Litcius/Paper detail

An epigenetic ‘extreme makeover’: the methylation of flaviviral RNA (and beyond)

Alessia Ruggieri, Mark Helm, Laurent Chatel‐Chaix

2020RNA Biology19 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Beyond their high clinical relevance worldwide, flaviviruses (comprising dengue and Zika viruses) are of particular interest to understand the spatiotemporal control of RNA metabolism. Indeed, their positive single-stranded viral RNA genome (vRNA) undergoes in the cytoplasm replication, translation and encapsidation, three steps of the flavivirus life cycle that are coordinated through a fine-tuned equilibrium. Over the last years, RNA methylation has emerged as a powerful mechanism to regulate messenger RNA metabolism at the posttranscriptional level. Not surprisingly, flaviviruses exploit RNA epigenetic strategies to control crucial steps of their replication cycle as well as to evade sensing by the innate immune system. This review summarizes the current knowledge about vRNA methylation events and their impacts on flavivirus replication and pathogenesis. We also address the important challenges that the field of epitranscriptomics faces in reliably and accurately identifying RNA methylation sites, which should be considered in future studies on viral RNA modifications.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyRNAFlavivirusRNA methylationEpigeneticsDengue feverViral replicationMethylationDNA methylationRNA editingGeneticsSubgenomic mRNATranslation (biology)VirologyComputational biologyMessenger RNAGeneVirusGene expressionMethyltransferaseRNA modifications and cancerRNA Research and Splicinginterferon and immune responses