4.6 Review

Phosphoinositides in the Hepatitis C Virus Life Cycle

Journal

VIRUSES-BASEL
Volume 4, Issue 10, Pages 2340-2358

Publisher

MDPI AG
DOI: 10.3390/v4102340

Keywords

HCV; hepatitis C; PI4P; phosphoinositides; PI4KIII alpha; PI4KIII beta

Categories

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [AI085087, DK077704, DK08379]

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Eukaryotes possess seven different phosphoinositides (PIPs) that help form the unique signatures of various intracellular membranes. PIPs serve as docking sites for the recruitment of specific proteins to mediate membrane alterations and integrate various signaling cascades. The spatio-temporal regulation of PI kinases and phosphatases generates distinct intracellular hubs of PIP signaling. Hepatitis C virus (HCV), like other plus-strand RNA viruses, promotes the rearrangement of intracellular membranes to assemble viral replication complexes. HCV stimulates enrichment of phosphatidylinositol 4-phosphate (PI4P) pools near endoplasmic reticulum (ER) sites by activating PI4KIII alpha, the kinase responsible for generation of ER-specific PI4P pools. Inhibition of PI4KIII alpha abrogates HCV replication. PI4P, the most abundant phosphoinositide, predominantly localizes to the Golgi and plays central roles in Golgi secretory functions by recruiting effector proteins involved in transport vesicle generation. The PI4P effector proteins also include the lipid-transfer and structural proteins such as ceramide transfer protein (CERT), oxysterol binding protein (OSBP) and Golgi phosphoprotein 3 (GOLPH3) that help maintain Golgi-membrane composition and structure. Depletion of Golgi-specific PI4P pools by silencing PI4KIII beta, expression of dominant negative CERT and OSBP mutants, or silencing GOLPH3 perturb HCV secretion. In this review we highlight the role of PIPs and specifically PI4P in the HCV life cycle.

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