Litcius/Paper detail

Herpesvirus Replication Compartments: Dynamic Biomolecular Condensates?

Enrico Caragliano, Wolfram Brune, Jens B. Bosse

2022Viruses25 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Recent progress has provided clear evidence that many RNA-viruses form cytoplasmic biomolecular condensates mediated by liquid-liquid phase separation to facilitate their replication. In contrast, seemingly contradictory data exist for herpesviruses, which replicate their DNA genomes in nuclear membrane-less replication compartments (RCs). Here, we review the current literature and comment on nuclear condensate formation by herpesviruses, specifically with regard to RC formation. Based on data obtained with human cytomegalovirus (human herpesvirus 5), we propose that liquid and homogenous early RCs convert into more heterogeneous RCs with complex properties over the course of infection. We highlight how the advent of DNA replication leads to the maturation of these biomolecular condensates, likely by adding an additional DNA scaffold.

Topics & Concepts

Replication (statistics)DNA replicationBiologyDNAHuman herpesvirus 6Origin of replicationRNAViral replicationCell biologyGenomeControl of chromosome duplicationBiophysicsComputational biologyHerpesviridaeVirologyVirusGeneticsGeneViral diseaseCytomegalovirus and herpesvirus researchRNA regulation and diseaseRNA Research and Splicing