
Alphavirus nucleocapsids are assembled in the cytoplasm of infected cells from 240 copies of the capsid protein and the approximately 11 kb positive strand genomic RNA. However, the challenge of how the capsid specifically selects its RNA package and assembles around it has remained an elusive one to solve. In this review, we will summarize what is known about the alphavirus capsid protein, the packaging signal, and their roles in the mechanism of packaging and assembly. We will review the discovery of the packaging signal and how there is as much evidence for, as well as against, its requirement to specify packaging of the genomic RNA. Finally, we will compare this model with those of other viral systems including particular reference to a relatively new idea of RNA packaging based on the presence of multiple minimal packaging signals throughout the genome known as the two stage mechanism. This review will provide a basis for further investigating the fundamental ways of how RNA viruses are able to select their own cargo from the relative chaos that is the cytoplasm.
assembly, RNA packaging, Virus Assembly, Review, Alphavirus, Virus Replication, packaging signal, Microbiology, Models, Biological, capsid protein, QR1-502, Infectious Diseases, Virology, alphavirus, Animals, Humans, Capsid Proteins, Nucleocapsid
assembly, RNA packaging, Virus Assembly, Review, Alphavirus, Virus Replication, packaging signal, Microbiology, Models, Biological, capsid protein, QR1-502, Infectious Diseases, Virology, alphavirus, Animals, Humans, Capsid Proteins, Nucleocapsid
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