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Published online ahead of print on 4 March 2009 as doi:10.1099/vir.0.009639-0
Journal of General Virology 2009;90:1398.

A more recent version of this article appeared on June 1, 2009 J Gen Virol (2009), DOI 10.1099/vir.0.009639-0
© 2009 Society for General Microbiology

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The NS2/NEP Protein Regulates Transcription and Replication of the Influenza Virus RNA Genome

Nicole C. Robb, Matt Smith, Frank T. Vreede and Ervin Fodor1

University of Oxford

1 E-mail: ervin.fodor{at}path.ox.ac.uk

The influenza virus RNA polymerase transcribes the negative-sense viral RNA segments (vRNA) into mRNA and replicates them via complementary RNA (cRNA) intermediates into more copies of vRNA. It is not clear how the relative amounts of the three RNA products, mRNA, cRNA and vRNA, are regulated during the viral life cycle. We found that in viral ribonucleoprotein (RNP) reconstitution assays involving only the minimal components required for viral transcription and replication (the RNA polymerase, the nucleoprotein and a vRNA template), the relative accumulation levels of RNA products differed from that observed in infected cells, suggesting a regulatory role for additional viral proteins. Expression of the viral NS2/NEP protein in RNP reconstitution assays affected viral RNA levels by reducing the accumulation of transcription products and increasing the accumulation of replication products to more closely resemble those found during viral infection. This effect was functionally conserved in influenza A and B viruses and is influenza type-specific, demonstrating that the NS2/NEP protein changes RNA levels by specific alteration of the viral transcription and replication machinery rather than through an indirect effect on the host cell. Although NS2/NEP has previously been shown to play a role in the nucleocytoplasmic export of viral RNPs, deletion of the nuclear export sequence region that is required for its transport function did not affect the ability of the protein to regulate RNA levels. A role for the NS2/NEP protein in the regulation of influenza virus transcription and replication that is independent of its RNP export function is proposed.

Received 12 December 2008; accepted 21 February 2009.





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