AI Article Synopsis

  • - The influenza A virus (IAV) replication requires the packaging of eight unique genomic RNA segments into a viral particle, thought to be influenced by interactions between these RNA segments.
  • - Research has identified many potential interactions between vRNA segments using a method called SPLASH, but the actual importance of these interactions for packaging remains unclear.
  • - A study shows that specific mutant viruses, which lack several of these identified interactions, can still package the RNA segments as effectively as the regular virus, suggesting these interactions may not be essential for the packaging process.

Article Abstract

A fundamental step in the influenza A virus (IAV) replication cycle is the coordinated packaging of eight distinct genomic RNA segments (i.e. vRNAs) into a viral particle. Although this process is thought to be controlled by specific vRNA-vRNA interactions between the genome segments, few functional interactions have been validated. Recently, a large number of potentially functional vRNA-vRNA interactions have been detected in purified virions using the RNA interactome capture method SPLASH. However, their functional significance in coordinated genome packaging remains largely unclear. Here, we show by systematic mutational analysis that mutant A/SC35M (H7N7) viruses lacking several prominent SPLASH-identified vRNA-vRNA interactions involving the HA segment package the eight genome segments as efficiently as the wild-type virus. We therefore propose that the vRNA-vRNA interactions identified by SPLASH in IAV particles are not necessarily critical for the genome packaging process, leaving the underlying molecular mechanism elusive.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10325904PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkad442DOI Listing

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