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1.
Autophagy is postulated to play a role in antiviral innate immunity. However, it is unknown whether viral evasion of autophagy is important in disease pathogenesis. Here we show that the herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1)-encoded neurovirulence protein ICP34.5 binds to the mammalian autophagy protein Beclin 1 and inhibits its autophagy function. A mutant HSV-1 virus lacking the Beclin 1-binding domain of ICP34.5 fails to inhibit autophagy in neurons and demonstrates impaired ability to cause lethal encephalitis in mice. The neurovirulence of this Beclin 1-binding mutant virus is restored in pkr(-/-) mice. Thus, ICP34.5-mediated antagonism of the autophagy function of Beclin 1 is essential for viral neurovirulence, and the antiviral signaling molecule PKR lies genetically upstream of Beclin 1 in host defense against HSV-1. Our findings suggest that autophagy inhibition is a novel molecular mechanism by which viruses evade innate immunity and cause fatal disease.  相似文献   

2.
Autophagy has been established as a player in host defense against viruses. The mechanisms by which the host induces autophagy during infection are diverse. In the case of HSV type 1 (HSV-1), dsRNA-dependent protein kinase is essential for induction of autophagy in fibroblasts through phosphorylation of eukaryotic initiation factor 2α (eIF2α). HSV-1 counteracts autophagy via ICP34.5, which dephosphorylates eIF2α and inhibits Beclin 1. Investigation of autophagy during HSV-1 infection has largely been conducted in permissive cells, but recent work suggests the existence of a eIF2α-independent autophagy-inducing pathway in nonpermissive cells. To clarify and further characterize the existence of a novel autophagy-inducing pathway in nonpermissive cells, we examined different HSV and cellular components in murine myeloid cells for their role in autophagy. We demonstrate that HSV-1-induced autophagy does not correlate with phosphorylation of eIF2α, is independent of functional dsRNA-dependent protein kinase, and is not antagonized by ICP34.5. Autophagy was activated independent of viral gene expression, but required viral entry. Importantly, we found that the presence of genomic DNA in the virion was essential for induction of autophagy and, conversely, that transfection of HSV-derived DNA induced microtubule-associated protein 1 L chain II formation, a marker of autophagy. This occurred through a mechanism dependent on stimulator of IFN genes, an essential component for the IFN response to intracellular DNA. Finally, we observed that HSV-1 DNA was present in the cytosol devoid of capsid material following HSV-1 infection of dendritic cells. Thus, our data suggest that HSV-1 genomic DNA induces autophagy in nonpermissive cells in a stimulator of IFN gene-dependent manner.  相似文献   

3.
The herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) neurovirulence gene encoding ICP34.5 controls the autophagy pathway. HSV-1 strains lacking ICP34.5 are attenuated in growth and pathogenesis in animal models and in primary cultured cells. While this growth defect has been attributed to the inability of an ICP34.5-null virus to counteract the induction of translational arrest through the PKR antiviral pathway, the role of autophagy in the regulation of HSV-1 replication is unknown. Here we show that HSV-1 infection induces autophagy in primary murine embryonic fibroblasts and that autophagosome formation is increased to a greater extent following infection with an ICP34.5-deficient virus. Elimination of the autophagic pathway did not significantly alter the replication of wild-type HSV-1 or ICP34.5 mutants. The phosphorylation state of eIF2alpha and viral protein accumulation were unchanged in HSV-1-infected cells unable to undergo autophagy. These data show that while ICP34.5 regulates autophagy, it is the prevention of translational arrest by ICP34.5 rather than its control of autophagy that is the pivotal determinant of efficient HSV-1 replication in primary cell culture.  相似文献   

