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1.
Hantavirus nucleocapsid protein (NP) inhibits protein kinase R (PKR) dimerization by an unknown mechanism to counteract its antiviral responses during virus infection. Here we demonstrate that NP exploits an endogenous PKR inhibitor P58IPK to inhibit PKR. The activity of P58IPK is normally restricted in cells by the formation of an inactive complex with its negative regulator Hsp40. On the other hand, PKR remains associated with the 40S ribosomal subunit, a unique strategic location that facilitates its free access to the downstream target eIF2α. Although both NP and Hsp40 bind to P58IPK, the binding affinity of NP is much stronger compared to Hsp40. P58IPK harbors an NP binding site, spanning to N-terminal TPR subdomains I and II. The Hsp40 binding site on P58IPK was mapped to the TPR subdomain II. The high affinity binding of NP to P58IPK and the overlap between NP and Hsp40 binding sites releases the P58IPK from its negative regulator by competitive inhibition. The NP-P58IPK complex is selectively recruited to the 40S ribosomal subunit by direct interaction between NP and the ribosomal protein S19 (RPS19), a structural component of the 40S ribosomal subunit. NP has distinct binding sites for P58IPK and RPS19, enabling it to serve as bridge between P58IPK and the 40S ribosomal subunit. NP mutants deficient in binding to either P58IPK or RPS19 fail to inhibit PKR, demonstrating that selective engagement of P58IPK to the 40S ribosomal subunit is required for PKR inhibition. Cells deficient in P58IPK mount a rapid PKR antiviral response and establish an antiviral state, observed by global translational shutdown and rapid decline in viral load. These studies reveal a novel viral strategy in which NP releases P58IPK from its negative regulator and selectively engages it on the 40S ribosomal subunit to promptly combat the PKR antiviral responses.  相似文献   

2.
The cellular response to environmental signals is largely dependent upon the induction of responsive protein kinase signaling pathways. Within these pathways, distinct protein-protein interactions play a role in determining the specificity of the response through regulation of kinase function. The interferon-induced serine/threonine protein kinase, PKR, is activated in response to various environmental stimuli. Like many protein kinases, PKR is regulated through direct interactions with activator and inhibitory molecules, including P58IPK, a cellular PKR inhibitor. P58IPK functions to represses PKR-mediated phosphorylation of the eukaryotic initiation factor 2α subunit (eIF-2α) through a direct interaction, thereby relieving the PKR-imposed block on mRNA translation and cell growth. To further define the molecular mechanism underlying regulation of PKR, we have utilized an interaction cloning strategy to identify a novel cDNA encoding a P58IPK-interacting protein. This protein, designated P52rIPK, possesses limited homology to the charged domain of Hsp90 and is expressed in a wide range of cell lines. P52rIPK and P58IPK interacted in a yeast two-hybrid assay and were recovered as a complex from mammalian cell extracts. When coexpressed with PKR in yeast, P58IPK repressed PKR-mediated eIF-2α phosphorylation, inhibiting the normally toxic and growth-suppressive effects associated with PKR function. Conversely, introduction of P52rIPK into these strains resulted in restoration of both PKR activity and eIF-2α phosphorylation, concomitant with growth suppression due to inhibition of P58IPK function. Furthermore, P52rIPK inhibited P58IPK function in a reconstituted in vitro PKR-regulatory assay. Our results demonstrate that P58IPK is inhibited through a direct interaction with P52rIPK which, in turn, results in upregulation of PKR activity. Taken together, our data describe a novel protein kinase-regulatory system which encompasses an intersection of interferon-, stress-, and growth-regulatory pathways.  相似文献   

3.
4.
We previously hypothesized that efficient translation of influenza virus mRNA requires the recruitment of P58(IPK), the cellular inhibitor of PKR, an interferon-induced kinase that targets the eukaryotic translation initiation factor eIF2alpha. P58(IPK) also inhibits PERK, an eIF2alpha kinase that is localized in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and induced during ER stress. The ability of P58(IPK) to interact with and inhibit multiple eIF2alpha kinases suggests it is a critical regulator of both cellular and viral mRNA translation. In this study, we sought to definitively define the role of P58(IPK) during viral infection of mammalian cells. Using mouse embryo fibroblasts from P58(IPK-/-) mice, we demonstrated that the absence of P58(IPK) led to an increase in eIF2alpha phosphorylation and decreased influenza virus mRNA translation. The absence of P58(IPK) also resulted in decreased vesicular stomatitis virus replication but enhanced reovirus yields. In cells lacking the P58(IPK) target, PKR, the trends were reversed-eIF2alpha phosphorylation was decreased, and influenza virus mRNA translation was increased. Although P58(IPK) also inhibits PERK, the presence or absence of this kinase had little effect on influenza virus mRNA translation, despite reduced levels of eIF2alpha phosphorylation in cells lacking PERK. Finally, we showed that influenza virus protein synthesis and viral mRNA levels decrease in cells that express a constitutively active, nonphosphorylatable eIF2alpha. Taken together, our results support a model in which P58(IPK) regulates influenza virus mRNA translation and infection through a PKR-mediated mechanism which is independent of PERK.  相似文献   

