Delineating the Interplay Between the PB2 Protein of Influenza A Viruses and the Host Ubiquitin Proteasome System
Author | : Elise Biquand |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : 0 |
Release | : 2017 |
ISBN-10 | : OCLC:1105082214 |
ISBN-13 | : |
Rating | : 4/5 ( Downloads) |
Download or read book Delineating the Interplay Between the PB2 Protein of Influenza A Viruses and the Host Ubiquitin Proteasome System written by Elise Biquand and published by . This book was released on 2017 with total page 0 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: An estimated 10%-20% of the world's population is affected each year by seasonal epidemic influenza, causing about 250,000 to 500,000 fatal cases. The pandemic risk reinforces the trait of influenza A virus (IAV) infection as a public health issue. The virus life cycle critically relies on its ability to manipulate the host proteome. Besides, the ubiquitin-proteasome system (UPS) is involved in many regulatory processes in mammalian cells by inducing protein degradation, mediating protein activation or shaping their sub-cellular localisation. Therefore, UPS is a prime target hijacked by viruses. Recent evidence indicates that an intricate regulatory network involving viral proteins and the cellular UPS is likely to contribute to viral replication and immune evasion of influenza A viruses. However, usurpation of the host UPS by IAV is far from being comprehensively deciphered. To gain better understanding, we assessed the interplay between the human UPS and the PB2 subunit of the influenza A virus polymerase through a global proteomic profiling approach. For that purpose, an UPS-dedicated library of 590 human cDNAs, comprising 63% of the whole human UPS, was constituted and characterised. In an initial screen, UPS factors were challenged using a high-throughput split luciferase assay for interaction with the PB2 protein from 5 influenza A strains of different pathogenicity in human. A total of 80 UPS factors emerged as potential PB2 partners, of which 42 were validated as high-confidence PB2 partners for at least one of the strains. Further comparison of interaction profiles of the 5 PB2 with the UPS by hierarchical clustering revealed an interaction dendrogram fitting with the circulation time in the human population.Functional importance of interactors was tested by siRNA-mediated knock down experiments using luciferase tagged recombinant IAV viruses. Depletion of 36 out of the 42 tested UPS factors showed an effect on the infection with all or a subset of IAV strains, underlying the strong functional output of the developed methodology. Among these factors three deubiquitinases (DUBs) were further studied to decipher their involvement in IAV viral cycle. We have shown that they are involved in early and late stage of the infection and began to draw their function in viral cycle. We demonstrated with our colleagues in Hong-Kong that OTUB1 is involved in the host cytokine response and most probably in virus assembly. OTUD6A was also shown to be implicated in late stages of the infection but we still don't know its exact role. Contrariwise, the inactive DUB PAN2, which is part of poly-deadenylation complexes, is implicated in early phase of IAV infection, but surprisingly apparently not through viral mRNA regulation. More work is on-going to precise by which mechanisms these DUBs are implicated in IAV infection.