4.
Poppers J  Mulvey M  Khoo D  Mohr I 《Journal of virology》2000,74(23):11215-11221
Upon activation by double-stranded RNA in virus-infected cells, the cellular PKR kinase phosphorylates the translation initiation factor eukaryotic initiation factor 2 (eIF2) and thereby inhibits protein synthesis. The gamma 34.5 and Us11 gene products encoded by herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) are dedicated to preventing the accumulation of phosphorylated eIF2. While the gamma 34.5 gene specifies a regulatory subunit for protein phosphatase 1 alpha, the Us11 gene encodes an RNA binding protein that also prevents PKR activation. gamma 34.5 mutants fail to grow on a variety of human cells as phosphorylated eIF2 accumulates and protein synthesis ceases prior to the completion of the viral life cycle. We demonstrate that expression of a 68-amino-acid fragment of Us11 containing a novel proline-rich basic RNA binding domain allows for sustained protein synthesis and enhanced growth of gamma 34.5 mutants. Furthermore, this fragment is sufficient to inhibit activation of the cellular PKR kinase in a cell-free system, suggesting that the intrinsic activities of this small fragment, notably RNA binding and ribosome association, may be required to prevent PKR activation.  相似文献   

5.
In cells infected with the herpes simplex virus 1 (HSV-1) recombinant R3616 lacking both copies of the γ134.5 gene, the double-stranded protein kinase R (PKR) is activated, eIF-2α is phosphorylated, and protein synthesis is shut off. Although PKR is also activated in cells infected with the wild-type virus, the product of the γ134.5 gene, infected-cell protein 34.5 (ICP34.5), binds protein phosphatase 1α and redirects it to dephosphorylate eIF-2α, thus enabling sustained protein synthesis. Serial passage in human cells of a mutant lacking the γ134.5 gene yields second-site, compensatory mutants lacking various domains of the α47 gene situated next to the US11 gene (I. Mohr and Y. Gluzman, EMBO J. 15:4759–4766, 1996). We report the construction of two recombinant viruses: R5103, lacking the γ134.5, US8, -9, -10, and -11, and α47 (US12) genes; and R5104, derived from R5103 and carrying a chimeric DNA fragment containing the US10 gene and the promoter of the α47 gene fused to the coding domain of the US11 gene. R5104 exhibited a protein synthesis profile similar to that of wild-type virus, whereas protein synthesis was shut off in cells infected with R5103 virus. Studies on the wild-type parent and mutant viruses showed the following: (i) PKR was activated in cells infected with parent or mutant virus but not in mock-infected cells, consistent with earlier studies; (ii) lysates of R3616, R5103, and R5104 virus-infected cells lacked the phosphatase activity specific for eIF-2α characteristic of wild-type virus-infected cells; and (iii) lysates of R3616 and R5103, which lacked the second-site compensatory mutation, contained an activity which phosphorylated eIF-2α in vitro, whereas lysates of mock-infected cells or cells infected with HSV-1(F) or R5104 did not phosphorylate eIF-2α. We conclude that in contrast to wild-type virus-infected cells, which preclude the shutoff of protein synthesis by causing rapid dephosphorylation of eIF-2α, in cells infected with γ134.5 virus carrying the compensatory mutation, eIF-2α is not phosphorylated. The activity made apparent by the second-site mutation may represent a more ancient mechanism evolved to preclude the shutoff of protein synthesis.  相似文献   

6.
Alexander DE  Leib DA 《Autophagy》2008,4(1):101-103
Autophagy functions in part as an important host defense mechanism to engulf and degrade intracellular pathogens, a process that has been termed xenophagy. Xenophagy is detrimental to the invading microbe in terms of replication and pathogenesis and many pathogens either dampen the autophagic response, or utilize the pathway to enhance their life cycle. Herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) counteracts the induction of xenophagy through its neurovirulence protein, ICP34.5. ICP34.5 binds protein phosphatase 1alpha to counter PKR-mediated phosphorylation of eIF2alpha, and also binds the autophagy-promoting protein Beclin 1. Through these interactions, ICP34.5 prevents translational arrest and down-regulates the formation of autophagosomes. Whereas autophagy antagonism promotes neurovirulence, it has no impact on the replication of HSV-1 in permissive cultured cells. As discussed in this article, this work raises a number of questions as to the mechanism of ICP34.5-mediated inhibition of autophagy, as well as to the role of autophagy antagonism in the lifecycle of HSV-1.  相似文献   

