Although it has been known for over 40 years that eukaryotic mRNAs bear internal base modifications, it is only in the last 5 years that the importance of these modifications has begun to come into focus. The most common mRNA modification, the addition of a methyl group to the N 6 position of adenosine (m 6 A), has been shown to affect splicing, translation, and stability, and m 6 A is also essential for embryonic development in organisms ranging from plants to mice. While all viral transcripts examined so far have been found to be extensively m 6 A modified, the role, if any, of m 6 A in regulating viral gene expression and replication was previously unknown. However, recent data generated using HIV-1 as a model system strongly suggest that sites of m 6 A addition not only are evolutionarily conserved but also enhance virus replication. It is therefore likely that the field of viral epitranscriptomics, which can be defined as the study of functionally relevant posttranscriptional modifications of viral RNA transcripts that do not change the nucleotide sequence of that RNA, is poised for a major expansion in scientific interest and may well fundamentally change our understanding of how viral replication is regulated.KEYWORDS Posttranscriptional gene regulation, RNA modification, N 6 -methyladenosine, mRNA function, mRNA stability, HIV-1 W hile over 100 different modified bases have been identified on RNA transcripts in mammalian cells, the majority of these are restricted to noncoding RNAs, especially tRNAs. However, at least 10 distinct modified bases have now been reported to occur in mammalian mRNAs (1). In addition to the 7-methylguanosine cap that is added at the 5= end of all cellular mRNAs, these include N 6 -methyladenosine (m 6 A), 2=-Omethyladenosine (Am), N 6 -2=-O-methyladenosine (m 6 Am), pseudouridine, and 5-methylcytosine. Of these, by far the most prevalent internal modified base found on mRNAs is m 6 A, and recent work has now begun to reveal how m 6 A affects mRNA function and how to precisely map the m 6 A residues present on mRNAs (1-3). m 6 A is also highly prevalent on a wide range of different viral RNA species (4-13), and recently, the first reports demonstrating a significant phenotypic effect of these m 6 A modifications have been published (10-14). Therefore, we will focus this review entirely on m 6 A and how this particular modification might affect different aspects of the viral life cycle. m 6 A was first reported to be present on cellular mRNAs in 1975 with ϳ3 internal m 6 A residues found on the average ϳ2.2-kb transcript (15, 16). However, we now know that many cellular mRNAs, including mRNAs encoding housekeeping genes, lack any m 6 A residues, while highly regulated mRNAs may contain 10 or more (2, 3). The first demonstration of m 6 A residues on viral mRNAs soon followed and, using the biochemical approaches available at that time, a range of mRNAs encoded by several nuclear DNA and RNA viruses were then shown to bear fairly high levels of m 6 A, with the eight influ...