| Literature DB >> 32143650 |
Mel Campbell1, Yoshihiro Izumiya2.
Abstract
Kaposi's sarcoma-associated herpesvirus (KSHV), also designated human herpesvirus 8 (HHV-8), has been linked to Kaposi's sarcoma, as well as to primary effusion lymphoma (PEL), and a subset of multicentric Castleman's disease. KSHV genomes are maintained as episomes within infected cells and the virus exhibits a biphasic life cycle consisting of a life-long latent phase during which only a few viral genes are expressed and no viral progeny are produced and a transient lytic reactivation phase, in which a full repertoire of ~ 80 lytic genes are activated in a temporally regulated manner culminating in the release of new virions. Lytic replication is initiated by a single viral protein, K-Rta (ORF50), which activates more than 80 viral genes from multiple resident viral episomes (i.e., viral chromosomes). One of the major targets of K-Rta is a long non-coding nuclear RNA, PAN RNA (polyadenylated nuclear RNA), a lncRNA that accumulates to exceedingly high levels in the nucleus during viral reactivation. K-Rta directly binds to the PAN RNA promoter and robustly activates PAN RNA expression. Although PAN RNA has been known for over 20 years, its role in viral replication is still incompletely understood. In this perspective, we will briefly review the current understanding of PAN RNA and then describe our current working model of this RNA. The model is based on our observations concerning events that occur during KSHV lytic reactivation including (i) a marked accumulation of RNA Pol II at the PAN promoter, (ii) genomic looping emanating from the PAN locus, (iii) interaction of a second viral lytic protein (ORF57) with K-Rta, PAN RNA and RNA Pol II, (iv) the essential requirement for PAN RNA expression in cis for optimal transcriptional execution needed for the entire lytic program, and (v) ORF57 recruitment of RNA Pol II to the PAN genomic locus. Together our results generate a model in which the PAN locus serves as a hub for sequestration/trapping of the cellular transcriptional machinery proximal to viral episomes. Sequestration at the PAN locus facilitates high levels of viral transcription throughout the viral genome during lytic replication. ORF57 acts as a transcription-dependent transactivator at the PAN locus by binding to both Rta and PAN to locally trap RNA Pol II. The resulting accumulation of high levels of nuclear PAN RNA created by this process is an inducible enhancer-derived (eRNA) by-product that litters the infected cell nucleus.Entities:
Keywords: Chromatin looping; Herpesvirus; Non-coding RNA; RNA pol II recruitment; eRNAs
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32143650 PMCID: PMC7060532 DOI: 10.1186/s12929-020-00637-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biomed Sci ISSN: 1021-7770 Impact factor: 8.410
Herpesvirus lncRNAs
| Virus and LncRNA Designation | Herpesvirus group | Acryonym | Transcript Size kb | Proposed functions | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Herpes simplex type 1 (HSV-1) Latency Associated Transcripts | Alpha | LATs | 8.3 6.3 2.0 1.5 + other species | Multiple controversial roles in virus reactivation efficiency, latency establishment, miRNA precursor | [ |
Marek’s Disease Virus (MDV) Latency Associated Transcripts and MDV small RNAs | Alpha | LATs/MSRs | 10 2.2 1.8 1.5 0.5 2.7 | Antisense to ICP4 | [ |
| Human Cytomegalovirus (hCMV) noncoding RNAs | Beta | RNA5.0 RNA4.9 RNA2.7 RNA1.2 | 5 4.9 2.7 1.2 | Abundant, anti-apoptosis (2.7); interaction with cellular repressors (4.9) | [ |
Epstein-Barr Virus (EBV) BamHI-A rightward transcripts | Gamma | BARTs | Multiple species 4–8 | Abundant, miRNA precursor | [ |
Kaposi’s Sarcoma-Associated Virus (KSHV) Polyadenylated Nuclear RNA | Gamma | PAN RNA | 1.1 | Facilitates viral late gene expression via nuclear RNA export; interaction with cellular epigenetic modifiers; interaction with viral latency protein | [ |
| KSHV Antisense to latency transcript | Gamma | ALT | 10 | Unknown, Antisense to latency associated transcripts | [ |