7.
8.
9.
PKR-dependent autophagic degradation of herpes simplex virus type 1   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The lysosomal pathway of autophagy is the major catabolic mechanism for degrading long-lived cellular proteins and cytoplasmic organelles. Recent studies have also shown that autophagy (xenophagy) may be used to degrade bacterial pathogens that invade intracellularly. However, it is not yet known whether xenophagy is a mechanism for degrading viruses. Previously, we showed that autophagy induction requires the antiviral eIF2alpha kinase signaling pathway (including PKR and eIF2alpha) and that this function of eIF2alpha kinase signaling is antagonized by the herpes simplex virus (HSV-1) neurovirulence gene product, ICP34.5. Here, we show quantitative morphologic evidence of PKR-dependent xenophagic degradation of herpes simplex virions and biochemical evidence of PKR and eIF2alpha-dependent degradation of HSV-1 proteins, both of which are blocked by ICP34.5. Together, these findings indicate that xenophagy degrades HSV-1 and that this cellular function is antagonized by the HSV-1 neurovirulence gene product, ICP34.5. Thus, autophagy-related pathways are involved in degrading not only cellular constituents and intracellular bacteria, but also viruses.  相似文献   

10.
《Autophagy》2013,9(1):24-29
The lysosomal pathway of autophagy is the major catabolic mechanism for degrading long-lived cellular proteins and cytoplasmic organelles. Recent studies have also shown that autophagy (xenophagy) may be used to degrade bacterial pathogens that invade intracellularly. However, it is not yet known whether xenophagy is a mechanism for degrading viruses. Previously, we showed that autophagy induction requires the antiviral eIF2alpha kinase signaling pathway (including PKR and eIF2alpha) and that this function ofeIF2alpha kinase signaling is antagonized by the herpes simplex virus (HSV-1) neurovirulence gene product, ICP34.5. Here, we show quantitative morphologic evidence of PKR-dependent xenophagic degradation of herpes simplex virions and biochemical evidence of PKR and eIF2alpha-dependent degradation of HSV-1 proteins, both of which are blocked by ICP34.5. Together, these findings indicate that xenophagy degrades HSV-1 and that this cellular function is antagonized by the HSV-1 neurovirulence gene product, ICP34.5. Thus, autophagy-related pathways are involved in degrading not only cellular constituents and intracellular bacteria, but also viruses.  相似文献   