5.
6.
P58(IPK) is a cellular inhibitor of the mammalian double-stranded RNA-activated protein kinase (PKR). Here we provide evidence for the existence of its homolog in plants and its role in viral infection at the organism level. Viral infection of P58(IPK)-silenced Nicotiana benthamiana and Arabidopsis knockouts leads to host death. This host cell death is associated with phosphorylation of the alpha subunit of eukaryotic translation initiation factor (eIF-2alpha). Loss of P58(IPK) leads to reduced virus titer, suggesting that wild-type P58(IPK) protein plays an important role in viral pathogenesis. Although our complementation results using mammalian P58(IPK) suggest conservation of the P58(IPK) pathway in plants and animals, its biological significance seems to be different in these two systems. In animals, P58(IPK) is recruited by the influenza virus to limit PKR-mediated innate antiviral response. In plants, P58(IPK) is required by viruses for virulence and therefore functions as a susceptibility factor.  相似文献   

7.
Influenza virus contains three integral membrane proteins: haemagglutinin, neuraminidase, and matrix protein (M1 and M2). Among them, M2 protein functions as an ion channel, important for virus uncoating in endosomes of virus-infected cells and essential for virus replication. In an effort to explore potential new functions of M2 in the virus life cycle, we used yeast two-hybrid system to search for M2-associated cellular proteins. One of the positive clones was identified as human Hsp40/Hdj1, a DnaJ/Hsp40 family protein. Here, we report that both BM2 (M2 of influenza B virus) and A/M2 (M2 of influenza A virus) interacted with Hsp40 in vitro and in vivo. The region of M2-Hsp40 interaction has been mapped to the CTD1 domain of Hsp40. Hsp40 has been reported to be a regulator of PKR signaling pathway by interacting with p58IPK that is a cellular inhibitor of PKR. PKR is a crucial component of the host defense response against virus infection. We therefore attempted to understand the relationship among M2, Hsp40 and p58IPK by further experimentation. The results demonstrated that both A/M2 and BM2 are able to bind to p58IPKin vitro and in vivo and enhance PKR autophosphorylation probably via forming a stable complex with Hsp40 and P58IPK, and consequently induce cell death. These results suggest that influenza virus M2 protein is involved in p58IPK-mediated PKR regulation during influenza virus infection, therefore affecting infected-cell life cycle and virus replication.  相似文献   

