Cis-acting replication element
Cis-acting replication elements bring together the 5′ and 3′ ends during replication of positive-sense single-stranded RNA viruses (for example Picornavirus, Flavivirus, coronavirus, togaviruses, Hepatitis C virus) and double-stranded RNA viruses (for example rotavirus and reovirus).[1]
See also
- Cis-regulatory element
- List of cis-regulatory RNA elements
- Enterovirus cis-acting replication element and Enterovirus 5′ cloverleaf cis-acting replication element
- Cardiovirus cis-acting replication element (CRE)
- Coronavirus SL-III cis-acting replication element (CRE)
- Rotavirus cis-acting replication element
- Hepatitis C virus cis-acting replication element
- Flavivirus 3′ UTR cis-acting replication element (CRE)
- Potato virus X cis-acting regulatory element
- Human rhinovirus internal cis-acting regulatory element (CRE)
References
- Cordey, S; Gerlach, D; Junier, T; Zdobnov, EM; Kaiser, L; Tapparel, C (2008). "The cis-acting replication elements define human enterovirus and rhinovirus species". RNA. 14 (8): 1568–1578. doi:10.1261/rna.1031408. PMC 2491478. PMID 18541697.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.