Literature detail

The 3'Untranslated region is a critical determinant of Getah virus replication, pathogenesis, and vector competence.

Tongwei Ren1 Peijie Li1 Muyang Liu1 Liping Zhang1 Zhen Zhong1 Guowei Wang1 Xindong Wang1 Lingshan Zhou1 Yifeng Qin1,2,3 Kang Ouyang1,2,3 Yeshi Yin1,2,3 Ying Chen1,2,3 Weijian Huang1,2,3 Zuzhang Wei1,2,3
Affiliations 3 institutions
  1. Laboratory of Animal Infectious Diseases and Molecular Immunology, College of Animal Science and Technology, Guangxi University, Nanning, China.
  2. Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region Engineering Research Center of Veterinary Biologics, Nanning, China.
  3. Guangxi Key Laboratory of Animal Reproduction, Breeding and Disease Control, Nanning, China.
PMID 42262762 2026 Virulence eng aheadofprint
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Article

Publication summary

Getah virus (GETV), a mosquito-borne arbovirus of the Alphavirus genus, poses an emerging threat to livestock economies and public health, underscored by its expanding host range and association with recent outbreaks of heightened virulence. While the functional significance of the 3' untranslated region (3'UTR) in alphavirus biology is recognized, its specific role in GETV remained undefined. Herein, we elucidate the virological functions of the GETV 3'UTR through a reverse genetics approach, generating a panel of viruses with targeted deletions. We demonstrate that the GETV 3'UTR is remarkably plastic, tolerating a consecutive deletion of up to 310 nucleotides while remaining viable. Deletion of conserved repeat sequence elements (RSEs) induced a cell-type-specific replication deficiency in vitro and significantly attenuated virulence in a murine model. A comprehensive deletion mutant (rGETV-KO310) exhibited further impaired replication kinetics in vitro and was profoundly attenuated in vivo, eliciting only transient morbidity with no mortality in both neonatal and weaned mice. Furthermore, this mutant displayed a significant defect in early colonization within mosquito vectors, indicating a role in vector competence. Comparative transcriptomic profiling of knee joints revealed that attenuation correlates with the altered modulation of critical host immune responses, notably the interferon and MAPK signaling pathways. Collectively, these findings establish the GETV 3'UTR as a pivotal regulator of viral fitness, pathogenesis, and transmission. This work provides a foundational rationale for the strategic development of live-attenuated vaccine candidates based on targeted 3'UTR attenuation.

3’ untranslated region Getah virus mutational analysis pathogenicity transmission potential viral replication

Structured evidence records

Evidence records

2 total
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.90
Key finding

Experimental infection in mice and mosquitoes showed that deletion mutants of the Getah virus 3'UTR are attenuated in mammals and exhibit defective replication in mosquito vectors, confirming host-range implications.

Virus
Location
Not specified
Supporting text

This mutant displayed a significant defect in early colonization within mosquito vectors... attenuated virulence in a murine model, eliciting only transient morbidity with no mortality in both neonatal and weaned mice.

Method
murine infection model | vector colonization assay
Sample type
murine model | mosquito vectors
Study design
animal experiment
Transmission direction
host-range experiment
Event type
vector and mammalian host infection model
Genes or proteins
3' untranslated region
Mutations
rGETV-KO310 deletion mutant
Mechanism types
attenuated replication | defective vector colonization
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.95
Key finding

Deletion within the 3' untranslated region of Getah virus caused impaired replication in vitro, decreased virulence in mice, and reduced colonization in mosquito vectors, indicating the 3'UTR's role in viral adaptation across host and vector systems.

Virus
Location
Not specified
Supporting text

Deletion of conserved repeat sequence elements (RSEs) induced a cell-type-specific replication deficiency in vitro and significantly attenuated virulence in a murine model. Furthermore, this mutant displayed a significant defect in early colonization within mosquito vectors, indicating a role in vector competence.

Method
reverse genetics | in vitro replication assay | murine model | transcriptomic profiling
Sample type
mosquito vectors | murine model | cell culture
Study design
reverse genetics
Transmission direction
molecular mechanism only
Event type
3'UTR functional adaptation affecting host and vector fitness
Genes or proteins
3' untranslated region | repeat sequence elements (RSEs)
Host factors
interferon signaling pathway | MAPK signaling pathway
Mutations
deletion of up to 310 nucleotides | rGETV-KO310 mutant
Mechanism types
viral fitness regulation | host immune modulation