8.
The interferon (IFN)-induced, double-stranded RNA-activated protein kinase (PKR) mediates the antiviral and antiproliferative actions of IFN, in part, via its translational inhibitory properties. Previous studies have demonstrated that PKR forms dimers and that dimerization is likely to be required for activation and/or function. In the present study we used multiple approaches to examine the modulation of PKR dimerization. Deletion analysis with the λ repressor fusion system identified a previously unrecognized site involved in PKR dimerization. This site comprised amino acids (aa) 244 to 296, which span part of the third basic region of PKR and the catalytic subdomains I and II. Using the yeast two-hybrid system and far-Western analysis, we verified the importance of this region for dimerization. Furthermore, coexpression of the 52-aa region alone inhibited the formation of full-length PKR dimers in the λ repressor fusion and two-hybrid systems. Importantly, coexpression of aa 244 to 296 exerted a dominant-negative effect on wild-type kinase activity in a functional assay. Due to its role as a mediator of IFN-induced antiviral resistance, PKR is a target of viral and cellular inhibitors. Curiously, PKR aa 244 to 296 contain the binding site for a select group of specific inhibitors, including the cellular protein P58IPK. We demonstrated, utilizing both the yeast and λ systems, that P58IPK, a member of the tetratricopeptide repeat protein family, can block kinase activity by preventing PKR dimerization. In contrast, a nonfunctional form of P58IPK lacking a TPR motif did not inhibit kinase activity or perturb PKR dimers. These results highlight a potential mechanism of PKR inhibition and define a novel class of PKR inhibitors. Finally, the data document the first known example of inhibition of protein kinase dimerization by a cellular protein inhibitor. On the basis of these results we propose a model for the regulation of PKR dimerization.Cellular protein kinases play crucial roles in propagating, regulating, and coordinating signals necessary for many seminal biological processes, including metabolism, gene expression, cell growth, differentiation, and development. As a result, protein kinases are subjected to elaborate control mechanisms, including association with domains or subunits that inhibit kinase activity by an autoregulatory process (40, 44) or domains that target the kinase to different subcellular localizations and/or substrates (23, 36). In addition, association with activating or inhibitory proteins (21, 86), reversible protein phosphorylation (19, 32), and multimerization (31, 76) also may regulate kinase activity. While dimerization is a common regulatory mechanism for receptor protein kinases, it is less so for cytosolic nonreceptor protein kinases. The latter class of protein kinases, whose dimerization is implicated in their activation and/or function, includes the cGMP- and cAMP-dependent kinases (81), casein kinase 2 (9), Mst1 kinase (17), Raf-1 kinase (22), and the interferon (IFN)-induced, double-stranded (ds)-RNA-activated kinase (PKR) (60). PKR is novel in that it also regulates its own protein synthesis at the translational level (7, 82).PKR is a pivotal component of the host antiviral defense system because of its translational inhibitory properties (58, 74). Viral replication produces dsRNA that can bind PKR via two dsRNA-binding motifs (DSRMs) located in the N-terminal portion of the kinase, resulting in autophosphorylation and consequently activation of the enzyme. Activated PKR, in turn, phosphorylates the α subunit of eukaryotic initiation factor-2 (eIF-2α), leading to a complex series of biochemical events that culminate in a dramatic decrease in the initiation of protein synthesis (15, 59). This disables the use of the translational machinery for the production of viral proteins, and hence restricts viral replication within the cell. Due to its function in antiviral defense, PKR is a target of viral and cellular inhibitors (42, 51). The best-characterized cellular protein inhibitor of PKR is P58IPK, which is activated upon influenza virus infection (53, 54). P58IPK appears to be a member of a potential new class of molecular chaperones containing tetratricopeptide repeat motifs and the “J region” of the DnaJ family (52, 62). The non-enzymatic P58IPK protein inhibits both the auto- and trans-phosphorylation activities of PKR (53, 54). However, the exact mode of P58IPK action is not fully understood, although it likely involves direct physical interaction with PKR (25, 69).In addition to its role in interferon-induced antiviral resistance, there is growing evidence that PKR is involved in the control of cell growth and proliferation. Overexpression of PKR in mouse (46), insect (4), and yeast (14) cells results in severe inhibition of growth due to increased eIF-2α phosphorylation. Furthermore, expression of catalytically inactive mutants of PKR elicits fibroblast transformation and tumor formation upon injection of the cells into nude mice, suggesting that PKR has tumor suppressor properties (6, 46, 61). In support of this view, the P58IPK protein exhibits oncogenic potential; overexpression of the cellular PKR inhibitor causes a transformed phenotype and rapid tumor formation in nude mice (3).The mechanism(s) by which the functionally defective PKR mutants or wild-type P58IPK induce malignant transformation is not known. One hypothesis is that the PKR mutants inhibit kinase function by forming inactive heterodimers with endogenous wild-type PKR (6, 46). This also raises a fundamental question concerning the role of dimerization on PKR function. Indeed, evidence for PKR dimerization dependent on the DSRMs has been reported (16, 67), although its role in activation and/or function remains unclear (71, 85). Moreover, the role of P58IPK in modulating PKR dimer formation has not been investigated.Recent efforts to identify the region and mechanism responsible for PKR dimerization have led to conflicting results (16, 66, 67). This controversy can be explained, at least in part, by our demonstration herein that PKR can dimerize through a previously unrecognized region independent of the DSRMs. In addition, we show that P58IPK, but not a nonfunctional form of the protein, prevents PKR dimer formation, suggesting that P58IPK inhibits PKR by converting PKR dimers into stable monomers. To our knowledge, our findings present the first known example of a cytosolic kinase whose activity may be modulated at the level of dimerization through association with a nonenzymatic cellular protein inhibitor.  相似文献   

