Selected article for: "Forest virus and Semliki Forest virus"

Author: Brisse, Morgan; Ly, Hinh
Title: Comparative Structure and Function Analysis of the RIG-I-Like Receptors: RIG-I and MDA5
  • Document date: 2019_7_17
  • ID: 1enteev7_48
    Snippet: There is also increasing evidence to suggest that RNA processing is another mechanism of immune modulation. Certain bunyaviruses can cleave the 5 ′ tri-phosphate group from their genomic RNA (262) in order to avoid immune detection. RIG-I has also been found to be subjected to negative modulation by RNAi during IAV infection (263) . On the contrary, nucleoproteins from the Sendai virus (264) regulate the number of DI particles being produced, a.....
    Document: There is also increasing evidence to suggest that RNA processing is another mechanism of immune modulation. Certain bunyaviruses can cleave the 5 ′ tri-phosphate group from their genomic RNA (262) in order to avoid immune detection. RIG-I has also been found to be subjected to negative modulation by RNAi during IAV infection (263) . On the contrary, nucleoproteins from the Sendai virus (264) regulate the number of DI particles being produced, and IAV nucleoproteins also regulate the production of abortive replication RNA (208) , mini viral RNAs (265) and DVG RNA (208) , all of which are immunostimulatory. The Semliki Forest virus (SFV) polymerase has even been found to convert host RNA into 5 ′ -ppp dsRNA to induce IFN1 expression (266) . This raises an intriguing possibility that induction of IFN1 may actually benefit some viruses under certain circumstances despite IFN1 signaling negatively regulating viral replication.

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