4.6 Article

Adenovirus exploits the cellular aggresome response to accelerate inactivation of the MRN complex

Journal

JOURNAL OF VIROLOGY
Volume 79, Issue 22, Pages 14004-14016

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/JVI.79.22.14004-14016.2005

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Funding

  1. NCI NIH HHS [R01 CA064799, CA64799] Funding Source: Medline

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Results reported here indicate that adenovirus 5 exploits the cellular aggresome response to accelerate inactivation of MREII-RAD50-NBSI (MRN) complexes that otherwise inhibit viral DNA replication and packaging. Aggresomes are cytoplasmic inclusion bodies, observed in many degenerative diseases, that are formed from aggregated proteins by dynein-dependent retrograde transport on microtubules to the microtubule organizing center. Viral E1B-55K protein forms aggresomes that sequester p53 and MRN in transformed cells and in cells transfected with an E1B-55K expression vector. During adenovirus infection, the viral protein E4orf3 associates with MRN in promyelocytic leukemia protein nuclear bodies before MRN is bound by E1B-55K. Either E4orf3 or E4orf6 is required in addition to E1B-55K for E1B-55K aggresome formation and MRE11 export to aggresomes in adenovirus-infected cells. Aggresome formation contributes to the protection of viral DNA from MRN activity by sequestering MRN in the cytoplasm and greatly accelerating its degradation by proteosomes following its ubiquitination by the E1B-55K/E4orf6/elongin BC/Cullin5/Rbxl ubiquitin ligase. Our results show that aggresomes significantly accelerate protein degradation by the ubiquitin-proteosome system. The observation that a normal cellular protein is inactivated when sequestered into an aggresome through association with an aggresome-inducing protein has implications for the potential cytotoxicity of aggresome-like inclusion bodies in degenerative diseases.

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