745 research outputs found
International Network for Capacity Building for the Control of Emerging Viral Vector-Borne Zoonotic Diseases: Arbo-Zoonet
Arboviruses are arthropod-borne viruses, which include West Nile fever virus (WNFV), a mosquito-borne virus, Rift Valley fever virus (RVFV), a mosquito-borne virus, and Crimean-Congo haemorrhagic fever virus (CCHFV), a tick-borne virus. These arthropod-borne viruses can cause disease in different domestic and wild animals and in humans, posing a threat to public health because of their epidemic and zoonotic potential. In recent decades, the geographical distribution of these diseases has expanded. Outbreaks of WNF have already occurred in Europe, especially in the Mediterranean basin. Moreover, CCHF is endemic in many European countries and serious outbreaks have occurred, particularly in the Balkans, Turkey and Southern Federal Districts of Russia. In 2000, RVF was reported for the first time outside the African continent, with cases being confirmed in Saudi Arabia and Yemen. This spread was probably caused by ruminant trade and highlights that there is a threat of expansion of the virus into other parts of Asia and Europe. In the light of global warming and globalisation of trade and travel, public interest in emerging zoonotic diseases has increased. This is especially evident regarding the geographical spread of vector-borne diseases. A multi-disciplinary approach is now imperative, and groups need to collaborate in an integrated manner that includes vector control, vaccination programmes, improved therapy strategies, diagnostic tools and surveillance, public awareness, capacity building and improvement of infrastructure in endemic regions
Inactivation of Capicua in adult mice causes T-cell lymphoblastic lymphoma
CIC (also known as Capicua) is a transcriptional repressor negatively regulated by RAS/MAPK signaling. Whereas the functions of Cic have been well characterized in Drosophila, little is known about its role in mammals. CIC is inactivated in a variety of human tumors and has been implicated recently in the promotion of lung metastases. Here, we describe a mouse model in which we inactivated Cic by selectively disabling its DNA-binding activity, a mutation that causes derepression of its target genes. Germline Cic inactivation causes perinatal lethality due to lung differentiation defects. However, its systemic inactivation in adult mice induces T-cell acute lymphoblastic lymphoma (T-ALL), a tumor type known to carry CIC mutations, albeit with low incidence. Cic inactivation in mice induces T-ALL by a mechanism involving derepression of its well-known target, Etv4 Importantly, human T-ALL also relies on ETV4 expression for maintaining its oncogenic phenotype. Moreover, Cic inactivation renders T-ALL insensitive to MEK inhibitors in both mouse and human cell lines. Finally, we show that Ras-induced mouse T-ALL as well as human T-ALL carrying mutations in the RAS/MAPK pathway display a genetic signature indicative of Cic inactivation. These observations illustrate that CIC inactivation plays a key role in this human malignancy.We are grateful to Carol MacKintosh (University of Dundee, UK) for the pcDNA5/FRT/TO-GFP-CIC plasmid, and Huda Zoghbi (Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX) and Yoontae Lee (University of Pohang, Korea) for Cic antisera. We thank Scott Brown and Robert Holt (University of Vancouver, Canada) for their help with TCR abundance calculations. We also thank Carmen G. Lechuga, Marta San Roman, Raquel Villar, Beatriz Jimenez, and Nuria Cabrera for excellent technical assistance. We value the support of Sagrario Ortega (Transgenic Mice Core Unit, CNIO) for help in generating the Cic mutant mice, Orlando Dominguez (Genomics Core Unit, CNIO) for the RNA-seq analysis, and the Histopathology Core Unit. This work was supported by grants from the Fundacio La Marato de TV3 (20131730/1) to G.J. and M.B., and the European Research Council (ERC-AG/250297-RAS AHEAD), the EU-Framework Programme (HEALTH-F2-2010-259770/LUNGTARGET and HEALTH-2010-260791/EUROCANPLATFORM), the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness (SAF2014-59864-R), the Autonomous Community of Madrid (S2011/BDM-2470/ONCOCYCLE), and the Asociacion Espanola contra el Cancer (AECC) (GC16173694BARB) to M.B. M.B. is the recipient of an Endowed Chair from the AXA Research Fund. L.S.-C. was supported by a fellowship from the Programa de Formacion de Personal Investigator (FPI) of the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness. M.D. and M.B. conceived and designed the study. L.S.-C., O.G., G.J., M.D., and M.B. developed the methodology. L.S.-C., O.G., M.S., and M.D. acquired the data. L.S.-C., O.G., M.S., H.K.C.J., G.J., M.D., and M.B. analyzed and interpreted the data. L.S-C., O.G., G.J., M.D., and M.B. wrote, reviewed, and/or revised the manuscript. G.J. provided material support. A. G. analyzed the T-ALL sequencing. M.D. and M.B. supervised the study.S