KSHV Transcript 3.0 KSHV Transcript 1.2 | Gamma | T3.0 T1.2 | 3.0 1.2 | Unknown, both transcripts antisense to ORF50 but not inhibitors of K-Rta expression, may encode small viral peptides | [ |
| KSHV Transcript 1.4 | Gamma | T1.4 | 1.4 | Important for lytic DNA replication | [ |
| Rhesus Rhadinovirus (RRV) Polyadenylated Nuclear RNA | Gamma | RRV PAN RNA | 1.3 | Nuclear RNA export; can complement KSHV PAN RNA mutant | [ |
Equine Herpesvirus 2 (EHV-2) Polyadenylated Nuclear RNA | Gamma | EHV-2 PAN RNA | 1.9 | Unknown; putative PAN RNA homolog with sequence homology to KSHV PAN expression and nuclear retention element (ENE) | [ |
Bovine herpesvirus 4 (BHV4) L1.7 RNA | Gamma | L1.7 RNA | 1.5 | Unknown, abundant, non-coding cytoplasmic RNA, some features similar to other PAN RNAs but has no ENE | [ |
Fig. 1KSHV genome, early lytic gene expression and K-Rta RNA FISH. RNA-seq reads from KSHV-infected PEL cells at 24 h post-reactivation. Reads are positioned above a KSHV ORF map. Sequence reads for PAN RNA and another lncRNA (T0.7) predominate at this time point. The genomic position of the other viral components of the engine (ORF50 and ORF57) are indicated. The lower panel depicts the ORF50 locus in an expanded view showing the position of the RNA-FISH probes which detect unspliced K-Rta mRNAs and are used to image sites of viral transcription. Numbering beneath the transcripts (70-74) indicates viral map position in kb
Fig. 2Visualization of KSHV transcription factories. a RNA-FISH (Red, K-Rta) and IFA (Green, RNA Pol II) colocalization (yellow) in a reactivated PEL cell population (24h) are shown. An example of cells scored as lytic or latent are indicated. b 3D view of KSHV transcription factory. Z-stack images were taken and 3D images with DAPI staining were constructed with Velocity imaging software (Quorum Technologies Inc., Canada). Green, LANA; Red, RNA Pol II; Orange, K-Rta RNA; Blue, DAPI
Fig. 3Cellular RNA polymerase II forms large peri-nucleolar aggregates after KHSV lytic reactivation. Fluorescence image stacks were imported, analyzed, and rendered in 3D using Volocity® Multi-Dimensional Imaging Platform (Quorum Technologies Inc., Canada). For each cell nucleus of interest, RNA Pol II aggregates were identified by fluorescence intensity over background and statistical information on aggregate volume, surface area, location, as well as minimum, maximum and average fluorescence signal were collected. a ORF57 knock-out (left) RNA Pol II is widely distributed throughout the nucleoplasm, with small aggregates (<5μm3) representing most of the total fluorescence. b With wild type KSHV reactivation (right) many cells exhibit prominent clustering of RNA pol II around a central void that likely represents the nucleolus. The distribution of RNA Pol II fluorescence measurably shifts towards large aggregates > 5μm3. (Images and analysis courtesy of Dr. Frank Chuang, UC Davis)
Fig. 4Model: Keeping resources for viral transcription in proximity by physically “trapping” RNA Polymerase II complex for effective viral gene expression. Nuclear PAN RNA as exhaust from the KSHV viral engine. Nascent PAN RNA accumulation is depicted as blue lines with RBPs (blue shapes) and ORF57 (light green ovals) bound. ORF57 binds to PAN RNA at multiple sites [106] including the Mta response element (MRE). The viral lytic engine starter motor is the viral transactivator K-Rta (red ovals), with the KSHV early gene product ORF57 serving as the fuel to drive the RNA Pol II rotor situated within the PAN RNA locus engine (red line). ORF57 is also a direct target of K-Rta and its lytic expression lags slightly behind that of K-Rta (not shown). Interactions between K-Rta, ORF57, RNA Pol II and nascent PAN RNA serve to keep RNA Pol II and associated transcriptional machinery trapped at the PAN promoter to facilitate high levels of PAN RNA. Excess PAN RNA production (green) accumulates as a by-product of running the high-powered viral engine. Running of the engine acts in cis drives expression of viral lytic genes along the entire KSHV episome. Hub formation via recruitment of additional RNA Pol II loaded genomic fragments (black line, upper left) is shown