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Fodor E  Smith M 《Journal of virology》2004,78(17):9144-9153
The RNA genome of influenza virus is transcribed and replicated by the viral RNA polymerase complex in the cell nucleus. We have generated green fluorescent protein (GFP)-tagged polymerase subunits to study the assembly of the polymerase complex. Our results show that individually expressed polymerase basic protein 1 (PB1) and polymerase acidic protein (PA) subunits were distributed in both the cytoplasm and the nucleus, while the polymerase basic protein 2 (PB2) subunit accumulated in the nucleus. Although it has been reported that PB1 alone accumulates in the nucleus, we demonstrate that PB1 requires the coexpression of PA for efficient nuclear accumulation. Our results support a model which proposes that PB1 and PA are transported into the nucleus as a complex.  相似文献   

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The RNA polymerase of influenza A virus is a host range determinant and virulence factor. In particular, the PB2 subunit of the RNA polymerase has been implicated as a crucial factor that affects cell tropism as well as virulence in animal models. These findings suggest that host factors associating with the PB2 protein may play an important role during viral replication. In order to identify host factors that associate with the PB2 protein, we purified recombinant PB2 from transiently transfected mammalian cells and identified copurifying host proteins by mass spectrometry. We found that the PB2 protein associates with the cytosolic chaperonin containing TCP-1 (CCT), stress-induced phosphoprotein 1 (STIP1), FK506 binding protein 5 (FKBP5), α- and β-tubulin, Hsp60, and mitochondrial protein p32. Some of these binding partners associate with each other, suggesting that PB2 might interact with these proteins in multimeric complexes. More detailed analysis of the interaction of the PB2 protein with CCT revealed that PB2 associates with CCT as a monomer and that the CCT binding site is located in a central region of the PB2 protein. PB2 proteins from various influenza virus subtypes and origins can associate with CCT. Silencing of CCT resulted in reduced viral replication and reduced PB2 protein and viral RNA accumulation in a ribonucleoprotein reconstitution assay, suggesting an important function for CCT during the influenza virus life cycle. We propose that CCT might be acting as a chaperone for PB2 to aid its folding and possibly its incorporation into the trimeric RNA polymerase complex.Influenza A viruses, members of the family of Orthomyxoviridae, contain a segmented RNA genome of negative polarity. The genomic RNA segments together with the three subunits of the viral RNA-dependent RNA polymerase (PB1, PB2, and PA protein) and the nucleoprotein (NP) form viral ribonucleoprotein complexes (vRNPs). The PB1 subunit is the polymerase itself, while the PB2 and PA subunits are involved in the generation of 5′ capped RNA primers through binding to and endonucleolytic cleavage of host pre-mRNAs (8, 10, 11, 41, 61). After the virus enters the cell via endocytosis, vRNPs are released into the cytoplasm and transported into the nucleus. In the nucleus, vRNPs catalyze the synthesis of viral mRNAs and complementary RNAs (cRNA) which, in turn, are used as templates for the synthesis of vRNAs. The newly formed vRNPs in association with other viral proteins (M1 and nonstructural protein 2/nuclear export factor [NS2/NEP]) are transported into the cytoplasm and subsequently to the cell membrane, where the assembly process takes place, followed by the release of progeny virions by budding (44).The PB1, PB2, and PA proteins are synthesized in the cytoplasm whereupon PB1 and PA form a dimeric complex that is transported into the nucleus. In the nucleus the dimer assembles with the PB2 subunit, which is transported separately (7, 14). RanBP5 was identified as a factor that is involved in the import of the PB1-PA dimer into the nucleus (6), while PB2 uses the classical importin-α/β pathway for nuclear import (57). Recently, further support for this transport and assembly model was provided by using fluorescence cross-correlation spectroscopy (25). An alternative pathway proposed for the import of the RNA polymerase subunits into the nucleus involves the heat shock protein 90 (Hsp90) that was shown to interact with the PB1 and PB2 proteins (39). Heat shock protein 70 (Hsp70) was also found to interact with the influenza virus polymerase subunits and vRNPs, and it was implicated in blocking the nuclear export of vRNPs (22).The RNA polymerase has been implicated as a host range determinant and pathogenicity factor of influenza viruses. In particular, amino acid residue 627 in the PB2 subunit was shown to determine the ability of certain influenza viruses to replicate in avian and mammalian cells (34, 54). A lysine at position 627, characteristic of most human influenza virus strains, appears to enhance replication in mammalian cells, while a glutamic acid, found in most avian isolates, attenuates virus replication in mammalian cells. The presence of a lysine was also shown to enhance virulence in mammalian models and has been associated with the lethality of H5N1 viruses in humans (20). It has been proposed that a negative factor, present in mammalian cells, specifically reduces the activity of a polymerase containing a glutamic acid (38). However, the identity of this factor remains to be determined. Interestingly, the 2009 H1N1 pandemic influenza virus encodes a glutamic acid at this position, and a second-site suppressor mutation has been identified in PB2 that promotes activity in mammalian cells (37). Introduction of a lysine at residue 627 in the 2009 H1N1 pandemic virus did not result in enhanced virulence (21, 62). Several other amino acid residues in the PB2 protein were also implicated in host range determination and virulence, suggesting that multiple amino acid substitutions are involved (15, 48). Collectively, these results suggest that the PB2 protein interacts with host factors and that these interactions have implications for host range and virulence.Therefore, we set up a biochemical copurification assay followed by mass spectrometry to identify host factors that associate with the PB2 protein in mammalian cells. We confirmed the interaction with several previously identified host factors, e.g., Hsp70 and Hsp90, and identified novel host proteins that interact with the PB2 protein. Among these, we have identified the oligomeric chaperonin containing TCP-1 (CCT) (also known as TRiC [TCP-1 ring complex]) and investigated the significance of this interaction in more detail. We found that CCT interacts with the PB2 protein but not with the PB1 or PA protein. However, PB2 in association with PB1 or PB1 and PA did not interact with CCT. We also found that PB2 proteins of different influenza virus strains of different origins, hosts, and subtypes interact with CCT. Growth of influenza virus, as well as the accumulation of the PB2 protein and viral RNAs in a ribonucleoprotein reconstitution assay, was reduced in CCT-silenced cells compared to that in control cells. These results suggest a role for CCT in the influenza A virus life cycle, possibly acting as a chaperone for the PB2 protein.  相似文献   

