RNA Lariat Debranching Enzyme as a Retroviral and Long-Terminal-Repeat Retrotransposon Host Factor

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Abstract

Host cell factors are integral to viral replication. Human immunodeficiency virus 1 (HIV-1), the retroviral agent of acquired immune deficiency syndrome, requires several host factors for reverse transcription of the viral genomic RNA (gRNA) into DNA shortly after viral entry. One of these host factors is the RNA lariat debranching enzyme (Dbr1), which cleaves the 2'-5' bond of branched and lariat RNAs. A recent study has revealed that Dbr1 cleaves HIV-1 gRNA lariats that form early after viral entry. Without Dbr1 activity, HIV-1 reverse transcription stalls, consistent with blockage of viral reverse transcriptase at gRNA branch points. These findings echo an earlier study with the long-terminal-repeat retrotransposon of Saccharomyces cerevisiae, Ty1, which is a retrovirus model. Currently, branching and debranching of viral gRNA are not widely recognized as features of HIV-1 replication, and the role of a gRNA lariat is not known. Future studies will determine whether these gRNA dynamics represent fundamental features of retroviral biology and whether they occur for other positive-sense RNA viruses.

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Menees, T. M. (2020). RNA Lariat Debranching Enzyme as a Retroviral and Long-Terminal-Repeat Retrotransposon Host Factor. Annual Review of Virology. Annual Reviews Inc. https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev-virology-012720-094902

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