Host Noncoding Retrotransposons Induced by DNA Viruses: a SINE of Infection?

  • Tucker J
  • Glaunsinger B
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Abstract

Our genomes are dominated by repetitive elements. The majority of these elements derive from retrotransposons, which expand throughout the genome through a process of reverse transcription and integration. Short interspersed nuclear elements, or SINEs, are an abundant class of retrotransposons that are transcribed by RNA polymerase III, thus generating exclusively noncoding RNA (ncRNA) that must hijack the machinery required for their transposition. SINE loci are generally transcriptionally repressed in somatic cells but can be robustly induced upon infection with multiple DNA viruses. Recent research has focused on the gene expression and signaling events that are modulated by SINE ncRNAs, particularly during gammaherpesvirus infection. Here, we review the biology of these SINE ncRNAs, explore how DNA virus infection may lead to their induction, and describe how novel gene regulatory and immune-related functions of these ncRNAs may impact the viral life cycle.

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Tucker, J. M., & Glaunsinger, B. A. (2017). Host Noncoding Retrotransposons Induced by DNA Viruses: a SINE of Infection? Journal of Virology, 91(23). https://doi.org/10.1128/jvi.00982-17

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