2020
DOI: 10.3390/cells9071569
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The RNA Replication Site of Tula Orthohantavirus Resides within a Remodelled Golgi Network

Abstract: The family Hantaviridae within the Bunyavirales order comprises tri-segmented negative sense RNA viruses, many of which are rodent-borne emerging pathogens associated with fatal human disease. In contrast, hantavirus infection of corresponding rodent hosts results in inapparent or latent infections, which can be recapitulated in cultured cells that become persistently infected. In this study, we used Tula virus (TULV) to investigate the location of hantavirus replication during early, peak and persiste… Show more

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Cited by 13 publications
(19 citation statements)
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“…Additional open questions relate to the exact cellular localization of viral genome replication and transcription as well as their regulation. Several studies present contradictory results regarding the replication and transcription site with the involvement of stress granules, P bodies, and different subcellular locations [ 86 , 89 , 100 ]. Importantly, most of the current studies used the overexpression of the N protein [ 71 , 86 , 100 ], which likely results in artificial distributions of the protein and the induction of cellular stress.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Additional open questions relate to the exact cellular localization of viral genome replication and transcription as well as their regulation. Several studies present contradictory results regarding the replication and transcription site with the involvement of stress granules, P bodies, and different subcellular locations [ 86 , 89 , 100 ]. Importantly, most of the current studies used the overexpression of the N protein [ 71 , 86 , 100 ], which likely results in artificial distributions of the protein and the induction of cellular stress.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Notably, RVFV N protein localization partially overlaps with P body-resident proteins [ 88 ]. In contrast, a recent study found no significant colocalization of TULV N protein and P body markers but reported significant colocalization of TULV RNA and N protein with stress granule-resident T-cell restricted intracellular antigen 1 (TIA-1) as well as an increase in the number of stress granules in TULV-infected cells [ 89 ]. Stress granules, similar to P bodies, are non-membranous compartments but rather serve as storage sites for translation-stalled mRNAs under cellular stress more than as sites of RNA decay.…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
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