4.7 Article

Picornavirus Modification of a Host mRNA Decay Protein

期刊

MBIO
卷 3, 期 6, 页码 -

出版社

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/mBio.00431-12

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资金

  1. National Cancer Institute [P30CA062203]
  2. National Institutes of Health [AI065357]
  3. Rocky Mountain Regional Center of Excellence in Biodefense
  4. Public Health Service from the National Institutes of Health [AI026765]
  5. California Center for Antiviral Drug Discovery (a Multicampus Research Program Initiative from the University of California)
  6. American Asthma Foundation
  7. George E. Hewitt Foundation for Medical Research

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Due to the limited coding capacity of picornavirus genomic RNAs, host RNA binding proteins play essential roles during viral translation and RNA replication. Here we describe experiments suggesting that AUF1, a host RNA binding protein involved in mRNA decay, plays a role in the infectious cycle of picornaviruses such as poliovirus and human rhinovirus. We observed cleavage of AUF1 during poliovirus or human rhinovirus infection, as well as interaction of this protein with the 5' noncoding regions of these viral genomes. Additionally, the picornavirus proteinase 3CD, encoded by poliovirus or human rhinovirus genomic RNAs, was shown to cleave all four isoforms of recombinant AUF1 at a specific N-terminal site in vitro. Finally, endogenous AUF1 was found to relocalize from the nucleus to the cytoplasm in poliovirus-infected HeLa cells to sites adjacent to (but distinct from) putative viral RNA replication complexes. IMPORTANCE This study derives its significance from reporting how picornaviruses like poliovirus and human rhinovirus proteolytically cleave a key player (AUF1) in host mRNA decay pathways during viral infection. Beyond cleavage of AUF1 by the major viral proteinase encoded in picornavirus genomes, infection by poliovirus results in the relocalization of this host cell RNA binding protein from the nucleus to the cytoplasm. The alteration of both the physical state of AUF1 and its cellular location illuminates how small RNA viruses manipulate the activities of host cell RNA binding proteins to ensure a faithful intracellular replication cycle.

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