4.3 Article

Prediction of human protein interactome of dengue virus non-structural protein 5 (NS5) and its downstream immunological implications

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3 BIOTECH
卷 13, 期 6, 页码 -

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SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s13205-023-03569-0

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Host-virus interactions; Nuclear localization; Eukaryotic linear motifs; DALI server; Transcription factors; Protein-protein interaction

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NS5, the most conserved protein among flaviviruses, functions as an RNA-dependent RNA polymerase and an RNA-methyltransferase and is essential for viral RNA replication. This study used computational approaches to predict host proteins that interact with DENV-NS5, and identified 34 novel interactions. The predicted human proteins are involved in key cellular processes related to cell cycle regulation, proliferation, protein degradation, apoptosis, and immune responses.
The non-structural protein 5 (NS5) is the most conserved protein among flaviviruses, a family that includes the dengue virus. It functions both as an RNA-dependent RNA polymerase and an RNA-methyltransferase and is therefore essential for the replication of viral RNA. The discovery that dengue virus NS5 protein (DENV-NS5) can also localize to the nucleus has resulted in renewed interest in its potential roles at the host-virus interface. In this study, we have used two complementary computational approaches in parallel - one based on linear motifs (ELM) and another based on tertiary structure of the protein (DALI) - to predict the host proteins that DENV-NS5 might interact with. Of the 42 human proteins predicted by both these methods, 34 are novel. Pathway analysis of these 42 human proteins shows that they are involved in key host cellular processes related to cell cycle regulation, proliferation, protein degradation, apoptosis, and immune responses. A focused analysis of transcription factors that directly interact with the predicted DENV-NS5 interacting proteins was performed, followed by the identification of downstream genes that are differentially expressed after dengue infection using previously published RNA-seq data. Our study provides unique insights into the DENV-NS5 interaction network and delineates mechanisms whereby DENV-NS5 could impact the host-virus interface. The novel interactors identified in this study could be potentially targeted by NS5 to modulate the host cellular environment in general, and the immune response in particular, thereby extending the role of DENV-NS5 beyond its known enzymatic functions.

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