4.7 Article

Reovirus uses temporospatial compartmentalization to orchestrate core versus outercapsid assembly

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PLOS PATHOGENS
卷 18, 期 9, 页码 -

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PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1010641

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  1. Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR)
  2. University of Alberta Faculty of Medicine and Dentistry (FoMD)
  3. Li Ka Shing Institute of Virology (LKS)
  4. Alberta Province

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During the replication of reoviruses, the amplification of cores and the assembly of outer capsid proteins occur in separate factories with a temporal delay.
Reoviridae virus family members, such as mammalian orthoreovirus (reovirus), encounter a unique challenge during replication. To hide the dsRNA from host recognition, the genome remains encapsidated in transcriptionally active proteinaceous core capsids that transcribe and release +RNA. De novo +RNAs and core proteins must repeatedly assemble into new progeny cores in order to logarithmically amplify replication. Reoviruses also produce outercapsid (OC) proteins mu 1, sigma 3 and sigma 1 that assemble onto cores to create highly stable infectious full virions. Current models of reovirus replication position amplification of transcriptionally-active cores and assembly of infectious virions in shared factories, but we hypothesized that since assembly of OC proteins would halt core amplification, OC assembly is somehow regulated. Using kinetic analysis of virus +RNA, core and OC proteins, core assembly and whole virus assembly, assembly of OC proteins was found to be temporally delayed. All viral RNAs and proteins were made simultaneously, eliminating the possibility that delayed OC RNAs or proteins account for delayed OC assembly. High resolution fluorescence and electron microscopy revealed that core amplification occurred early during infection at peripheral core-only factories, while all OC proteins associated with lipid droplets (LDs) that coalesced near the nucleus in a mu 1-dependent manner. Core-only factories transitioned towards the nucleus despite cycloheximide-mediated halting of new protein expression, while new core-only factories developed in the periphery. As infection progressed, OC assembly occurred at LD-and nuclear-proximal factories. Silencing of OC mu 1 expression with siRNAs led to large factories that remained further from the nucleus, implicating mu 1 in the transition to perinuclear factories. Moreover, late during infection, +RNA pools largely contributed to the production of de-novo viral proteins and fully-assembled infectious viruses. Altogether the results suggest an advanced model of reovirus replication with spatiotemporal segregation of core amplification, OC complexes and fully assembled virions.

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