4.8 Article

Alternative splicing of viral transcripts: the dark side of HBV

Journal

GUT
Volume 70, Issue 12, Pages 2373-2382

Publisher

BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1136/gutjnl-2021-324554

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Institut National de la Sante et de la. Recherche Medicale (Inserm)-France
  2. Universite Sorbonne UniversiteFrance
  3. Agence Nationale de la Recherche sur le Sida et les Hepatites (ANRS)France [ECTZ 103985, ECTZ 163186]
  4. Fondation pour la Recherche Medicale (FRM)-France [EQU202003010517]

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Alternative splicing of HBV pregenomic RNAs can lead to the synthesis of multiple spliced variants, most of which result in defective particle formation. Recent data highlights the importance of these HBV-spliced variants, which can modulate viral and cellular processes.
Regulation of alternative splicing is one of the most efficient mechanisms to enlarge the proteomic diversity in eukaryotic organisms. Many viruses hijack the splicing machinery following infection to accomplish their replication cycle. Regarding the HBV, numerous reports have described alternative splicing events of the long viral transcript (pregenomic RNA), which also acts as a template for viral genome replication. Alternative splicing of HBV pregenomic RNAs allows the synthesis of at least 20 spliced variants. In addition, almost all these spliced forms give rise to defective particles, detected in the blood of infected patients. HBV-spliced RNAs have long been unconsidered, probably due to their uneasy detection in comparison to unspliced forms as well as for their dispensable role during viral replication. However, recent data highlighted the relevance of these HBV-spliced variants through (1) the trans-regulation of the alternative splicing of viral transcripts along the course of liver disease; (2) the ability to generate defective particle formation, putative biomarker of the liver disease progression; (3) modulation of viral replication; and (4) their intrinsic propensity to encode for novel viral proteins involved in liver pathogenesis and immune response. Altogether, tricky regulation of HBV alternative splicing may contribute to modulate multiple viral and cellular processes all along the course of HBV-related liver disease.

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