2020
DOI: 10.1080/21505594.2020.1864136
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gga-miR-1603 and gga-miR-1794 directly target viral L gene and function as a broad-spectrum antiviral factor against NDV replication

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Cited by 7 publications
(5 citation statements)
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References 49 publications
(47 reference statements)
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“…The virus replicates constantly in cells. When the virus was inoculated at an MOI of 1, the virus replication kinetics did not reach a plateau at 30 hpi ( 44 , 45 ). When the mRNA expression of NOD1 was suppressed, the DHAV-3 genomic copy number dropped significantly.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The virus replicates constantly in cells. When the virus was inoculated at an MOI of 1, the virus replication kinetics did not reach a plateau at 30 hpi ( 44 , 45 ). When the mRNA expression of NOD1 was suppressed, the DHAV-3 genomic copy number dropped significantly.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The microRNAs (miRNAs) have been shown to regulate viral replication by interacting with various host mRNAs [ 130 ]. Based on this, Chen et al [ 131 ] further investigated the interaction between miRNAs and NDV genes associated with viral replication. They revealed that miRNAs could regulate the infection of NDV through interacting with the L gene.…”
Section: Main Textmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These changes in miRNA expression profiles could be a strategy used by RNA viruses when escaping from the host cell immune system through the fine-tuning of miRNA on intracellular protein expression, or it could be an immune reaction, meaning that the body perceives the invasion of RNA viruses and fine-tunes immune-related genes through the miRNA system to coordinate the whole immune response. Since miRNA can bind to mRNA and regulate its translation, it is reasonable to suggest that the positive RNA from RNA viruses, which carry translatable genetic information, could be targeted and regulated by the host miRNAs ( Zheng et al., 2018 ; Li et al., 2019 ; Chen et al., 2021 ). Up until now, there have been numerous experiments conducted to try and confirm this hypothesis.…”
Section: Interactions Between Mirnas and Virusesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Similarly, the virulent newcastle disease virus (NDV) is a negative-strand RNA virus and is translated into viral protein after NDV has been transcribed for a positive-sense RNA upon entry into host cells. gga-miR-1603 and gga-miR-1794 (gga, chicken) were confirmed to target two highly conserved regions of the L gene of NDV, to inhibit the expression of the L protein at both the protein and RNA levels, thus suppressing NDV replication ( Chen et al., 2021 ). Both of these examples are based on the RNA-silencing effects of miRNA in inhibiting protein translation within RNA viruses, and some more interesting examples of miRNA and RNA viruses are mentioned below.…”
Section: Mirnas Regulate Gene Expressionmentioning
confidence: 99%