RNR-R2 Upregulation by a Short Non-Coding Viral Transcript.
Karin BroennimannInna Ricardo-LaxJulia AdlerEleftherios MichailidisYpe P de JongNina ReuvenYosef ShaulPublished in: Biomolecules (2021)
DNA viruses require dNTPs for replication and have developed different strategies to increase intracellular dNTP pools. Hepatitis B virus (HBV) infects non-dividing cells in which dNTPs are scarce and the question is how viral replication takes place. Previously we reported that the virus induces the DNA damage response (DDR) pathway culminating in RNR-R2 expression and the generation of an active RNR holoenzyme, the key regulator of dNTP levels, leading to an increase in dNTPs. How the virus induces DDR and RNR-R2 upregulation is not completely known. The viral HBx open reading frame (ORF) was believed to trigger this pathway. Unexpectedly, however, we report here that the production of HBx protein is dispensable. We found that a small conserved region of 125 bases within the HBx ORF is sufficient to upregulate RNR-R2 expression in growth-arrested HepG2 cells and primary human hepatocytes. The observed HBV mRNA embedded regulatory element is named ERE. ERE in isolation is sufficient to activate the ATR-Chk1-E2F1-RNR-R2 DDR pathway. These findings demonstrate a non-coding function of HBV transcripts to support its propagation in non-cycling cells.
Keyphrases
- hepatitis b virus
- dna damage response
- poor prognosis
- induced apoptosis
- liver failure
- sars cov
- transcription factor
- cell cycle arrest
- binding protein
- signaling pathway
- long non coding rna
- endothelial cells
- cell proliferation
- dna repair
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- minimally invasive
- cell death
- oxidative stress
- dna damage
- rna seq
- pi k akt
- cell free
- single cell
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- nucleic acid