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Peptide-mediated interference with influenza A virus polymerase   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4       下载免费PDF全文
The assembly of the polymerase complex of influenza A virus from the three viral polymerase subunits PB1, PB2, and PA is required for viral RNA synthesis. We show that peptides which specifically bind to the protein-protein interaction domains in the subunits responsible for complex formation interfere with polymerase complex assembly and inhibit viral replication. Specifically, we provide evidence that a 25-amino-acid peptide corresponding to the PA-binding domain of PB1 blocks the polymerase activity of influenza A virus and inhibits viral spread. Targeting polymerase subunit interactions therefore provides a novel strategy to develop antiviral compounds against influenza A virus or other viruses.  相似文献   

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The 11th influenza A virus protein PB1-F2 was previously shown to enhance apoptosis in response to cytotoxic stimuli. The 87 amino acid protein that is encoded by an alternative reading frame of the PB1 polymerase gene was described to localize to mitochondria consistent with its proapoptotic function. However, PB1-F2 is also found diffusely distributed in the cytoplasm and in the nucleus suggesting additional functions of the protein. Here we show that PB1-F2 colocalizes and directly interacts with the viral PB1 polymerase protein. Lack of PB1-F2 during infection resulted in an altered localization of PB1 and decreased viral polymerase activity. Consequently, mutant viruses devoid of a functional PB1-F2 reading frame exhibited a small plaque phenotype. Thus, we have identified a novel function of PB1-F2 as an indirect regulator of the influenza virus polymerase activity via its interaction with PB1.  相似文献   

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To develop a novel attenuation strategy applicable to all influenza A viruses, we targeted the highly conserved protein-protein interaction of the viral polymerase subunits PA and PB1. We postulated that impaired binding between PA and PB1 would negatively affect trimeric polymerase complex formation, leading to reduced viral replication efficiency in vivo. As proof of concept, we introduced single or multiple amino acid substitutions into the protein-protein-binding domains of either PB1 or PA, or both, to decrease binding affinity and polymerase activity substantially. As expected, upon generation of recombinant influenza A viruses (SC35M strain) containing these mutations, many pseudo-revertants appeared that partially restored PA-PB1 binding and polymerase activity. These polymerase assembly mutants displayed drastic attenuation in cell culture and mice. The attenuation of the polymerase assembly mutants was maintained in IFNα/β receptor knock-out mice. As exemplified using a H5N1 polymerase assembly mutant, this attenuation strategy can be also applied to other highly pathogenic influenza A virus strains. Thus, we provide proof of principle that targeted mutation of the highly conserved interaction domains of PA and PB1 represents a novel strategy to attenuate influenza A viruses.  相似文献   

