Shihua Lu

Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC, USA

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Publications (6)44.54 Total impact

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    Article: Epstein-Barr virus microRNAs are evolutionarily conserved and differentially expressed.
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    ABSTRACT: The pathogenic lymphocryptovirus Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) is shown to express at least 17 distinct microRNAs (miRNAs) in latently infected cells. These are arranged in two clusters: 14 miRNAs are located in the introns of the viral BART gene while three are located adjacent to BHRF1. The BART miRNAs are expressed at high levels in latently infected epithelial cells and at lower, albeit detectable, levels in B cells. In contrast to the tissue-specific expression pattern of the BART miRNAs, the BHRF1 miRNAs are found at high levels in B cells undergoing stage III latency but are essentially undetectable in B cells or epithelial cells undergoing stage I or II latency. Induction of lytic EBV replication was found to enhance the expression of many, but not all, of these viral miRNAs. Rhesus lymphocryptovirus, which is separated from EBV by > or =13 million years of evolution, expresses at least 16 distinct miRNAs, seven of which are closely related to EBV miRNAs. Thus, lymphocryptovirus miRNAs are under positive selection and are likely to play important roles in the viral life cycle. Moreover, the differential regulation of EBV miRNA expression implies distinct roles during infection of different human tissues.
    PLoS Pathogens 03/2006; 2(3):e23. · 9.13 Impact Factor
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    Article: Kaposi's sarcoma-associated herpesvirus expresses an array of viral microRNAs in latently infected cells.
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    ABSTRACT: MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are an endogenously encoded class of small RNAs that have been proposed to function as key posttranscriptional regulators of gene expression in a range of eukaryotic species, including humans. The small size of miRNA precursors makes them potentially ideal for use by viruses as inhibitors of host cell defense pathways. Here, we demonstrate that the pathogenic human herpesvirus Kaposi's sarcoma-associated herpesvirus (KSHV) encodes an array of 11 distinct miRNAs, all of which are expressed at readily detectable levels in latently KSHV infected cells. Individual KSHV miRNAs were expressed at up to 2,200 copies per cell. The KSHV miRNAs are expressed from what appears to be a single genetic locus that largely coincides with an approximately 4-kb noncoding sequence located between the KSHV v-cyclin and K12/Kaposin genes, both of which are also expressed in latently infected cells. Computer analysis of potential mRNA targets for these viral miRNAs identified a number of interesting candidate genes, including several mRNAs previously shown to be down-regulated in KSHV-infected cells. We hypothesize that these viral miRNAs play a critical role in the establishment and/or maintenance of KSHV latent infection in vivo and, hence, in KSHV-induced oncogenesis.
    Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 05/2005; 102(15):5570-5. · 9.68 Impact Factor
  • Article: Adenovirus VA1 noncoding RNA can inhibit small interfering RNA and MicroRNA biogenesis.
    Shihua Lu, Bryan R Cullen
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    ABSTRACT: Although inhibition of RNA interference (RNAi) by plant virus proteins has been shown to enhance viral replication and pathogenesis in plants, no viral gene product has as yet been shown to inhibit RNAi in vertebrate cells. Here, we present evidence demonstrating that the highly structured approximately 160-nucleotide adenoviral VA1 noncoding RNA can inhibit RNAi at physiological levels of expression. VA1, which is expressed at very high levels in adenovirus-infected cells, potently inhibited RNAi induced by short hairpin RNAs (shRNAs) or human microRNA precursors but did not affect RNAi induced by artificial short interfering RNA duplexes. Inhibition appeared to be due both to inhibition of nuclear export of shRNA or premicro-RNA precursors, competition for the Exportin 5 nuclear export factor, and inhibition of Dicer function by direct binding of Dicer. Together, these data argue that adenovirus infection can result in inhibition of RNAi and identify VA1 RNA as the first viral gene product able to inhibit RNAi in human cells.
    Journal of Virology 01/2005; 78(23):12868-76. · 5.40 Impact Factor
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    Article: Nonsense mediated decay induced by tethered human UPF3B is restricted to the cytoplasm.
    Shihua Lu, Bryan R Cullen
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    ABSTRACT: The subcellular localization of the nonsense mediated decay (NMD) of mRNA transcripts bearing premature termination codons has been controversial. Recently, it has been demonstrated that RNA tethering of key mediators of NMD, including human UPF3B, accurately recreates NMD. Here, we have used tethered UPF3B, combined with regulation of nuclear mRNA export using the retroviral Rev/RRE system, to examine where UPF3B-mediated mRNA degradation occurs. Our data clearly demonstrate that nuclear mRNA export is required for UPF3B-mediated degradation and moreover show that this degradation is exclusively cytoplasmic, despite the fact that the UPF3B fusion protein used is a nucleocytoplasmic shuttle protein localized predominantly to the nucleus. Moreover, exclusively cytoplasmic NMD occurred whether the target mRNA was exported via the retroviral Rev/RRE pathway or via the Tap: Nxt pathway used by most cellular mRNAs. These data may suggest that truly nuclear NMD, if it occurs, is at least in part mechanistically distinct from cytoplasmic NMD.
    RNA biology 06/2004; 1(1):42-7. · 5.56 Impact Factor
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    Article: Exon junction complexes mediate the enhancing effect of splicing on mRNA expression.
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    ABSTRACT: Intron-containing genes are generally expressed more effectively in human cells than are intronless versions of the same gene. We have asked whether this effect is due directly to splicing or instead reflects the action of components of the exon junction complex (EJC) that is assembled at splice junctions after splicing is completed. Here, we show that intron removal does not enhance gene expression if EJC formation is blocked. Conversely, RNA tethering of the EJC components SRm160 or RNPS1 boosts the expression of intronless mRNAs but not of spliced mRNAs. Splicing and RNPS1 tethering are shown to enhance the same steps in mRNA biogenesis and function, including mRNA 3' end processing and translation. Together, these data argue that the EJC is primarily responsible for the positive effect of splicing on gene expression.
    Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 10/2003; 100(20):11327-32. · 9.68 Impact Factor
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    Article: Analysis of the stimulatory effect of splicing on mRNA production and utilization in mammalian cells.
    Shihua Lu, Bryan R Cullen
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    ABSTRACT: We have examined how splicing affects the expression of a range of human and nonhuman genes in vertebrate cells. Although our data demonstrate that splicing invariably enhances the level of gene expression, this positive effect is generally moderate. However, in the case of the human beta-globin gene, splicing is essential for significant protein expression. In the absence of introns, 3' end processing is inefficient, and this appears to be causally linked to a significant decrease in the level of both nuclear and cytoplasmic 3' end-processed RNA. In contrast, splicing appears to only modestly enhance nuclear mRNA export. Consistent with this observation, intronless beta-globin gene expression was only partially rescued by the insertion of retroviral nuclear mRNA export elements. Surprisingly, in the case of the highly intron dependent beta-globin gene, the mRNA that did reach the cytoplasm was also only inefficiently translated if it derived from an intronless expression plasmid. Together, these data argue that splicing can increase gene expression by enhancing mRNA 3' end processing, and hence, mRNA production. Moreover, in the case of the highly intron-dependent beta-globin gene, splicing also significantly enhanced the translational utilization of cytoplasmic beta-globin mRNAs.
    RNA 06/2003; 9(5):618-30. · 5.09 Impact Factor

Institutions

  • 2005–2006
    • Duke University Medical Center
      Durham, NC, USA
  • 2003–2006
    • Duke University
      • Department of Molecular Genetics and Microbiology
      Durham, NC, USA
  • 2003–2005
    • Howard Hughes Medical Institute
      Chevy Chase, MD, USA