11.
Autophagy is an important component of host innate and adaptive immunity to viruses. It is critical for the degradation of intracellular pathogens and for promoting antigen presentation. Herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) infection induces an autophagy response, but this response is antagonized by the HSV-1 neurovirulence gene product, ICP34.5. This is due, in part, to its interaction with the essential autophagy protein Beclin 1 (Atg6) via the Beclin-binding domain (BBD) of ICP34.5. Using a recombinant virus lacking the BBD, we examined pathogenesis and immune responses using mouse models of infection. The BBD-deficient virus (Δ68H) replicated equivalently to its marker-rescued counterpart (Δ68HR) at early times but was cleared more rapidly than Δ68HR from all tissues at late times following corneal infection. In addition, the infection of the cornea with Δ68H induced less ocular disease than Δ68HR. These results suggested that Δ68H was attenuated due to its failure to control adaptive rather than innate immunity. In support of this idea, Δ68H stimulated a significantly stronger CD4+ T-cell-mediated delayed-type hypersensitivity response and resulted in significantly more production of gamma interferon and interleukin-2 from HSV-specific CD4+ T cells than Δ68HR. Taken together, these data suggest a role for the BBD of ICP34.5 in precluding autophagy-mediated class II antigen presentation, thereby enhancing the virulence and pathogenesis of HSV-1.Autophagy is a conserved cellular pathway that eliminates defective proteins and organelles, prevents abnormal protein aggregate accumulation, and removes intracellular pathogens (11, 22, 32, 56). This process begins with the formation and elongation of a double membrane that fuses to form an autophagosome. The cytoplasmic contents are nonspecifically sequestered inside the autophagosome and then are degraded once the autophagosome fuses with the lysosome. Autophagy is upregulated during starvation, growth factor withdrawal, hypoxia, and infection (10). Following metabolic stress, autophagy can generate metabolic precursors that can be recycled for the de novo synthesis of proteins. The autophagic pathway has important roles in development, immune defense, apoptosis, tumor suppression, and the prevention of neuronal degeneration (reviewed in references 21 and 31).Autophagy is not limited to the degradation of self proteins; it also can engulf and break down invading microorganisms in a process termed xenophagy (26). Xenophagy can limit the replication of pathogens (3, 4, 29, 34, 42), but some infectious agents can exploit autophagy to enhance their replication (2, 18, 38). There are pathogens that actively inhibit autophagy through interaction with the essential autophagy-promoting protein, Beclin 1 (24, 35). Beclin 1 is the mammalian homolog of yeast Atg6 and is required for the formation of the autophagosome membrane through its interaction with VPS34, a class III phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (19, 27). Autophagy/xenophagy is also an important process for the adaptive immune response to infection through the delivery of antigens for major histocompatibility complex class I and II (MHC-I and -II) presentation (7, 9, 12, 36, 45). The inhibition of autophagy by pathogens therefore would serve to block CD4+ and CD8+ cell responses and allow pathogens to remain underrecognized by the adaptive immune response.The interferon (IFN)-inducible double-strand RNA-inducible protein kinase (PKR) pathway is required for virus- and starvation-induced autophagy (50). The PKR-mediated induction of autophagy requires the phosphorylation of the translation initiation factor eIF2α (50). Herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) inhibits autophagy through at least two domains and the activities of the late protein ICP34.5, its C-terminal mediation of dephosphorylation of eIF2α, and its N-terminal binding to Beclin 1 (5, 16, 35). HSV-1 strains lacking ICP34.5 show significant attenuation in vivo, increased sensitivity to IFN (33), an inability to counteract the PKR-induced phosphorylation of eIF2α, and the induction of the generalized shutoff of protein synthesis in infected cells. These activities originally were ascribed solely to ICP34.5''s ability to recruit PP1α and redirect its activity to dephosphorylate eIF2α to counteract the general shutoff of protein synthesis mediated by PKR (17). This function is mediated by the C-terminal domain of ICP34.5 that contains homology to the growth arrest and DNA damage 34 (GADD34) gene (6). Independently of the role of ICP34.5 in countering the PKR-induced antiviral state, viruses lacking ICP34.5 also exhibit altered patterns of autophagy. This manifests as increased long-lived protein degradation, the increased formation of autophagosomes, increased autophagic vacuole volume density, and the enhanced xenophagic degradation of virions (35, 50, 51). Such alterations in the autophagy pathway now can be ascribed to ICP34.5''s ability to bind Beclin 1 in addition to its mediation of eIF2α dephosphorylation (35). The deletion of the Beclin 1-binding domain (BBD) of ICP34.5 renders HSV-1 less able to regulate autophagosome formation, and viruses lacking this domain are neuroattenuated (35).To determine the impact of Beclin 1-ICP34.5 interactions on the pathogenesis of HSV-1 during infection, we examined the ability of BBD-deficient virus to replicate, cause disease, and stimulate an immune response in mice. We determined that mice infected with HSV-1 lacking the ICP34.5 BBD were able to clear virus more efficiently than mice infected with wild-type virus. We observed the significantly enhanced stimulation of CD4+ T cells by the virus lacking the BBD compared to that of mice infected with wild-type virus. These data suggest that Beclin 1 binding and the inhibition of autophagy by ICP34.5 are important for HSV-1 pathogenesis through its ability to suppress autophagy and to dampen the activation of CD4+ T cells.  相似文献   