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The biosynthesis, nuclear transport, and formation of a complex among the influenza polymerase proteins were studied in influenza virus-infected MDBK cells by using monospecific antisera. To obtain these monospecific antisera, portions of cloned cDNAs encoding the individual polymerase proteins (PB1, PB2, or PA) of A/WSN/33 influenza virus were expressed as fusion proteins in Escherichia coli, and the purified fusion proteins were injected into rabbits. Studies using indirect immunofluorescence showed that early in the infectious cycle (4 h postinfection) of influenza virus, PB1 and PB2 are present mainly in the nucleus, whereas PA is predominantly present in the cytoplasm of the virus-infected cells. Later, at 6 to 8 h postinfection, all three polymerase proteins are apparent both in the cytoplasm as well as the nucleus. Radiolabeling and immunoprecipitation analyses showed that the three polymerase proteins remain physically associated as a complex in either the presence or the absence of ribonucleoproteins. In the cytoplasm, the majority of the polymerase proteins remain unassociated, whereas in the nucleus they are present as a complex of three polymerase proteins. To determine whether a polymerase protein is transported into the nucleus individually, PB1 was expressed from the cloned cDNA by using the simian virus 40 late promoter expression vector. PB1 alone, in the absence of the other polymerase proteins or the nucleoprotein, accumulates in the nucleus. This suggests that the formation of a complex with other viral protein(s) is not required for either nuclear transport or nuclear accumulation of PB1 protein and that the PB1 protein may contain an intrinsic signal(s) for nuclear transport.  相似文献   

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甲型流感病毒的RNA聚合酶由PB1、PB2和PA 三个亚基组成,在病毒的生命周期中负责行使病毒基因组的转录与复制等多方面功能. 甲型流感病毒由于频繁变异,导致其对传统抗病毒药物的敏感性降低,因此开发疗效好、针对性强、毒性低的新型抗病毒药物已成为当前亟待解决的问题.由于RNA聚合酶是甲型流感病毒生命周期重要的调控蛋白,并且编码聚合酶各亚基的基因序列具有高度保守性,故成为当前抗病毒药物的重要靶点.  相似文献   

