4.7 Article

Genomes of the autonomous parvovirus minute virus of mice induce replication stress through RPA exhaustion

Journal

PLOS PATHOGENS
Volume 19, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1011203

Keywords

-

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study demonstrates that the autonomous parvovirus sequesters the host DNA repair protein RPA, leading to replication stress and vulnerability to DNA breaks in the host genome. This provides insights into the mechanisms employed by single-stranded DNA viruses to amplify host-cell DNA damage.
Author summaryParvoviruses are used in the clinic to design recombinant gene therapy vectors and as oncolytic agents. The autonomous parvovirus MVM utilizes the host cell's DNA damage response machinery to replicate in host cells and cause additional DNA breaks. However, the mechanism of MVM-induced DNA damage remains unknown. We have discovered that MVM sequesters the host DNA repair protein RPA, which normally associates with single stranded DNA in the nucleus, rendering the host genome susceptible to replication stress. Our study provides insights into the mechanisms utilized by single-stranded DNA viruses to amplify host-cell DNA damage. The oncolytic autonomous parvovirus Minute Virus of Mice (MVM) establishes infection in the nuclear environment by usurping host DNA damage signaling proteins in the vicinity of cellular DNA break sites. MVM replication induces a global cellular DNA Damage Response (DDR) that is dependent on signaling by the ATM kinase and inactivates the cellular ATR-kinase pathway. However, the mechanism of how MVM generates cellular DNA breaks remains unknown. Using single molecule DNA Fiber Analysis, we have discovered that MVM infection leads to a shortening of host replication forks as infection progresses, as well as induction of replication stress prior to the initiation of virus replication. Ectopically expressed viral non-structural proteins NS1 and NS2 are sufficient to cause host-cell replication stress, as is the presence of UV-inactivated non-replicative MVM genomes. The host single-stranded DNA binding protein Replication Protein A (RPA) associates with the UV-inactivated MVM genomes, suggesting MVM genomes might serve as a sink for cellular stores of RPA. Overexpressing RPA in host cells prior to UV-MVM infection rescues DNA fiber lengths and increases MVM replication, confirming that MVM genomes deplete RPA stores to cause replication stress. Together, these results indicate that parvovirus genomes induce replication stress through RPA exhaustion, rendering the host genome vulnerable to additional DNA breaks.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available