9.
P58IPK is one of the endoplasmic reticulum- (ER-) localised DnaJ (ERdj) proteins which interact with the chaperone BiP, the mammalian ER ortholog of Hsp70, and are thought to contribute to the specificity and regulation of its diverse functions. P58IPK, expression of which is upregulated in response to ER stress, has been suggested to act as a co-chaperone, binding un- or misfolded proteins and delivering them to BiP. In order to give further insights into the functions of P58IPK, and the regulation of BiP by ERdj proteins, we have determined the crystal structure of human P58IPK to 3.0 Å resolution using a combination of molecular replacement and single wavelength anomalous diffraction. The structure shows the human P58IPK monomer to have a very elongated overall shape. In addition to the conserved J domain, P58IPK contains nine N-terminal tetratricopeptide repeat motifs, divided into three subdomains of three motifs each. The J domain is attached to the C-terminal end via a flexible linker, and the structure shows the conserved Hsp70-binding histidine-proline-aspartate (HPD) motif to be situated on the very edge of the elongated protein, 100 Å from the putative binding site for unfolded protein substrates. The residues that comprise the surface surrounding the HPD motif are highly conserved in P58IPK from other organisms but more varied between the human ERdj proteins, supporting the view that their regulation of different BiP functions is facilitated by differences in BiP-binding.  相似文献   

10.

Background

Previous studies have demonstrated that DC differentially regulate influenza A virus (IAV)–specific CD8 T cell responses in vivo during high and low dose IAV infections. Furthermore, in vitro infection of DC with IAV at low versus high multiplicities of infection (MOI) results in altered cytokine production and a reduced ability to prime naïve CD8 T cell responses. Flow cytometric detection of IAV proteins within DC, a commonly used method for detection of cellular IAV infection, does not distinguish between the direct infection of these cells or their uptake of viral proteins from dying epithelial cells.

Methods/Principal Findings

We have developed a novel, sensitive, single-cell RT-PCR–based approach to assess the infection of respiratory DC (rDC) and lymph node (LN)-resident DC (LNDC) following high and low dose IAV infections. Our results show that, while a fraction of both rDC and LNDC contain viral mRNA following IAV infection, there is little correlation between the percentage of rDC containing viral mRNA and the initial IAV inoculum dose. Instead, increasing IAV inoculums correlate with augmented rDC MOI.

Conclusion/Significance

Together, our results demonstrate a novel and sensitive method for the detection of direct IAV infection at the single-cell level and suggest that the previously described ability of DC to differentially regulate IAV-specific T cell responses during high and low dose IAV infections could relate to the MOI of rDC within the LN rather than the percentage of rDC infected.  相似文献   

11.
Protein kinase R (PKR) is a vital component of host innate immunity against viral infection. However, the mechanism underlying inactivation of PKR by influenza A virus (IAV) remains elusive. Here, we found that vault RNAs (vtRNAs) were greatly induced in A549 cells and mouse lungs after infection with IAV. The viral NS1 protein was shown to be the inducer triggering the upregulation of vtRNAs. Importantly, silencing vtRNA in A549 cells significantly inhibited IAV replication, whereas overexpression of vtRNAs markedly promoted the viral replication. Furthermore, in vivo studies showed that disrupting vtRNA expression in mice significantly decreased IAV replication in infected lungs. The vtRNA knockdown animals exhibited significantly enhanced resistance to IAV infection, as evidenced by attenuated acute lung injury and spleen atrophy and consequently increased survival rates. Interestingly, vtRNAs promoted viral replication through repressing the activation of PKR and the subsequent antiviral interferon response. In addition, increased expression of vtRNAs was required for efficient suppression of PKR by NS1 during IAV infection. Moreover, vtRNAs were also significantly upregulated by infections of several other viruses and involved in the inactivation of PKR signaling by these viruses. These results reveal a novel mechanism by which some viruses circumvent PKR-mediated innate immunity.  相似文献   

12.

Background

Influenza A virus (IAV) infection primarily targets respiratory epithelial cells and produces clinical outcomes ranging from mild upper respiratory infection to severe pneumonia. Recent studies have shown the importance of lung antioxidant defense systems against injury by IAV. Nuclear factor-erythroid 2 related factor 2 (Nrf2) activates the majority of antioxidant genes.

