Involvement of L polymerase and heat shock proteins in the biogenesis of viral circular RNAs derived from respiratory syncytial virus
Mingzhen Lin, Shanshan Miao, Xinru Yang, Yezhenghong Qiu, Zesen Mai, Yao Xiao, Mengyuan Xie, Yulong Luo, Caiqi Ma, Jifang Liu, Zhaoyu Liu, Wenxia Yao

TL;DR
This study explores how respiratory syncytial virus produces circular RNAs and identifies key proteins involved in the process.
Contribution
The study identifies L polymerase and heat shock proteins as novel factors involved in the biogenesis of RSV-derived circular RNAs.
Findings
L polymerase and HSP70/90 proteins associate with RSV circular RNAs.
RSV circular RNAs colocalize with L polymerase and HSP70/90 in inclusion bodies.
Flanking AT/TA sequences act as cis-acting elements in RSV circular RNA biogenesis.
Abstract
Circular RNAs (circRNAs) are new members of noncoding RNAs that have gained increased attention, and reports on viral circRNAs and their functions continue to emerge in recent years. However, the mechanisms underlying the biogenesis of viral circRNAs, especially those produced by RNA viruses, remain largely unexplored. Our recent research systematically identified and characterized viral circRNAs induced by respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), a human RNA virus for which no effective treatments exist. In this study, we further investigated the mechanism underlying the production of RSV circRNAs. We found that the viral L polymerase and the cellular HSP70 and HSP90 proteins associate with viral circRNAs through proteomic analysis of circRNA pulled-down lysates. These interactions were further confirmed using RNA-binding protein immunoprecipitation assays. We also observed that RSV circRNAs…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRespiratory viral infections research · Viral Infections and Immunology Research · Circular RNAs in diseases
