Abstract

Viral noncoding RNAs have acquired increasing prominence as important regulators of infection and mediators of pathogenesis. Circular RNAs (circRNAs) generated by backsplicing events have been identified in several oncogenic human DNA viruses. Here, we show that Merkel cell polyomavirus (MCV), the etiologic cause of ∼80% of Merkel cell carcinomas (MCCs), also expresses circular RNAs. By RNase R-resistant RNA sequencing, four putative circRNA backsplice junctions (BSJs) were identified from the MCV early region (ER). The most abundantly expressed MCV circRNA, designated circMCV-T, is generated through backsplicing of all of ER exon II to form a 762-nucleotide (nt) circular RNA molecule. Curiously, circMCV-T, as well as two other less abundantly expressed putative MCV circRNAs, overlaps in a complementary fashion with the MCV microRNA (miRNA) locus that encodes MCV-miR-M1. circMCV-T is consistently detected in concert with linear T antigen transcripts throughout infection, suggesting a crucial role for this RNA molecule in the regulatory functions of the early region, known to be vital for viral replication. Knocking out the hairpin structure of MCV-miR-M1 in genomic early region expression constructs and using a new high-efficiency, recombinase-mediated, recircularized MCV molecular clone demonstrates that circMCV-T levels decrease in the presence of MCV-miR-M1, underscoring the interplay between MCV circRNA and miRNA. Furthermore, circMCV-T partially reverses the known inhibitory effect of MCV-miR-M1 on early gene expression. RNase R-resistant RNA sequencing of lytic rat polyomavirus 2 (RatPyV2) identified an analogously located circRNA, stipulating a crucial, conserved regulatory function of this class of RNA molecules in the family of polyomaviruses.IMPORTANCE Covalently closed circular RNAs were recently described in the human DNA tumor viruses Epstein-Barr virus (EBV), Kaposi's sarcoma-associated herpesvirus (KSHV), and human papillomavirus (HPV). Here, we show that MCV, another DNA tumor virus, generates circRNAs from its early regulatory region in concert with T antigen linear transcripts. MCV circMCV-T interacts with another MCV noncoding RNA, miR-M1, to functionally modulate early region transcript expression important for viral replication and long-term episomal persistence. This work describes a dynamic regulatory network integrating circRNA/miRNA/mRNA biomolecules and underscores the intricate functional modulation between several classes of polyomavirus-encoded RNAs in the control of viral replication.

Highlights

  • Viral noncoding RNAs have acquired increasing prominence as important regulators of infection and mediators of pathogenesis

  • In comparison to the replicating model of Merkel cell polyomavirus (MCV)-HF-transfected 293 cells, those of the Merkel cell carcinomas (MCCs) cell lines MS-1 and CVG-1 displayed at least 2 orders of magnitude-lower numbers of RNase R-resistant viral reads despite the total numbers of reads being comparable between the two models

  • This is in agreement with a previous report where the numbers of viral sequence reads from poly(A) sequencing of MCC-derived cell lines MKL-1 and WaGa were significantly lower than for PFSK-1 cells transfected with MCVsyn, a circularized, wild-type genome identical to MCV-HF [2]

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Summary

Introduction

Viral noncoding RNAs have acquired increasing prominence as important regulators of infection and mediators of pathogenesis. MCV circMCV-T interacts with another MCV noncoding RNA, miR-M1, to functionally modulate early region transcript expression important for viral replication and long-term episomal persistence. MCV ER transcripts express tumor antigen (T-Ag) proteins, including large T antigen (LT), small T antigen (sT), 57,000-molecular-weight T antigen (57kT), and the alternative large T antigen open reading frame (ALTO) [2,3,4] Some of these ER-encoded proteins have characterized functions essential for MCV replication and MCC oncogenesis [4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17]. HPV-encoded circE7 has been reported to be translated into an E7 oncoprotein [45], and the EBV-encoded circLMP2A may induce stemness in EBVassociated gastric cancer [46] It has not previously been determined whether the human tumor virus MCV, in like fashion to these oncogenic DNA viruses, can encode circRNAs

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