Recognition of 5′ Triphosphate by RIG-I Helicase Requires Short Blunt Double-Stranded RNA as Contained in Panhandle of Negative-Strand Virus — Martin Schlee (2009) | RDL Network
Recognition of 5′ Triphosphate by RIG-I Helicase Requires Short Blunt Double-Stranded RNA as Contained in Panhandle of Negative-Strand Virus
Immunity 31(1): 25-34
Article 2009 English
Authors
MS
Martin Schlee
AR
Andreas Roth
VH
Veit Hornung
Abstract
1 min read
Antiviral immunity is triggered by immunorecognition of viral nucleic acids. The cytosolic helicase RIG-I is a key sensor of viral infections and is activated by RNA containing a triphosphate at the 5′ end. The exact structure of RNA activating RIG-I remains controversial. Here, we established a chemical approach for 5′ triphosphate oligoribonucleotide synthesis and found that synthetic single-stranded 5′ triphosphate oligoribonucleotides were unable to bind and activate RIG-I. Conversely, the addition of the synthetic complementary strand resulted in optimal binding and activation of RIG-I. Short double-strand conformation with base pairing of the nucleoside carrying the 5′ triphosphate was required. RIG-I activation was impaired by a 3′ overhang at the 5′ triphosphate end. These results define the structure of RNA for full RIG-I activation and explain how RIG-I detects negative-strand RNA viruses that lack long double-stranded RNA but do contain blunt short double-stranded 5′ triphosphate RNA in the panhandle region of their single-stranded genome.
Veit Hornung, Jana M. Ellegast, Sarah Kim-Hellmuth, Krzysztof Brzózka, Andreas Jung, Hiroki Kato, Hendrik Poeck, Akira Shizuo, Karl‐Klaus Conzelmann, Martin Schlee, Stefan Endres, Gunther Hartmann
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