Genomic determinants of Furin cleavage in diverse European SARS-related bat coronaviruses
The furin cleavage site (FCS) in SARS-CoV-2 is unique within the Severe acute respiratory syndrome–related coronavirus (SrC) species. We re-assessed diverse SrC from European horseshoe bats and analyzed the spike-encoding genomic region harboring the FCS in SARS-CoV-2. We reveal molecular features in SrC such as purine richness and RNA secondary structures that resemble those required for FCS acquisition in avian influenza viruses. We discuss the potential acquisition of FCS through molecular mechanisms such as nucleotide substitution, insertion, or recombination, and show that a single nucleotide exchange in two European bat-associated SrC may suffice to enable furin cleavage. Furthermore, we show that FCS occurrence is variable in bat- and rodent-borne counterparts of human coronaviruses. Our results suggest that furin cleavage sites can be acquired in SrC via conserved molecular mechanisms known in other reservoir-bound RNA viruses and thus support a natural origin of SARS-CoV-2
KSR induces RAS-independent MAPK pathway activation and modulates the efficacy of KRAS inhibitors.
The kinase suppressor of rat sarcoma (RAS) proteins (KSR1 and KSR2) have long been considered as scaffolding proteins required for optimal mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathway signalling. However, recent evidence suggests that they play a more complex role within this pathway. Here, we demonstrate that ectopic expression of KSR1 or KSR2 is sufficient to activate the MAPK pathway and to induce cell proliferation in the absence of RAS proteins. In contrast, the ectopic expression of KSR proteins is not sufficient to induce cell proliferation in the absence of either rapidly accelerated fibrosarcoma (RAF) or MAPK-ERK kinase proteins, indicating that they act upstream of RAF. Indeed, KSR1 requires dimerization with at least one member of the RAF family to stimulate proliferation, an event that results in the translocation of the heterodimerized RAF protein to the cell membrane. Mutations in the conserved aspartic acid-phenylalanine-glycine motif of KSR1 that affect ATP binding impair the induction of cell proliferation. We also show that increased expression levels of KSR1 decrease the responsiveness to the KRASG12C inhibitor sotorasib in human cancer cell lines, thus suggesting that increased levels of expression of KSR may make tumour cells less dependent on KRAS oncogenic signalling.We thank M. San Roman and R. Villar for technical assistance. This work was supported by grants from the European Research Council (ERC-AG/695566, THERACAN), the Spanish Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities (RTI2018-094664-B-I00 and RTC2017-6576-1), the Autonomous Community of Madrid (B2017/BMD-3884 iLUNG-CM), the CRIS Cancer Foundation and the Asociacion Espanola contra el Cancer (AECC) (GC166173694BARB). MB is a recipient of an Endowed Chair from the AXA Research Fund. GP has been supported by a fellowship from the Programa de Atraccion de Talento of the Autonomous Community of Madrid. SGA is a recipient of a postdoctoral fellowship from the AECC. OB is a recipient of a fellowship from the Formacion de Personal Investigador (FPI) program of the Spanish Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities.S
Human Coronavirus NL63 Open Reading Frame 3 encodes a virion-incorporated N-glycosylated membrane protein
Background: Human pathogenic coronavirus NL63 (hCoV-NL63) is a group 1 (alpha) coronavirus commonly
associated with respiratory tract infections. In addition to known non-structural and structural proteins all
coronaviruses have one or more accessory proteins whose functions are mostly unknown. Our study focuses on
hCoV-NL63 open reading frame 3 (ORF 3) which is a highly conserved accessory protein among coronaviruses.
