For intracellular survival it is imperative that viruses have the capacity to manipulate various cellular responses, including metabolic and biosynthetic pathways. The unfolded protein response (UPR) is induced by various external and internal stimuli, including the accumulation of misfolded proteins in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). Our previous studies have indicated that the replication and assembly of the flavivirus West Nile virus strain Kunjin virus (WNV KUN ) is intimately associated with the ER. Thus, we sought to determine whether the UPR was induced during WNV KUN infection. WNV KUN induces UPR signaling during replication, which is coordinated with peak replication. Interestingly, signaling is biased toward the ATF6/IRE-1 arm of the response, with high levels of Xbp-1 activation but negligible eukaryotic translation initiation factor 2␣ phosphorylation and downstream transcription. We show that the PERK-mediated response may partially regulate replication, since external UPR stimulation had a limiting effect on early replication events and cells deficient for PERK demonstrated increased replication and virus release. Significantly, we show that the WNV KUN hydrophobic nonstructural proteins NS4A and NS4B are potent inducers of the UPR, which displayed a high correlation in inhibiting Jak-STAT signaling in response to alpha interferon (IFN-␣). Sequential removal of the transmembrane domains of NS4A showed that reducing hydrophobicity decreased UPR signaling and restored IFN-␣-mediated activation. Overall, these results suggest that WNV KUN can stimulate the UPR to facilitate replication and that the induction of a general ER stress response, regulated by hydrophobic WNV KUN proteins, can potentiate the inhibition of the antiviral signaling pathway.
Hepatitis C virus (HCV) assembles its replication complex on cytosolic membrane vesicles often clustered in a membranous web (MW). During infection, HCV NS5A protein activates PI4KIII␣ enzyme, causing massive production and redistribution of phosphatidylinositol 4-phosphate (PI4P) lipid to the replication complex. However, the role of PI4P in the HCV life cycle is not well understood. We postulated that PI4P recruits host effectors to modulate HCV genome replication or virus particle production. To test this hypothesis, we generated cell lines for doxycycline-inducible expression of short hairpin RNAs (shRNAs) targeting the PI4P effector, four-phosphate adaptor protein 2 (FAPP2). FAPP2 depletion attenuated HCV infectivity and impeded HCV RNA synthesis. Indeed, FAPP2 has two functional lipid-binding domains specific for PI4P and glycosphingolipids. While expression of the PI4P-binding mutant protein was expected to inhibit HCV replication, a marked drop in replication efficiency was observed unexpectedly with the glycosphingolipid-binding mutant protein. These data suggest that both domains are crucial for the role of FAPP2 in HCV genome replication. We also found that HCV significantly increases the level of some glycosphingolipids, whereas adding these lipids to FAPP2-depleted cells partially rescued replication, further arguing for the importance of glycosphingolipids in HCV RNA synthesis. Interestingly, FAPP2 is redistributed to the replication complex (RC) characterized by HCV NS5A, NS4B, or double-stranded RNA (dsRNA) foci. Additionally, FAPP2 depletion disrupts the RC and alters the colocalization of HCV replicase proteins. Altogether, our study implies that HCV coopts FAPP2 for virus genome replication via PI4P binding and glycosphingolipid transport to the HCV RC. IMPORTANCELike most viruses with a positive-sense RNA genome, HCV replicates its RNA on remodeled host membranes composed of lipids hijacked from various internal membrane compartments. During infection, HCV induces massive production and retargeting of the PI4P lipid to its replication complex. However, the role of PI4P in HCV replication is not well understood. In this study, we have shown that FAPP2, a PI4P effector and glycosphingolipid-binding protein, is recruited to the HCV replication complex and is required for HCV genome replication and replication complex formation. More importantly, this study demonstrates, for the first time, the crucial role of glycosphingolipids in the HCV life cycle and suggests a link between PI4P and glycosphingolipids in HCV genome replication.
Salmonella enterica serovar 4,[5],12:i:- (Salmonella 4,[5],12:i:-) is a monophasic variant of Salmonella Typhimurium that has emerged as a global cause of multidrug resistant salmonellosis. We used Bayesian phylodynamics, genomic epidemiology, and phenotypic characterization to describe the emergence and evolution of Salmonella 4,[5],12:i:- in Australia. We show that the interruption of the genetic region surrounding the phase II flagellin, FljB, causing a monophasic phenotype, represents a stepwise evolutionary event through the accumulation of mobile resistance elements with minimal impairment to bacterial fitness. We identify three lineages with different population dynamics and discrete antimicrobial resistance profiles emerged, likely reflecting differential antimicrobial selection pressures. Two lineages are associated with travel to South-East Asia and the third lineage is endemic to Australia. Moreover antimicrobial-resistant Salmonella 4,[5],12:i- lineages efficiently infected and survived in host phagocytes and epithelial cells without eliciting significant cellular cytotoxicity, suggesting a suppression of host immune response that may facilitate the persistence of Salmonella 4,[5],12:i:-.
BackgroundFlavivirus NS1 is a non-structural glycoprotein that is expressed on the cell surface and secreted into the extracellular space, where it acts as an antagonist of complement pathway activation. Despite its transit through the secretory pathway and intracellular localization in the lumen of the endoplasmic reticulum and Golgi vesicles, NS1 is as an essential gene for flavivirus replication. How NS1 modulates infection remains uncertain given that the viral RNA replication complex localizes to the cytosolic face of the endoplasmic reticulum.Methods and ResultsUsing a trans-complementation assay, we show that viruses deleted for NS1 (∆-NS1) can be rescued by transgenic expression of NS1 from West Nile virus (WNV) or heterologous flaviviruses in the absence of adaptive mutations. In viral lifecycle experiments, we demonstrate that WNV NS1 was not required for virus attachment or input strand translation of the infectious viral RNA, but was necessary for negative and positive strand RNA synthesis and formation of the endoplasmic reticulum-associated replication complex.ConclusionsWNV RNA lacking intact NS1 genes was efficiently translated but failed to form canonical replication complexes at early times after infection, which resulted in an inability to replicate viral RNA. These results expand on prior studies with yellow fever and Kunjin viruses to show that flavivirus NS1 has an essential co-factor role in regulating replication complex formation and viral RNA synthesis.