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Intracellular transport and assembly of the subunits of the heterotrimeric RNA-dependent RNA polymerase constitute a key component of the replication cycle of influenza virus. Recent results suggest that efficient polymerase assembly is a limiting factor in the viability of reassortant viruses. The mechanism of nuclear import and assembly of the three polymerase subunits, PB1, PB2, and PA, is still controversial, yet it is clearly of great significance in understanding the emergence of new strains with pandemic potential. In this study, we systematically investigated the interactions between the polymerase subunits and their localization in living cells by fluorescence cross-correlation spectroscopy (FCCS) and quantitative confocal microscopy. We could show that PB1 and PA form a dimer in the cytoplasm, which is imported into the nucleus separately from PB2. Once in the nucleus, the PB1/PA dimer associates with PB2 to form the trimeric polymerase. Photon-counting histogram analysis revealed that trimeric polymerase complexes can form higher-order oligomers in the nucleus. We furthermore demonstrate that impairing the nuclear import of PB2 by mutating its nuclear localization signal leads to abnormal formation of the trimeric polymerase in the cytoplasm. Taken together, our results demonstrate which of the previously discussed influenza virus polymerase transport models operates in live cells. Our study sheds light on the interplay between the nuclear import of the subunits and the assembly of the influenza virus polymerase and provides a methodological framework to analyze the effects of different host range mutations in the future.Influenza A viruses can infect a wide range of avian and mammalian species (49). Most avian strains of influenza virus infect wild waterfowl and domestic poultry but usually do not spread to humans. However, adaptation of pathogenic avian viruses to humans can occur either by mutation or reassortment, leading to potentially very serious pandemics, as was the case in 1918 when the “Spanish” flu caused 20 to 40 million deaths worldwide (33). Due to this ability to cross the species barrier, influenza A viruses are a permanent threat to human health. Since 2005 the spread of highly pathogenic H5N1 avian strains in Asia, Europe, and Africa has raised serious concern about the potential of this strain to cause an influenza pandemic (50). Since early 2009, an ongoing new, rapidly evolving pandemic threat has arisen from the emergence of a highly contagious, interhuman-transmissible “quadruple reassortant” swine H1N1 virus to which the world population is antigenically naïve (6).Influenza A viruses are enveloped viruses of the orthomyxovirus family whose genomes comprise eight negative-strand RNA segments (2). In contrast to many RNA viruses, the influenza virus genome is transcribed and replicated by the trimeric viral RNA polymerase (PA, PB1, and PB2) in the nuclei of the infected cells. Therefore, the polymerase subunits, which are produced in the cytoplasm, have to be imported into the nucleus and assembled into a functional trimer (2, 18). Many studies have demonstrated that the viral polymerase plays a major role in host specificity, probably due to the necessity for the polymerase subunits to adapt to host cell-interacting partners such as nuclear import factors (13, 16, 25, 37, 46). Due to the lack of in vivo data concerning the interactions between the polymerase subunits in the nucleus and the cytoplasm of the host cells, the mechanisms of polymerase assembly and nuclear import, as well as their spatial and temporal relationships, are still not completely understood. Putative nuclear localization signals (NLSs) have been identified on PB1 (31), PB2 (29), and PA (32), suggesting that each subunit could be imported separately. However, based on in vitro assembly observations and cellular localization studies (8, 9, 12), it has been proposed that PB1 and PA are imported into the nucleus as a subcomplex by import factor RanBP5 (a member of the importin β superfamily). PB2 is thought to enter the nucleus separately, probably via the canonical importin α/importin β pathway (46), and then associates with the PB1/PA heterodimer in the nucleus to form the functional trimeric polymerase. Nevertheless, alternative pathways have also been proposed. Naito et al. (30) suggested that the nuclear import of PB1 requires the formation of a PB2/PB1 heterodimer, stabilized by Hsp90, in the cytoplasm, while PA is transported in the nucleus separately. More recently, a pathway in which the PA/PB2 heterodimer would be formed in the cytoplasm and then imported into the nucleus has been proposed (17). It has also been recently shown that efficient assembly of the trimeric polymerase could be a major limiting factor in the viability of reassortant influenza viruses (26). Since gene reassortment is an evolutionary mechanism of influenza virus which can lead to new strains with pandemic potential, a precise understanding of the processes leading to the formation of an active viral polymerase in the nuclei of infected cells is of great importance.Recent publications have demonstrated that fluorescence cross-correlation spectroscopy (FCCS) is a method of choice to study protein-protein interactions in vivo (23, 27, 42). FCCS is the dual-color extension of fluorescence correlation spectroscopy (FCS), a technique based on the analysis of the temporal fluorescence fluctuations arising from single fluorescently labeled molecules diffusing in and out of the femtoliter-scale detection volume commonly obtained with a confocal microscope. From the autocorrelation of the fluctuating signal, it is possible to extract the local concentrations and mobilities of the molecules of interest (10, 28, 39). In the case of FCCS, signals from two spectrally separated dyes labeling two different molecules are recorded. If the two molecules interact with each other, they diffuse synchronously through the detection volume, resulting in correlated fluctuations in the fluorescence signals acquired in the two channels. The cross-correlation between the two signals is then a direct and quantitative readout of the interactions between the molecular species studied (22, 38, 40). To our knowledge, this study is the first application of FCCS to viral protein interactions and thus provides a general methodological framework to analyze the effects of different host range mutations and the interactions of viral proteins and host factors in the future.In this study, we applied FCCS to monitor the interactions between the subunits of influenza A virus RNA polymerase in live cells. Based both on the study of these interactions in the cytoplasm and nucleus and on the quantitative analysis of the intracellular localization of the subunits, we show that PB1 and PA form a heterodimer in the cytoplasm while PB2 remains a monomer in this compartment. Association of PB1/PA with PB2 to form the trimeric polymerase was detected only in the nucleus, arguing that the PB1/PA heterodimer is normally imported separately from PB2. Interestingly, when we impaired the nuclear import of PB2 by mutating its nuclear localization signal, this induced the aberrant presence of the trimeric polymerase in the cytoplasm and led to the retention of PB1 and PA outside the nucleus. Finally, by comparing the molecular brightnesses of the single polymerase subunits with that of the trimeric complex, we show that trimeric polymerase complexes can interact with each other in the nucleus to form higher-order oligomers.  相似文献   

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