| Literature DB >> 19095692 |
Zhumur Ghosh1, Bibekanand Mallick, Jayprokas Chakrabarti.
Abstract
MicroRNAs (miRNAs) mark a new paradigm of RNA-directed gene expression regulation in a wide spectrum of biological systems. These small non-coding RNAs can contribute to the repertoire of host-pathogen interactions during viral infection. This interplay has important consequences, both for the virus and the host. There have been reported evidences of host-cellular miRNAs modulating the expression of various viral genes, thereby playing a pivotal role in the host-pathogen interaction network. In the hide-and-seek game between the pathogens and the infected host, viruses have evolved highly sophisticated gene-silencing mechanisms to evade host-immune response. Recent reports indicate that virus too encode miRNAs that protect them against cellular antiviral response. Furthermore, they may exploit the cellular miRNA pathway to their own advantage. Nevertheless, our increasing knowledge of the host-virus interaction at the molecular level should lead us toward possible explanations to viral tropism, latency and oncogenesis along with the development of an effective, durable and nontoxic antiviral therapy. Here, we summarize the recent updates on miRNA-induced gene-silencing mechanism, modulating host-virus interactions with a glimpse of the miRNA-based antiviral therapy for near future.Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 19095692 PMCID: PMC2651794 DOI: 10.1093/nar/gkn1004
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nucleic Acids Res ISSN: 0305-1048 Impact factor: 16.971
List of viruses encoding microRNAs, their genomic location, hosts and diseases caused by these viruses
| DNA virus families | Species | Diseases | Host | Nos. | miRNAs | Genomic location | Functions | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| α-Herpesviruses | Herpes Simplex Virus-1 | Cold sores | Human | 6 | hsv1-miR-H1 | 450-bp upstream of TSS of LAT region | Maintenance of viral latency | 16,26 |
| hsv1-miR-H(2-6) | Four are encoded in LAT region and fifth one in unknown transcript | |||||||
| Herpes Simplex Virus-2 | Genital herpes | Human | 1 | hsv2-miR-I | Encoded in LAT exon-2 | Controls viral replication in neurons | 34 | |
| Marek's disease virus | Marek's disease (MD); Neurolymphomatosis; Ocular lymphomatosis | Chicken | 14 | mdv1-miR-M (1–13) | Clustered in MEQ and LAT regions | Neoplastic transformation, antiapoptotic | 36,38 | |
| Marek's disease virus type 2 | Nononcogenic; Neurolymphomatosis; Ocular lymphomatosis | Chicken | 17 | mdv2-miR-M (14–30) | Sixteen are clustered in a long repeat region, encoding R-LORF2 to R-LORF5. The single miRNA is within the C-terminal region of the ICP4 homolog. | 37 | ||
| β-Herpesviruses | Human Cytomegalovirus | Congenital CMV infection; CMV mononucleosis; CMV pneumonitis; CMV retinitis | Human | 11 | hcmv-miR-UL22A, hcmv-miR-UL36, hcmv-miR-UL70, hcmv-miR-UL112, hcmv-miR-UL148D, hcmv-miR-US4, hcmv-miR-US5-1, hcmv-miR-US5-2, hcmv-miR-US25-1, hcmv-miR-US25-2, hcmv-miR-US33 | Intergenic and intronic | Act as immune-response inhibitor, help in viral replication | 10,25,30,33,39 |
| Mouse Cytomegalovirus | Murine | 18 | mcmv-miR-M23-1, mcmv-miR-M23-2, mcmv-miR-M44-1, mcmv-miR-M55-1, mcmv-miR-M87-1, mcmv-miR-M95-1, mcmv-miR-m01-1, mcmv-miR-m01-2, mcmv-miR-m01-3, mcmv-miR-m01-4, mcmv-miR-m21-1, mcmv-miR-m22-1, mcmv-miR-m59-1, mcmv-miR-m59-2, mcmv-miR-m88-1, mcmv-miR-m107-1, mcmv-miR-m108-1, mcmv-miR-m108-2 | Organized into five genomic regions and three clusters | Could influence viral infection and latency | 13,35 | ||
| γ-Herpesviruses | Kaposi's sarcoma-associated Herpesvirus | Kaposi's sarcoma, primary effusion lymphoma (PEL), multicentric Castleman's disease | Human | 13 | kshv-miR-K12-(1-9), kshv-miR-K12-10(a,b), kshv-miR-K12-(11-12) | Located within 3.6-kb intergenic region and Kaposin gene | May regulate kaposin gene; down-regulates thrombospondin 1, which has anti-proliferative, anti-angiogenic activity | 10,27,40–42 |
