AI Article Synopsis

  • Translation of SARS-CoV-2 mRNAs by host ribosomes is crucial for the virus to replicate, with the viral protein NSP1 playing a key role by suppressing translation and causing degradation of cellular mRNAs.
  • NSP1 destabilizes multi-exon host mRNAs while allowing stability in intron-less transcripts, including viral mRNAs, due to a specific RNA element that protects against NSP1's effects.
  • The structure of the SARS-CoV-2 5'UTR promotes cap-independent translation and NSP1 production, while also revealing vulnerabilities that could be targeted for potential therapies against the virus.

Article Abstract

Translation of SARS-CoV-2-encoded mRNAs by the host ribosomes is essential for its propagation. Following infection, the early expressed viral protein NSP1 binds the ribosome, represses translation, and induces mRNA degradation, while the host elicits an anti-viral response. The mechanisms enabling viral mRNAs to escape this multifaceted repression remain obscure. Here we show that expression of NSP1 leads to destabilization of multi-exon cellular mRNAs, while intron-less transcripts, such as viral mRNAs and anti-viral interferon genes, remain relatively stable. We identified a conserved and precisely located cap-proximal RNA element devoid of guanosines that confers resistance to NSP1-mediated translation inhibition. Importantly, the primary sequence rather than the secondary structure is critical for protection. We further show that the genomic 5'UTR of SARS-CoV-2 drives cap-independent translation and promotes expression of NSP1 in an eIF4E-independent and Torin1-resistant manner. Upon expression, NSP1 further enhances cap-independent translation. However, the sub-genomic 5'UTRs are highly sensitive to eIF4E availability, rendering viral propagation partially sensitive to Torin1. We conclude that the combined NSP1-mediated degradation of spliced mRNAs and translation inhibition of single-exon genes, along with the unique features present in the viral 5'UTRs, ensure robust expression of viral mRNAs. These features can be exploited as potential therapeutic targets.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9371909PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkac615DOI Listing

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