
Influenza B virus particles, colorized orange and pink, seen through a scanning electron microscope.
Image Credit: NIAID/NIH
Scientific Frontline: Extended "At a Glance" Summary: The Viral ORFeome
The Core Concept: The viral ORFeome is a comprehensive genetic library containing 13,000 physical DNA sequences that encode approximately 9,000 proteins from 513 different viruses, enabling scientists to study thousands of viral proteins simultaneously.
Key Distinction/Mechanism: Unlike previous viral libraries that were limited to a single virus or family (usually restricted to 100 or 200 sequences), the viral ORFeome scales up analysis using genetic barcoding. Researchers can safely insert thousands of noninfectious viral DNA constructs into cell cultures at once, using unique ID tags to track which specific proteins disrupt cellular functions, block interferon, or evade immune responses.
Major Frameworks/Components:
- Open Reading Frames (ORFs): Engineered DNA sequences designed to instruct host cells to produce specific viral proteins without synthesizing or replicating the entire virus.
- Genetic Barcodes: Unique identifier tags attached to each ORF, allowing researchers to conduct and track large-scale, multiplexed genetic screens in a single experiment.
- Ubiquitin Proteasome System: The cellular garbage-disposal machinery frequently hijacked by viral proteins (such as the NSP1 protein from rotavirus) to degrade host defenses and remain undetected.
- Unified Workflow: A flexible, biosafety-compliant design that allows biologists outside of specialized virology fields to integrate the library into common laboratory test models.


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