12.
In animal models of herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) infection, ICP34.5-null viruses are avirulent and also fail to grow in a variety of cultured cells due to their inability to prevent RNA-dependent protein kinase (PKR)-mediated inhibition of protein synthesis. We show here that the inability of ICP34.5 mutants to grow in vitro is due specifically to the accumulation of phosphorylated eIF2 alpha. Mutations suppressing the in vitro phenotype of ICP34.5-null mutants have been described which map to the unique short region of the HSV-1 genome, resulting in dysregulated expression of the US11 gene. Despite the inability of the suppressor mutation to suppress the avirulent phenotype of the ICP34.5-null parental virus following intracranial inoculation, the suppressor mutation enhanced virus growth in the cornea, trigeminal ganglia, and periocular skin following corneal infection compared to that with the ICP34.5-null virus. The phosphorylation state of eIF2 alpha following in vitro infection with the suppressor virus was examined to determine if in vivo differences could be attributed to differential regulation of eIF2 alpha phosphorylation. The suppressor virus prevented accumulation of phosphorylated eIF2 alpha, while the wild-type virus substantially reduced eIF2 alpha phosphorylation levels. These data suggest that US11 functions as a PKR antagonist in vivo, although its activity may be modulated by tissue-specific differences in translation regulation.  相似文献   

13.
The ICP34.5 protein of herpes simplex virus (HSV) is involved in many aspects of viral pathogenesis; promoting neurovirulence, inhibiting interferon-induced shutoff of protein synthesis, interacting with PCNA and TBK1, inhibiting dendritic cell (DC) maturation, and binding to Beclin 1 to interfere with autophagy. Because of its key role in neuropathogenicity, the γ34.5 gene is deleted in all oncolytic HSVs (oHSVs) currently in clinical trial for treating malignant gliomas. Unfortunately, deletion of γ34.5 attenuates virus replication in cancer cells, especially human glioblastoma stem cells (GSCs). To develop new oHSVs for use in the brain and that replicate in GSCs, we explored the effect of deleting the γ34.5 Beclin 1 binding domain (BBD). To ensure cancer selectivity and safety, we inactivated the ICP6 gene (UL39, large subunit of ribonucleotide reductase), constructing ICP6 mutants with different γ34.5 genotypes: Δ68HR-6, intact γ34.5; Δ68H-6, γ34.5 BBD deleted; and 1716-6, γ34.5 deleted. Multimutated Δ68H-6 exhibited minimal neuropathogenicity in HSV-1-susceptible mice, as opposed to Δ68H and Δ68HR-6. It replicated well in human glioma cell lines and GSCs, effectively killing cells in vitro and prolonging survival of mice bearing orthotopic brain tumors. In contrast, 1716 and 1716-6 barely replicated in GSCs. Infection of glioma cells with Δ68H-6 and 1716-6 induced autophagy and increased phosphorylation of eIF2α, while inhibition of autophagy, by Beclin 1 short hairpin RNA (shRNA) knockdown or pharmacological inhibition, had no effect on virus replication or phosphorylated eIF2α (p-eIF2α) levels. Thus, Δ68H-6 represents a new oHSV vector that is safe and effective against a variety of brain tumor models.  相似文献   

14.
15.
Double-stranded RNA (dsRNA) produced during viral infection activates several cellular antiviral responses. Among the best characterized is the shutoff of protein synthesis mediated by the dsRNA-dependent protein kinase (PKR) and the oligoadenylate synthetase (OAS)/RNase L system. As viral replication depends on protein synthesis, many viruses have evolved mechanisms for counteracting the PKR and OAS/RNase L pathways. The murine cytomegalovirus (MCMV) proteins m142 and m143 have been characterized as dsRNA binding proteins that inhibit PKR activation, phosphorylation of the translation initiation factor eIF2α, and a subsequent protein synthesis shutoff. In the present study we analyzed the contribution of the PKR- and the OAS-dependent pathways to the control of MCMV replication in the absence or presence of m142 and m143. We show that the induction of eIF2α phosphorylation during infection with an m142- and m143-deficient MCMV is specifically mediated by PKR, not by the related eIF2α kinases PERK or GCN2. PKR antagonists of vaccinia virus (E3L) or herpes simplex virus (γ34.5) rescued the replication defect of an MCMV strain with deletions of both m142 and m143. Moreover, m142 and m143 bound to each other and interacted with PKR. By contrast, an activation of the OAS/RNase L pathway by MCMV was not detected in the presence or absence of m142 and m143, suggesting that these viral proteins have little or no influence on this pathway. Consistently, an m142- and m143-deficient MCMV strain replicated to high titers in fibroblasts lacking PKR but did not replicate in cells lacking RNase L. Hence, the PKR-mediated antiviral response is responsible for the essentiality of m142 and m143.  相似文献   

