Concepedia

Publication | Closed Access

5'-Triphosphate RNA Is the Ligand for RIG-I

2.4K

Citations

14

References

2006

Year

TLDR

The structural basis for distinguishing viral RNA from abundant self RNA in infected cells remains largely unknown. The study shows that uncapped 5′‑triphosphate RNA, which directly binds RIG‑I, is the ligand that triggers RIG‑I–mediated interferon responses, and that capping or modification of this end blocks detection.

Abstract

The structural basis for the distinction of viral RNA from abundant self RNA in the cytoplasm of virally infected cells is largely unknown. We demonstrated that the 5'-triphosphate end of RNA generated by viral polymerases is responsible for retinoic acid-inducible protein I (RIG-I)-mediated detection of RNA molecules. Detection of 5'-triphosphate RNA is abrogated by capping of the 5'-triphosphate end or by nucleoside modification of RNA, both occurring during posttranscriptional RNA processing in eukaryotes. Genomic RNA prepared from a negative-strand RNA virus and RNA prepared from virus-infected cells (but not from noninfected cells) triggered a potent interferon-alpha response in a phosphatase-sensitive manner. 5'-triphosphate RNA directly binds to RIG-I. Thus, uncapped 5'-triphosphate RNA (now termed 3pRNA) present in viruses known to be recognized by RIG-I, but absent in viruses known to be detected by MDA-5 such as the picornaviruses, serves as the molecular signature for the detection of viral infection by RIG-I.

References

YearCitations

Page 1