Results: In-silico analysis of the 225 amino acid sequence of hCoV-NL63 ORF 3 predicted a triple membranespanning
protein. Expression in infected CaCo-2 and LLC-MK2 cells was confirmed by immunofluorescence and
Western blot analysis. The protein was detected within the endoplasmatic reticulum/Golgi intermediate
compartment (ERGIC) where coronavirus assembly and budding takes place. Subcellular localization studies using
recombinant ORF 3 protein transfected in Huh-7 cells revealed occurrence in ERGIC, Golgi- and lysosomal
compartments. By fluorescence microscopy of differently tagged envelope (E), membrane (M) and nucleocapsid (N)
proteins it was shown that ORF 3 protein colocalizes extensively with E and M within the ERGIC. Using N-terminally
FLAG-tagged ORF 3 protein and an antiserum specific to the C-terminus we verified the proposed topology of an
extracellular N-terminus and a cytosolic C-terminus. By in-vitro translation analysis and subsequent endoglycosidase
H digestion we showed that ORF 3 protein is N-glycosylated at the N-terminus. Analysis of purified viral particles
revealed that ORF 3 protein is incorporated into virions and is therefore an additional structural protein.
Conclusions: This study is the first extensive expression analysis of a group 1 hCoV-ORF 3 protein. We give
evidence that ORF 3 protein is a structural N-glycosylated and virion-incorporated protein.Web of Scienc
Re-assessing the diversity of negative strand RNA viruses in insects.
The spectrum of viruses in insects is important for subjects as diverse as public health, veterinary medicine, food production, and biodiversity conservation. The traditional interest in vector-borne diseases of humans and livestock has drawn the attention of virus studies to hematophagous insect species. However, these represent only a tiny fraction of the broad diversity of Hexapoda, the most speciose group of animals. Here, we systematically probed the diversity of negative strand RNA viruses in the largest and most representative collection of insect transcriptomes from samples representing all 34 extant orders of Hexapoda and 3 orders of Entognatha, as well as outgroups, altogether representing 1243 species. Based on profile hidden Markov models we detected 488 viral RNA-directed RNA polymerase (RdRp) sequences with similarity to negative strand RNA viruses. These were identified in members of 324 arthropod species. Selection for length, quality, and uniqueness left 234 sequences for analyses, showing similarity to genomes of viruses classified in Bunyavirales (n = 86), Articulavirales (n = 54), and several orders within Haploviricotina (n = 94). Coding-complete genomes or nearly-complete subgenomic assemblies were obtained in 61 cases. Based on phylogenetic topology and the availability of coding-complete genomes we estimate that at least 20 novel viral genera in seven families need to be defined, only two of them monospecific. Seven additional viral clades emerge when adding sequences from the present study to formerly monospecific lineages, potentially requiring up to seven additional genera. One long sequence may indicate a novel family. For segmented viruses, cophylogenies between genome segments were generally improved by the inclusion of viruses from the present study, suggesting that in silico misassembly of segmented genomes is rare or absent. Contrary to previous assessments, significant virus-host codivergence was identified in major phylogenetic lineages based on two different approaches of codivergence analysis in a hypotheses testing framework. In spite of these additions to the known spectrum of viruses in insects, we caution that basing taxonomic decisions on genome information alone is challenging due to technical uncertainties, such as the inability to prove integrity of complete genome assemblies of segmented viruses
The SARS-coronavirus-host interactome
Coronaviruses (CoVs) are important human and animal pathogens that induce fatal respiratory, gastrointestinal and neurological disease. The outbreak of the severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) in 2002/2003 has demonstrated human vulnerability to (Coronavirus) CoV epidemics. Neither vaccines nor therapeutics are available against human and animal CoVs. Knowledge of host cell proteins that take part in pivotal virus-host interactions could define broad-spectrum antiviral targets. In this study, we used a systems biology approach employing a genome-wide yeast-two hybrid interaction screen to identify immunopilins (PPIA, PPIB, PPIH, PPIG, FKBP1A, FKBP1B) as interaction partners of the CoV non-structural protein 1 (Nsp1). These molecules modulate the Calcineurin/NFAT pathway that plays an important role in immune cell activation. Overexpression of NSP1 and infection with live SARS-CoV strongly increased signalling through the Calcineurin/NFAT pathway and enhanced the induction of interleukin 2, compatible with late-stage immunopathogenicity and long-term cytokine dysregulation as observed in severe SARS cases. Conversely, inhibition of cyclophilins by cyclosporine A (CspA) blocked the replication of CoVs of all genera, including SARS-CoV, human CoV-229E and -NL-63, feline CoV, as well as avian infectious bronchitis virus. Non-immunosuppressive derivatives of CspA might serve as broad-range CoV inhibitors applicable against emerging CoVs as well as ubiquitous pathogens of humans and livestock
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