16.
Multiple herpes simplex virus type 1 functions control translation by regulating phosphorylation of the initiation factor eIF2 on its alpha subunit. Both of the two known regulators, the gamma(1)34.5 and Us11 gene products, are produced late in the viral life cycle, although the gamma(1)34.5 gene is expressed prior to the gamma(2) Us11 gene, as gamma(2) genes require viral DNA replication for their expression while gamma(1) genes do not. The gamma(1)34.5 protein, through a GADD34-related domain, binds a cellular phosphatase (PP1alpha), maintaining pools of active, unphosphorylated eIF2. Infection of a variety of cultured cells with a gamma(1)34.5 mutant virus results in the accumulation of phosphorylated eIF2alpha and the inhibition of translation prior to the completion of the viral lytic program. Ectopic, immediate-early Us11 expression prevents eIF2alpha phosphorylation and the inhibition of translation observed in cells infected with a gamma(1)34.5 mutant by inhibiting activation of the cellular kinase PKR and the subsequent phosphorylation of eIF2alpha; however, a requirement for the Us11 protein, produced in its natural context as a gamma(2) polypeptide, remains to be demonstrated. To determine if Us11 regulates late translation, we generated two Us11 null viruses. In cells infected with a Us11 mutant, elevated levels of activated PKR and phosphorylated eIF2alpha were detected, viral translation rates were reduced 6- to 7-fold, and viral replication was reduced 13-fold compared to replication in cells infected with either wild-type virus or a virus in which the Us11 mutation was repaired. This establishes that the Us11 protein is critical for proper late translation rates. Moreover, it demonstrates that the shutoff of protein synthesis observed in cells infected with a gamma(1)34.5 mutant virus, previously ascribed solely to the gamma(1)34.5 mutation, actually results from the combined loss of gamma(1)34.5 and Us11 functions, as the gamma(2) Us11 mRNA is not translated in cells infected with a gamma(1)34.5 mutant.  相似文献   

17.
I Mohr  Y Gluzman 《The EMBO journal》1996,15(17):4759-4766
Novel suppressor variants of conditionally lethal HSV-1 gamma34.5 deletion mutants have been isolated which exhibit restored ability to grow on neoplastic neuronal cells. Deletion of the viral gamma34.5 genes, whose products share functional similarity with the cellular GADD34 gene, renders the virus non-neurovirulent and imposes a block to viral replication in neuronal cells. Protein synthesis ceases at late times post-infection and the translation initiation factor eIF2alpha is phosphorylated by the cellular PKR kinase [Chou et al. (1990) Science, 252, 1262-1266; (1995) Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA, 92, 10516-10520]. The suppressor mutants have overcome the translational block imposed by PKR. Multiple, independent isolates all contain rearrangements within a 595 bp element in the HSV-1 genome where the unique short component joins the terminal repeats. This alteration, which affects the production of the viral mRNA and protein from the Us11 and Us12 genes, is both necessary and sufficient to confer the suppressor phenotype on gamma34.5 mutant viruses. HSV-1 thus encodes a specific element which inhibits ongoing protein synthesis in the absence of the viral GADD34-like function. Since this inhibition involves the accumulation of phosphorylated eIF2alpha, the element identified by the suppressor mutations may be a discrete PKR activator. Activation of the PKR kinase thus does not proceed through a general, cellular 'antiviral' sensing mechanism. Instead, the virus deliberately activates PKR and encodes a separate function which selectively prevents the phosphorylation of at least one PKR target, eIF2alpha. The nature of this potential activator element, and how analogous cellular elements could affect PKR pathways which affect growth arrest and differentiation are discussed.  相似文献   