Positive-sense RNA virus intracellular replication is intimately associated with membrane platforms that are derived from host organelles and comprised of distinct lipid composition. For flaviviruses, such as West Nile virus strain Kunjin virus (WNVKUN) we have observed that these membrane platforms are derived from the endoplasmic reticulum and are rich in (at least) cholesterol. To extend these studies and identify the cellular lipids critical for WNVKUN replication we utilized a whole cell lipidomics approach and revealed an elevation in phospholipase A2 (PLA2) activity to produce lyso-phosphatidylcholine (lyso-PChol). We observed that the PLA2 enzyme family is activated in WNVKUN-infected cells and the generated lyso-PChol lipid moieties are sequestered to the subcellular sites of viral replication. The requirement for lyso-PChol was confirmed using chemical inhibition of PLA2, where WNVKUN replication and production of infectious virus was duly affected in the presence of the inhibitors. Importantly, we could rescue chemical-induced inhibition with the exogenous addition of lyso-PChol species. Additionally, electron microscopy results indicate that lyso-PChol appears to contribute to the formation of the WNVKUN membranous replication complex (RC); particularly affecting the morphology and membrane curvature of vesicles comprising the RC. These results extend our current understanding of how flaviviruses manipulate lipid homeostasis to favour their own intracellular replication.
The vinegar fly, Drosophila melanogaster, is a popular model for the study of invertebrate antiviral immune responses. Several picorna-like viruses are commonly found in both wild and laboratory populations of D. melanogaster. The best-studied and most pathogenic of these is the dicistrovirus Drosophila C virus. Among the uncharacterized small RNA viruses of D. melanogaster, Drosophila A virus (DAV) is the least pathogenic. Historically, DAV has been labelled as a picorna-like virus based on its particle size and the content of its RNA genome. Here, we describe the characterization of both the genome and the virion structure of DAV. Unexpectedly, the DAV genome was shown to encode a circular permutation in the palm-domain motifs of the RNA-dependent RNA polymerase. This arrangement has only been described previously for a subset of viruses from the double-stranded RNA virus family Birnaviridae and the T54 single-stranded RNA virus family Tetraviridae. The 8 Å (0.8 nm) DAV virion structure computed from cryo-electron microscopy and image reconstruction indicates that the virus structural protein forms two discrete domains within the capsid. The inner domain is formed from a clear T53 lattice with similarity to the b-sandwich domain of tomato bushy stunt virus, whilst the outer domain is not ordered icosahedrally, but forms a cage-like structure that surrounds the core domain. Taken together, this indicates that DAV is highly divergent from previously described viruses.
The West Nile virus strain Kunjin virus (WNV KUN ) NS4A protein is a multifunctional protein involved in membrane proliferation, stimulation of cellular pathways, and evasion of host defense and is a major component of the WNV KUN RNA replication complex. We identified a highly conserved region ( 120 P-E-P-E 123 ) upstream of the viral protease dibasic cleavage site and investigated whether this motif was required for WNV KUN replication. Single point mutations to alanine and a PEPE deletion mutation were created in a full-length infectious WNV KUN molecular clone. All mutations drastically impaired viral replication and virion production, except that of the P122A mutant, which was slightly attenuated. These mutations were subsequently transferred to a WNV KUN replicon to specifically assess effects on RNA replication alone. Again, all mutants, except P122A, showed severely reduced negative-sense RNA production as well as decreased viral protein production. Correspondingly, immunofluorescence analyses showed a lack of double-stranded RNA (dsRNA) labeling and a dispersed localization of the WNV KUN proteins, suggesting that replication complex formation was additionally impaired. Attempts to rescue replication via conservative mutants largely failed except for substitution of Asp at E121, suggesting that a negative charge at this residue is equally important. Analysis of viral protein processing suggested that cleavage of the 2K peptide from NS4A did not occur with the mutant constructs. These observations imply that the combined effects of proline and negatively charged residues within the PEPE peptide are essential to promote the cleavage of 2K from NS4A, which is a prerequisite for efficient WNV replication.West Nile virus strain Kunjin virus (WNV KUN ) is an enveloped, positive-sense RNA virus that can infect multiple bird species as well and human and horses via a mosquito vector. The replication cycle of WNV KUN involves a number of specific protein-protein and protein-membrane interactions that facilitate efficient genome amplification. We and others have arguably provided the most comprehensive interrogation of the WNV KUN replication complex (RC) and have provided insight on the composition and interactions that occur during intracellular WNV KUN replication (20,21). The WNV KUN RC itself is composed of vesicles that have invaginated from the ER membrane (3), whereas a second WNV KUN -induced membrane structure (convoluted membranes/paracrystalline arrays [CM/PC]) is proposed to partake in polyprotein translation and processing (11).One of the WNV KUN small hydrophobic proteins, nonstructural protein 4A (NS4A), has been identified as a key regulator of membrane proliferation and inducer of cell signaling pathways and immune evasion as well as forming part of the RC (1, 9, 12-14, 16). NS4A is a 16-kDa protein that has an N-terminal cytoplasmic region, three transmembrane regions, and one membrane-associated region at its C terminus (Fig. 1A) (2,14). It is cleaved from the viral polyprotein by the action o...
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