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Department of Pathology

 

Scientists uncover how astroviruses replicate inside human cells

New research published in NAR Molecular Medicine sheds light on how astroviruses — a common cause of gastroenteritis — replicate within host cells, offering potential new targets for antiviral therapies.


Why astroviruses matter

Astroviruses are widespread gastrointestinal pathogens affecting humans and animals, yet their genome replication strategy has long remained a mystery.


Key discovery: how the virus replicates its RNA genome

In this study, we utilize high-throughput RNA-seq to challenge the “internal initiation” mechanism of subgenomic RNA synthesis. By identifying previously overlooked RNA species, we’ve shown that these viruses likely use a premature termination model to synthesize their subgenomic RNA.

Mapping these precise boundaries settles a long-standing mechanistic question and significantly advances our understanding of the viral life cycle.


Implications for future treatments

Ultimately, this work provides a foundation for developing targeted RNA-based therapeutics to combat these common infections.

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