The oligoadenylate synthetase family: an ancient protein family with multiple antiviral activities

H Kristiansen, HH Gad, S Eskildsen-Larsen… - Journal of Interferon & …, 2011 - liebertpub.com
H Kristiansen, HH Gad, S Eskildsen-Larsen, P Despres, R Hartmann
Journal of Interferon & Cytokine Research, 2011liebertpub.com
The 2′-5′ oligoadenylate synthetases (OAS) are interferon-induced antiviral enzymes that
recognize virally produced dsRNA and initiate RNA destabilization through activation of
RNase L within infected cells. However, recent evidence points toward several RNase L–
independent pathways, through which members of the OAS family can exert antiviral activity.
The crystal structure of OAS led to a novel insight into the catalytic mechanism, and revealed
a remarkable similarity between OAS, Polyadenosine polymerase, and the class I CCA …
The 2′-5′ oligoadenylate synthetases (OAS) are interferon-induced antiviral enzymes that recognize virally produced dsRNA and initiate RNA destabilization through activation of RNase L within infected cells. However, recent evidence points toward several RNase L–independent pathways, through which members of the OAS family can exert antiviral activity. The crystal structure of OAS led to a novel insight into the catalytic mechanism, and revealed a remarkable similarity between OAS, Polyadenosine polymerase, and the class I CCA-adding enzyme from Archeoglobus fulgidus. This, combined with a variety of bioinformatic data, leads to the definition of a superfamily of template independent polymerases and proved that the OAS family are ancient proteins, which probably arose as early as the beginning of metazoan evolution.
Mary Ann Liebert