4.7 Article

Asp149 and Asp152 in chicken and human ANP32A play an essential role in the interaction with influenza viral polymerase

Journal

FASEB JOURNAL
Volume 35, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1096/fj.202002006RR

Keywords

ANP32A; host factor; influenza virus; precise genome editing; protein‐ protein interaction

Funding

  1. National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF) [2015R1A3A2033826]
  2. BK21 FOUR Program of the Department of Agricultural Biotechnology, Seoul National University

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The study found that the 27 residues of human ANP32A play a crucial role in AIV vPol activity, while ANP32C cannot support this activity. Asp149 and Asp152 are involved in supporting vPol activity, and mutations in these residues decreases the interaction between ANP32A and vPol.
The acidic nuclear phosphoprotein 32 family member A (ANP32A) is a cellular host factor that determines the host tropism of the viral polymerase (vPol) of avian influenza viruses (AIVs). Compared with human ANP32A (hANP32A), chicken ANP32A contains an additional 33 amino acid residues (176-208) duplicated from amino acid residues 149-175 (27 residues), suggesting that these residues could be involved in increasing vPol activity by strengthening interactions between ANP32A and vPol. However, the molecular interactions and functional roles of the 27 residues within hANP32A during AIV vPol activity remain unclear. Here, we examined the functional role of 27 residues of hANP32A based on comparisons with other human (h) ANP32 family members. It was notable that unlike hANP32A and hANP32B, hANP32C could not support vPol activity or replication of AIVs, despite the fact that hANP32C shares a higher sequence identity with hANP32A than hANP32B. Pairwise comparison between hANP32A and hANP32C revealed that Asp149 (D149) and Asp152 (D152) are involved in hydrogen bonding and electrostatic interactions, respectively, which support vPol activity. Mutation of these residues reduced the interaction between hANP32A and vPol. Finally, we demonstrated that precise substitution of the identified residues within chicken ANP32A via homology-directed repair using the CRISPR/Cas9 system resulted in a marked reduction of viral replication in chicken cells. These results increase our understanding of ANP32A function and may facilitate the development of AIV-resistant chickens via precise modification of residues within ANP32A.

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