Eukaryotic host transcription shutoff by virus (kw:KW-1191)

Host RNA polymerase II (RNA pol-II) is the major enzyme responsible for transcription of mRNA from a DNA template strand.

transcription initiation modulation PolII regulation

Some viruses interfere with host RNA pol-II function. They may either mediate its ubiquitination and subsequent proteasomal degradation, or inhibit RNA pol-II phosphorylation thereby lowering its efficiency. They can as well interfere with initiation factors. Inhibiting host transcription eventually leads to shutoff of host proteins expression and gives viruses transcripts a competitive edge for access to the cellular translation machinery. Preventing the expression of host proteins is also a strategy to counteract the antiviral response.

Viruses inhibiting transcription:

Family Virus Viral protein Transcription inhibition strategy references
Herpesviridae HHV-1 ICP22 Counteracts CTD Ser-2 phosphorylation
Bunyaviridae Bunyamwera virus NSs Counteracts CTD Ser-2 phosphorylation
Orthomyxoviridae Influenza virus Polymerase PB1, PB2, PA RNA pol-II ubiquitination and proteasomal degradation
Papillomaviridae, alphapapillomavirus HPV16 E7 Inhibition of TBP
Picornaviridae Poliovirus 3C Cleavage of TBP
Bunyaviridae, Phlebovirus Rift valley fever virus NSs Downregulates TFIIH subunit p62
Herpesviridae Varicella virus IE63 Disruption of the transcriptional pre-initiation complex

Matching UniProtKB/Swiss-Prot entries

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0 entry grouped by protein