Methods

Alveolar type II (ATII) cells and alveolar macrophages (AM) were isolated from human lungs not suitable for transplantation and donated for medical research. In some studies ATII cells were transdifferentiated to alveolar type I-like (ATI-like) cells. Alveolar epithelial cells were infected with A/PR/8/34 (PR8) virus. We analyzed PR8 virus production, influenza A nucleoprotein levels, ROS generation and expression of antiviral genes. Immunocytofluorescence was used to determine Nrf2 translocation and western blotting to detect Nrf2, HO-1 and caspase 1 and 3 cleavage. We also analyzed ingestion of PR8 virus infected apoptotic ATII cells by AM, cytokine levels by ELISA, glutathione levels, necrosis and apoptosis by TUNEL assay. Moreover, we determined the critical importance of Nrf2 using adenovirus Nrf2 (AdNrf2) or Nrf2 siRNA to overexpress or knockdown Nrf2, respectively.

Results

We found that IAV induced oxidative stress, cytotoxicity and apoptosis in ATI-like and ATII cells. We also found that AM can ingest PR8 virus-induced apoptotic ATII cells (efferocytosis) but not viable cells, whereas ATII cells did not ingest these apoptotic cells. PR8 virus increased ROS production, Nrf2, HO-1, Mx1 and OAS1 expression and Nrf2 translocation to the nucleus. Nrf2 knockdown with siRNA sensitized ATI-like cells and ATII cells to injury induced by IAV and overexpression of Nrf2 with AdNrf2 protected these cells. Furthermore, Nrf2 overexpression followed by infection with PR8 virus decreased virus replication, influenza A nucleoprotein expression, antiviral response and oxidative stress. However, AdNrf2 did not increase IFN-λ1 (IL-29) levels.

Conclusions

Our results indicate that IAV induces alveolar epithelial injury and that Nrf2 protects these cells from the cytopathic effects of IAV likely by increasing the expression of antioxidant genes. Identifying the pathways involved in protecting cells from injury during influenza infection may be particularly important for developing new therapeutic strategies.  相似文献   

13.
Yan W  Gale MJ  Tan SL  Katze MG 《Biochemistry》2002,41(15):4938-4945
P58(IPK) was discovered as an inhibitor of the interferon-induced, protein kinase, PKR. Upon virus infection, PKR can, as part of the host defense system, inhibit mRNA translation by phosphorylating the alpha subunit of protein synthesis eukaryotic initiation factor 2 (eIF-2alpha). We previously found that influenza virus recruits the cellular P58(IPK) co-chaperone to inhibit PKR activity and thus facilitate viral protein synthesis. P58(IPK) contains nine tetratricopeptide repeat (TPR) motifs in addition to the highly conserved J domain found in all DnaJ chaperone family members. To define the role of molecular chaperones in regulating cell growth in addition to PKR regulation, we performed a detailed analysis of the P58(IPK) J domain. Using growth rescue assays, we found that the P58(IPK) J domain substituted for the J domains of other DnaJ proteins, including DnaJ in Escherichia coli and Ydj1 in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. This is the first time a cellular J domain from a mammalian DnaJ family member was shown to be functional in both prokaryotic DnaJ and eukaryotic Ydj1 constructs. Furthermore, point mutations within the conserved HPD residue cluster of the P58(IPK) J domain disrupted P58(IPK) J function including stimulation of ATPase activity of Hsp70. However, the P58(IPK) HPD mutants still inhibited PKR activity and thus supported cell growth in a yeast rescue assay. Overexpression of the HPD mutants of P58(IPK), similar to their wild-type counterpart, also stimulated mRNA translation in a mammalian cell system. Taken together, our data necessitate a model of P58(IPK) inhibition of PKR kinase activity and stimulation of mRNA translation, which does not require classical J domain function found in the DnaJ molecular chaperone family.  相似文献   

14.
Previously we found that prolonged endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress caused by coxsackievirus B3 (CVB3) infection led to p58IPK downregulation and subsequent cell apoptosis. This finding implies that p58IPK expression benefits cell survival and counteracts CVB3‐induced apoptosis. In testing this hypothesis, we first found that PI3K/Akt survival pathway is more sensitive than ERK1/2 in response to p58IPK expression. This finding was further verified by silencing p58IPK with specific siRNAs, which led to the significant suppression of phosphorylation of Akt (p‐Akt) but not ERK1/2. Further, using CVB3‐infected cell line expressing dominant negative ATF6a (DN‐ATF6a), we found that expression of p58IPK and p‐Akt was significantly reduced, which led to the decreased cell viability. However, when the DN‐ATF6a cells were transiently transfected with p58IPK, an opposite result was obtained. Finally, by CVB3 infection of cells stably expressing p58IPK, we found that CVB3‐induced mitochondria‐mediated apoptosis was suppressed, which was evidenced by the reduced cytochrome c release and upregulation of the mitochondrial membrane protein mitofusin 2. However, silencing p58IPK with either specific siRNAs or DN‐ATF6a sensitized cells to CVB3‐induced apoptosis. These results suggest that p58IPK suppresses CVB3‐induced apoptosis through selective activation of PI3K/Akt pathway that requires activation of ATF6a and subsequently upregulates mitofusin 2.  相似文献   

