Litcius/Paper detail

Nucleocapsid Structure of Negative Strand RNA Virus

Ming Luo, James R. Terrell, Shelby Ashlyn Mcmanus

2020Viruses53 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Negative strand RNA viruses (NSVs) include many important human pathogens, such as influenza virus, Ebola virus, and rabies virus. One of the unique characteristics that NSVs share is the assembly of the nucleocapsid and its role in viral RNA synthesis. In NSVs, the single strand RNA genome is encapsidated in the linear nucleocapsid throughout the viral replication cycle. Subunits of the nucleocapsid protein are parallelly aligned along the RNA genome that is sandwiched between two domains composed of conserved helix motifs. The viral RNA-dependent-RNA polymerase (vRdRp) must recognize the protein-RNA complex of the nucleocapsid and unveil the protected genomic RNA in order to initiate viral RNA synthesis. In addition, vRdRp must continuously translocate along the protein-RNA complex during elongation in viral RNA synthesis. This unique mechanism of viral RNA synthesis suggests that the nucleocapsid may play a regulatory role during NSV replication.

Topics & Concepts

RNARNA-dependent RNA polymeraseBiologyVirologyVP40Viral replicationPolymeraseRNA virusRNA polymeraseRNA editingVirusViral structural proteinNon-coding RNAViral entryDNAGeneticsGeneViral Infections and VectorsVirology and Viral DiseasesViral Infections and Outbreaks Research
Nucleocapsid Structure of Negative Strand RNA Virus | Litcius