18.
Infection of cells by herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) triggers host cell shutoff whereby mRNAs are degraded and cellular protein synthesis is diminished. However, virus protein translation continues because the translational apparatus in HSV-infected cells is maintained in an active state. Surprisingly, poly(A)-binding protein 1 (PABP1), a predominantly cytoplasmic protein that is required for efficient translation initiation, is partially relocated to the nucleus during HSV-1 infection. This relocalization occurred in a time-dependent manner with respect to virus infection. Since HSV-1 infection causes cell stress, we examined other cell stress inducers and found that oxidative stress similarly relocated PABP1. An examination of stress-induced kinases revealed similarities in HSV-1 infection and oxidative stress activation of JNK and p38 mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinases. Importantly, PABP relocalization in infection was found to be independent of the viral protein ICP27. The depletion of PABP1 by small interfering RNA (siRNA) knockdown had no significant effect on viral replication or the expression of selected virus late proteins, suggesting that reduced levels of cytoplasmic PABP1 are tolerated during infection.The lytic replication cycle of herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) can be divided into three phases, immediate-early (IE), early (E), and late (L), that occur in a coordinated sequential gene expression program. IE proteins can regulate E and L gene expression, which produces proteins involved in DNA replication, capsid production, and virion assembly. HSV infection results in host cell shutoff to facilitate the efficient production of viral proteins. First, mRNA is degraded by the virion-associated vhs protein, and then ICP27, a multifunctional regulator of gene expression, inhibits pre-mRNA splicing. As most viral mRNAs are intronless, this abrogates the production of stable cellular mRNAs that can be exported to the cytoplasm and compete for translation with viral mRNAs (44).HSV mRNAs are capped and polyadenylated and so are translated via a normal cap-dependent mechanism. Translation initiation, during which translationally active ribosomes are assembled, is a tightly regulated process (21). Eukaryotic initiation factor 4F (eIF4F) (composed of eIF4E, eIF4G, and eIF4A) that binds the cap at the 5′ end of the mRNA promotes the recruitment of the 40S ribosomal subunit and associated factors, including eIF2-GTP initiator tRNA. The recognition of the start codon then promotes large ribosomal subunit joining. Poly(A)-binding protein 1 (PABP1), which binds and multimerizes on mRNA poly(A) tails, enhances translation initiation through interactions with the eIF4G component of the eIF4F cap-binding complex (20, 29, 32, 51) to circularize the mRNA in a “closed-loop” conformation (24). Key protein-RNA and protein-protein interactions in the translation initiation complex are strengthened by this PABP1-mediated circularization (12).HSV-1 maintains active viral translation in the face of host translational shutoff. Infection activates protein kinase R (PKR), which phosphorylates eIF2α, resulting in translation inhibition. However, HSV-1 ICP34.5 redirects protein phosphatase 1α to reverse eIF2α phosphorylation, abrogating the block to translation (17, 38). In addition, the HSV-1 US11 protein inhibits PKR and may also block PKR-mediated eIF2α phosphorylation (40, 42). HSV-1 infection also enhances eIF4F assembly in quiescent cells by the phosphorylation and proteasome-mediated degradation of the eIF4E-binding protein (4E-BP), which, when hypophosphorylated, can negatively regulate eIF4F complex formation (54). However, ICP6 may also contribute to eIF4F assembly by binding to eIF4G (55). Finally, ICP6 is required for Mnk-1 phosphorylation of eIF4E, but the mechanisms behind this remain unclear (54). ICP27 has also been implicated in translation regulation during HSV infection (6, 8, 10, 30) and may also activate p38 mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase that can phosphorylate eIF4E (16, 59).PABP1 appears to be a common cellular target of RNA and DNA viruses. PABP1 can undergo proteolysis, intracellular relocalization, or modification of its interaction with other translation factors in response to infection. For example, poliovirus induces host cell shutoff by cleaving PABP1, thus disrupting certain PABP1-containing complexes (28, 29). The rotavirus NSP3 protein can displace PABP1 from translation initiation complexes (41). However, NSP3 also interacts with a cellular protein, RoXaN, which is required to relocate PABP1 to the nucleus (13). Similarly, the Kaposi''s sarcoma herpesvirus (KSHV) SOX protein plays a role in relocating PABP1, its cofactor in cellular mRNA decay, to the nucleus (33). Although steady-state levels of PABP1 are highest in the cytoplasm of normal cells, where it has cytoplasmic functions, it is a nucleocytoplasmic shuttling protein (1). However, it is unclear how PABP1 enters or exits the nucleus, as it contains neither a canonical nuclear export nor an import signal.Here we describe the loss of PABP1 from cap-binding complexes and the partial relocation of PABP1 to the nucleus in HSV-1-infected cells in a time-dependent manner. Relocation is specific for PABP1, as other translation factors remained in the cytoplasm. Cells undergo stress during HSV-1 infection, and analysis of a variety of cell stresses revealed that PABP relocalization was also observed upon oxidative stress. Paxillin, a potential PABP1 nuclear chaperone, was phosphorylated, and the paxillin-PABP1 interaction was reduced during virus infection. However, the interaction was weak and cell type dependent, indicating that other effectors of PABP1 relocation in the infected cell must exist. Recently, the HSV-1 ICP27 protein was suggested to alter the PABP1 cellular location (6). However, infections with ICP27-null mutant viruses clearly demonstrated that ICP27 is not required for PABP1 nuclear relocation in the context of infection. Although HSV-1 mRNAs are translated by a normal cap-dependent mechanism known to be enhanced by PABP1, small interfering RNA (siRNA) knockdown of PABP1 indicated that at late times of infection, the translation of certain virus late proteins tolerates very low levels of PABP1.  相似文献   

