Dengue virus harnesses mosquito Syntenin to load and secrete viral RNA into salivary exosomes
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Viruses exploit extracellular vesicles (EVs) to transfer infection-enhancing viral RNAs. However, mechanisms underlying viral RNA loading remain elusive. We leveraged our previous discovery that dengue virus secretes transmission-enhancing subgenomic flaviviral RNA (sfRNA) into mosquito salivary EVs to investigate viral RNA loading mechanism. We demonstrate that sfRNA promotes the secretion of sfRNA-containing EVs marked by the mosquito EV biogenesis protein AeSyntenin, by applying microscopy and viral genetic editing in in vitro and in vivo models. SfRNA interacts intracellularly with mosquito AeSyntenin and this interaction is selectively maintained within EVs as shown by complementary RNA-affinity chromatography and RNA immunoprecipitation, and AI-based prediction. Finally, we used systemic and salivary gland-specific protein depletion to establish a functional role for mosquito AeSyntenin in exosome production and salivary secretion of sfRNA. We propose that sfRNA binds AeSyntenin to drive its selective packaging and release into exosomes, elucidating a mechanism for viral RNA incorporation into EVs.