Litcius/Paper detail

RNA Modifications in Pathogenic Viruses: Existence, Mechanism, and Impacts

Yingying Zou, Zhoule Guo, Xing‐Yi Ge, Ye Qiu

2024Microorganisms13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

RNA modification is a key posttranscriptional process playing various biological roles, and one which has been reported to exist extensively in cellular RNAs. Interestingly, recent studies have shown that viral RNAs also contain a variety of RNA modifications, which are regulated dynamically by host modification machinery and play critical roles in different stages of the viral life cycle. In this review, we summarize the reports of four typical modifications reported on viral RNAs, including N6-methyladenosine (m6A), 5-methylcytosine (m5C), N4-acetylcytosine (ac4C), and N1-methyladenosine (m1A), describe the molecular mechanisms of these modification processes, and illustrate their impacts on viral replication, pathogenicity, and innate immune responses. Notably, we find that RNA modifications in different viruses share some common features and mechanisms in their generation, regulation, and function, highlighting the potential for viral RNA modifications and the related host machinery to serve as the targets or bases for the development of antiviral therapeutics and vaccines.

Topics & Concepts

RNABiologyMechanism (biology)Viral replicationComputational biologyInnate immune systemFunction (biology)Viral life cycleVirusImmune systemCell biologyGeneticsGeneEpistemologyPhilosophyRNA modifications and cancerCancer-related molecular mechanisms researchRNA Research and Splicing