4.6 Article

Nucleocytoplasmic traffic disorder induced by cardioviruses

Journal

JOURNAL OF VIROLOGY
Volume 80, Issue 6, Pages 2705-2717

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/JVI.80.6.2705-2717.2006

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Funding

  1. NIAID NIH HHS [AI-17331, R56 AI017331, R01 AI017331] Funding Source: Medline

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Some picornaviruses, for example, poliovirus, increase bidirectional permeability of the nuclear envelope and suppress active nucleocytoplasmic transport. These activities require the viral protease 2A(pro). Here, we studied nucleocytoplasmic traffic in cells infected with encephalomyocarditis virus (EMCV; a cardiovirus), which lacks the poliovirus 2A(pro)-related protein. EMCV similarly enhanced bidirectional nucleocytoplasmic traffic. By using the fluorescent Timer protein, which contains a nuclear localization signal, we showed that the cytoplasmic accumulation of nuclear proteins in infected cells was largely due to the nuclear efflux of old proteins rather than impaired active nuclear import of newly synthesized molecules. The nuclear envelope of digitonin-treated EMCV-infected cells permitted rapid efflux of a nuclear marker protein. Inhibitors of poliovirus 2A(pro) did not prevent the EMCV-induced efflux. Extracts from EMCV-infected cells and products of in vitro translation of viral RNAs contained an activity increasing permeability of the nuclear envelope of uninfected cells. This activity depended on the expression of the viral leader protein. Mutations disrupting the zinc finger motif of this protein abolished its efflux-inducing ability. Inactivation of the L protein phosphorylation site (Thr47 -> Ala) resulted in a delayed efflux, while a phosphorylation-mimicking (Thr47 -> Asp) replacement did not significantly impair the efflux-inducing ability. Such activity of extracts from EMCV-infected cells was suppressed by the protein kinase inhibitor staurosporine. As evidenced by electron microscopy, cardiovirus infection resulted in alteration of the nuclear pores, but it did not trigger degradation of the nucleoporins known to be degraded in the poliovirus-infected cells. Thus, two groups of picornaviruses, enteroviruses and cardioviruses, similarly alter the nucleocytoplasmic traffic but achieve this by strikingly different mechanisms.

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