Author:
Lulla Valeria,Wandel Michal P.,Bandyra Katarzyna J.,Ulferts Rachel,Wu Mary,Dendooven Tom,Yang Xiaofei,Doyle Nicole,Oerum Stephanie,Beale Rupert,O’Rourke Sara M.,Randow Felix,Maier Helena J.,Scott William,Ding Yiliang,Firth Andrew E.,Bloznelyte Kotryna,Luisi Ben F.
Abstract
SummaryRNA structural elements occur in numerous single stranded (+)-sense RNA viruses. The stemloop 2 motif (s2m) is one such element with an unusually high degree of sequence conservation, being found in the 3’ UTR in the genomes of many astroviruses, some picornaviruses and noroviruses, and a variety of coronaviruses, including SARS-CoV and SARS-CoV-2. The evolutionary conservation and its occurrence in all viral subgenomic transcripts implicates a key role of s2m in the viral infection cycle. Our findings indicate that the element, while stably folded, can nonetheless be invaded and remodelled spontaneously by antisense oligonucleotides (ASOs) that initiate pairing in exposed loops and trigger efficient sequence-specific RNA cleavage in reporter assays. ASOs also act to inhibit replication in an astrovirus replicon model system in a sequence-specific, dose-dependent manner and inhibit SARS-CoV-2 infection in cell culture. Our results thus permit us to suggest that the s2m element is a site of vulnerability readily targeted by ASOs, which show promise as anti-viral agents.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
6 articles.
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