An Overlapping Protein-Coding Region in Influenza A Virus Segment 3 Modulates the Host Response

2012 
Because of the well-known pandemic potential of influenza viruses, it is important to understand the range of molecular interactions between the virus and its host. Despite years of intensive research on the virus, Jagger et al. (p. [199][1], published online 28 June; see the Perspective by [Yewdell and Ince][2] ) have found that the influenza A virus has been hiding a gene in its small negative-sense RNA genome. An overlapping open reading frame was found contained in the PA viral RNA polymerase gene, which is accessed by ribosomal frameshifting to produce a fusion protein containing the N-terminal messenger RNA (mRNA) endonuclease domain of PA and an alternative C-terminal X domain. The resulting polypeptide, PA-X, selectively degrades host mRNAs and, in a mouse model of infection, modulated cellular immune responses, thus limiting viral pathogenesis. [1]: /lookup/doi/10.1126/science.1222213 [2]: /lookup/volpage/337/164?iss=6091
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