title_short RNA Structure Duplication in the Dengue Virus 3′ UTR: Redundancy or Host Specificity?
title_sort rna structure duplication in the dengue virus 3′ utr: redundancy or host specificity?
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6325252/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30622191
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mBio.02506-18
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