Polysomally Protected Viruses
Abstract
It is conceivable that an RNA virus could use a polysome, that is, a string of ribosomes covering the RNA strand, to protect the genetic material from degradation inside a host cell. This paper discusses how such a virus might operate, and how its presence might be detected by ribosome profiling. There are two possible forms for such a polysomally protected virus, depending upon whether just the forward strand or both the forward and complementary strands can be encased by ribosomes (these will be termed type 1 and type 2, respectively). It is argued that in the type 2 case the viral RNA would evolve an ambigrammatic property, whereby the viral genes are free of stop codons in a reverse reading frame (with forward and reverse codons aligned). Recent observations of ribosome profiles of ambigrammatic narnavirus sequences are consistent with our predictions for the type 2 case.
Cite
@article{arxiv.2102.00316,
title = {Polysomally Protected Viruses},
author = {Michael Wilkinson and David Yllanes and Greg Huber},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2102.00316},
year = {2021}
}
Comments
14 pages, 4 figures, Physical Biology, in press