19.
Earlier studies have shown that active MEK blocks the activation of protein kinase R (PKR), a component of antiviral innate immune responses. In this report we show that the herpes simplex virus 1 virion host shutoff (VHS) RNase protein and MEK (mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase) act cooperatively in blocking the activation of PKR. This conclusion is based on the following. (i) In contrast to viral gene expression in the parental cell line or a cell line expressing a constitutively active MEK, the replication of a VHS mutant is particularly impaired in cells expressing dominant negative MEK. In this cell line PKR is activated by phosphorylation, and the accumulation of several viral proteins is delayed. (ii) In transfected cells, wild-type VHS blocked the activation of PKR, whereas PKR was activated in cells transfected with a mutant VHS or with plasmids encoding the VHS RNase and VP16 and VP22, the two viral proteins that neutralize the RNase activity of VHS. The results suggest that early in infection the VHS RNase degrades RNAs that activate PKR. Coupled with published data, the results suggest that inhibition of activation of PKR or its effect on viral replication is staged early in infection by VHS, postsynthesis of VP16 and VP22 by the γ134.5 protein, and very late in infection by the US11 protein.  相似文献   

20.
The herpes simplex virus type 1 gamma34.5 gene product and the cellular GADD34 protein both contain similar domains that can regulate the activity of eukaryotic initiation factor 2 (eIF2), a critical translation initiation factor. Viral mutants that lack the GADD34-related function grow poorly on a variety of malignant human cells, as activation of the cellular PKR kinase leads to the accumulation of inactive, phosphorylated eIF2 at late times postinfection. Termination of translation prior to the completion of the viral reproductive cycle leads to impaired growth. Extragenic suppressors that regain the ability to synthesize proteins efficiently in the absence of the viral GADD34-related function have been isolated. These suppressor alleles are dominant in trans and affect the steady-state accumulation of several viral mRNA species. We demonstrate that deregulated expression of Us11, a virus-encoded RNA-binding, ribosome-associated protein is necessary and sufficient to confer a growth advantage upon viral mutants that lack a GADD34-related function. Ectopic expression of Us11 reduces the accumulation of the activated cellular PKR kinase and allows for sustained protein synthesis. Thus, an RNA-binding, ribosome-associated protein (Us11) and a GADD34-related protein (gamma34.5) both function in a signal pathway that regulates translation by modulating eIF2 phosphorylation.  相似文献   

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