| Epstein-Barr Virus | Pfeiffer's disease; Burkitt's lymphoma; gastric carcinoma; Nasopharyngeal carcinoma | Human | 23 | ebv-miR-BART(1-20), ebv-miR-BHRF1-(1-3) | Twenty genes are within the introns of BARTs and remaining in BHRF1 | Tumorigenesis of EBVaGCs; regulates LMP1 expression (Nasopharyngeal Carcinoma); down-regulate the viral DNA polymerase BALF5; | 9,28,29,43–45 | |
| Rhesus Lymphocryptovirus | Lymphadenopathy | Simian | 16 | rlcv-miR-rL1-(1-16) | Clustered in BART and BHRF1 | 28 | ||
| Rhesus Monkey Rhadinovirus | Multicentric lymphoproliferative disorder | Simian | 7 | rrv-miR-rR1-(1-7) | Located within a single cluster at the same genomic location as of KSHV | 31 | ||
| Mouse Gamma Herpesvirus 68 | Infectious mononucleosis | 9 | mghv-miR-M1-(1-9) | Intergenic and clustered | 10,30 | |||
| Polyomaviruses | Simian Virus 40 | Tumors | Simian | 1 | sv40-miR-S1 | Down-regulate the expression of viral early genes | 11 | |
| BK Polyomavirus | Polyomavirus-associated nephropathy | Human | 1 | bkv-miR-B1 | -do- | 32 | ||
| JC Polyomavirus | Progressive Multifocal Leuko-encephalopathy | Human | 1 | jcv-miR-J1 | -do- | 32 | ||
| RNA virus families | ||||||||
| HIV | Human immunodeficiency virus 1 | AIDS | Human | 3 | hiv1-miR-H1, hiv1-miR-N367, hiv1-miR-TAR | Found in nef gene and TAR element | Supress Nef function; supress HIV-1 virulence | 15,46,47 |
TSS: transcription start site; LAT: latency-associated transcript; BART: BamA rightward transcript; BHRF1: BamH1 fragment H rightward open reading frame 1; TAR: trans-acting responsive element; nef: negative factor.
Figure 1.Biogenesis of microRNAs. Processing of both host miRNAs (violet) and virus-encoded miRNAs (blue) is assumed to occur through the same pathway. The arrows (pink) indicate the effects of cellular miRNAs on their own cellular transcripts as well as on viral transcripts. The violet arrow shows the effects of virus-encoded miRNAs on both cellular and viral transcripts. Both these arrows suggest possible miRNA-mediated interactions between viruses and their hosts.
Figure 2.Virus-encoded microRNAs as orthologs of cellular microRNAs. Encircled boxes show sequence homology of viral miRNAs to human/mouse miRNAs. The homologous bases are shown in blue. (a) Orthologs of cellular miR-155; (b) orthologs of cellular miR-151; (c) orthologs of cellular miR-18a and miR-18b.
Figure 3.Effects of virus-encoded microRNAs on viral and cellular transcripts.
Database resources on virus-encoded microRNAs
| Resources | Websites | Descriptions |
|---|---|---|
| ViTa | Database of viral microRNAs and predicted host targets | |
| miRBase | Comprehensive miRNA resource including virus-encoded microRNAs | |
| Vir-Mir db | Viral miRNA prediction database | |
| MicroRNAdb | Comprehensive database for MicroRNAs | |
| Ambion microRNA Resource | Resource for microRNA and their targets | |
| siVirus | Website for efficient antiviral siRNA design |
MicroRNA expression profile resources
| Resources | Websites | Descriptions |
|---|---|---|
| microRNA.org | A resource for predicted microRNA targets and expression | |
| miRAS (miRNA Analysis System at Tsinghua University) | A data processing system for miRNA-expression profiling study. | |
| miRNAMap | Collection of experimental-verified microRNAs and experimental- verified miRNA target genes in human, mouse, rat and other metazoan genomes and expression profiles of human miRNAs in 18 major normal tissues in human. | |
| Argonaute | A database for gene regulation by mammalian microRNAs | |
| miRGator | Differential expression analysis for a compendium of miRNA- expression data |