15.
16.
Gil J  Esteban M  Roth D 《Biochemistry》2000,39(51):16016-16025
Regulation of eIF2alpha phosphorylation is critical to the maintenance of cellular homeostasis, and eIF2alpha kinases are subject to complex and multidimensional controls. A cellular 67 kDa glycoprotein (p67) has been proposed to have an important role in regulating the activity of eIF2alpha kinases including the interferon-induced, dsRNA-stimulated protein kinase PKR. To dissect p67-PKR interactions and evaluate their significance in vivo, we have used a vaccinia virus (VV) expression system that successfully mimics PKR control pathways. Recombinant VV were constructed that constitutively express p67 and inducibly express PKR in BSC-40 cells. Stable expression of p67 reduced the PKR-mediated antiviral response and apoptosis. These effects correlated with decreased eIF2alpha phosphorylation, with rescue of PKR-mediated inhibition of protein synthesis, and with partial inhibition of PKR-triggered activation of NF-kappaB. The direct interaction between PKR and p67 was suggested by in vivo and in vitro analyses. These data demonstrate that in vivo p67 is an important modulator of PKR-mediated signal transduction pathways and may provide a useful tool to dissect the relative contributions of PKR to cell growth and stress response.  相似文献   

17.
18.
Apoptosis induction is an antiviral host response, however, influenza A virus (IAV) infection promotes host cell death. The nucleoprotein (NP) of IAV is known to contribute to viral pathogenesis, but its role in virus-induced host cell death was hitherto unknown. We observed that NP contributes to IAV infection induced cell death and heterologous expression of NP alone can induce apoptosis in human airway epithelial cells. The apoptotic effect of IAV NP was significant when compared with other known proapoptotic proteins of IAV. The cell death induced by IAV NP was executed through the intrinsic apoptosis pathway. We screened host cellular factors for those that may be targeted by NP for inducing apoptosis and identified human antiapoptotic protein Clusterin (CLU) as a novel interacting partner. The interaction between IAV NP and CLU was highly conserved and mediated through β-chain of the CLU protein. Also CLU was found to interact specifically with IAV NP and not with any other known apoptosis modulatory protein of IAV. CLU prevents induction of the intrinsic apoptosis pathway by binding to Bax and inhibiting its movement into the mitochondria. We found that the expression of IAV NP reduced the association between CLU and Bax in mammalian cells. Further, we observed that CLU overexpression attenuated NP-induced cell death and had a negative effect on IAV replication. Collectively, these findings indicate a new function for IAV NP in inducing host cell death and suggest a role for the host antiapoptotic protein CLU in this process.  相似文献   

19.
The TAR RNA binding Protein, TRBP, inhibits the activity of the interferon-induced protein kinase R (PKR), whereas the PKR activator, PACT, activates its function. TRBP and PACT also bind to each other through their double-stranded RNA binding domains (dsRBDs) and their Medipal domains, which may influence their activity on PKR. In a human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) long terminal repeat-luciferase assay, PACT unexpectedly reversed PKR-mediated inhibition of gene expression. In a translation inhibition assay in HeLa cells, PACT lacking the 13 C-terminal amino acids (PACTΔ13), but not full-length PACT, activated PKR and enhanced interferon-mediated repression. In contrast, in the astrocytic U251MG cells that express low TRBP levels, both proteins activate PKR, but PACTΔ13 is stronger. Immunoprecipitation assays and yeast two-hybrid assays show that TRBP and PACTΔ13 interact very weakly due to a loss of binding in the Medipal domain. PACT-induced PKR phosphorylation was restored in Tarbp2−/− murine tail fibroblasts and in HEK293T or HeLa cells when TRBP expression was reduced by RNA interference. In HEK293T and HeLa cells, arsenite, peroxide, and serum starvation-mediated stresses dissociated the TRBP-PACT interaction and increased PACT-induced PKR activation, demonstrating the relevance of this control in a physiological context. Our results demonstrate that in cells, TRBP controls PACT activation of PKR, an activity that is reversed by stress.  相似文献   

20.
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