Litcius/Paper detail

The Formation and Function of Birnaviridae Virus Factories

Andrew J. Brodrick, Andrew J. Broadbent

2023International Journal of Molecular Sciences15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

family are biomolecular condensates that show properties consistent with liquid-liquid phase separation (LLPS). Although the VFs are not bound by membranes, it is currently thought that viral protein 3 (VP3) initially nucleates the formation of the VF on the cytoplasmic leaflet of early endosomal membranes, and likely drives LLPS. In addition to VP3, IBDV VFs contain VP1 (the viral polymerase) and the dsRNA genome, and they are the sites of de novo viral RNA synthesis. Cellular proteins are also recruited to the VFs, which are likely to provide an optimal environment for viral replication; the VFs grow due to the synthesis of the viral components, the recruitment of other proteins, and the coalescence of multiple VFs in the cytoplasm. Here, we review what is currently known about the formation, properties, composition, and processes of these structures. Many open questions remain regarding the biophysical nature of the VFs, as well as the roles they play in replication, translation, virion assembly, viral genome partitioning, and in modulating cellular processes.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyViral replicationVirusCytoplasmRNAViral entryCell biologyGenomePolymeraseEndosomeRNA silencingVirologyViral proteinTranslation (biology)GeneticsDNAGeneRNA interferenceMessenger RNAIntracellularVirology and Viral DiseasesVector-Borne Animal DiseasesViral Infections and Vectors