7 research outputs found

    Identifikation zellulärer Ziel-Gene KSHV-kodierter miRNAs

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    Herpesviren exprimieren Micro-(mi)RNAs, welche die Expression von zellulären und viralen Genen beeinflussen. Das Genom des Kaposi Sarkom Assoziierten Herpesvirus (KSHV) kodiert ein Cluster von insgesamt 12 miRNAs, welche sowohl während der latenten, als auch während der lytischen Infektion exprimiert werden. Da bisher nur sehr wenige zelluläre Zielgene für KSHV miRNAs bekannt sind, war es das Ziel dieser Studie, Gene zu identifizieren, deren Expression durch virale miRNAs von KSHV beeinflusst wird. Zu diesem Zweck wurden KSHV miRNAs mit Hilfe eines lentiviralen Transduktionssystems in B-Zellen und in Endothelzellen exprimiert. Diese sind beide natürliche Wirtszellen für KSHV. Die dabei entstandenen Zelllinien wurden mit Hilfe von zwei unterschiedlichen experimentellen Ansätzen untersucht: Beim ersten Ansatz wurde das gesamte Expressionsprofil dieser Zellen mit Hilfe von Microarrays analysiert und, nach Filterung durch bioinformatische Methoden, wurden Kandidaten für eine Regulation durch virale miRNAs identifiziert. Das Ergebnis wurde anhand biochemischer Methoden validiert und zwei zelluläre Transkripte als Zielgene bestätigt. In funktionellen Analysen konnte gezeigt werden, dass KSHV miRNAs die Caspase 3 inhibieren und dadurch die Zellen vor Apoptose schützen. Im zweiten, weitaus effizienteren Ansatz, wurden die sogenannten RISC-Komplexe mit Hilfe von AGO2-spezifischen Antikörpern sowohl aus den KSHV miRNA exprimierenden Zellen als auch aus latent KSHV infizierten Zellen isoliert und die daran gebundenen mRNAs identifiziert. Der RISC-Komplex spielt die entscheidende Rolle bei der miRNA-induzierten Regulation und enthält neben Proteinkomponenten (u.a. Argonauten (AGO)-Proteinen) sowohl die aktiven miRNAs als auch die regulierten mRNAs. Nach Isolierung der gebundenen RNAs konnten mit dieser Methode 72 Gene als Zielgene für KSHV miRNAs identifiziert werden. Viele davon spielen eine wichtige Rolle in unterschiedlichen Prozessen wie Zellzykluskontrolle, in der Apoptose oder der mRNA-Prozessierung. Insgesamt 11 identifizierte Zielgene wurden mit Hilfe von real-time PCRs untersucht und 10 bestätigt. Mittels 3’UTR-Luciferase-Assays wurden 6 davon weiter analysiert und bestätigt. Für die Gene LRRC8D, NHP2L1 und GEMIN8 konnten die zuständigen KSHV miRNAs und die dazugehörigen Bindungsstellen auf dem Transkript identifiziert werden. Bei den letzteren beiden lagen diese interessanterweise nicht wie erwartet in der 3’UTR, sondern in dem kodierenden Bereich

    Widespread context dependency of microRNA-mediated regulation

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    Gene expression is regulated in a context-dependent, cell-type specific manner. Condition-specific transcription is dependent on the presence of transcription factors (TFs) that can activate or inhibit its target genes (global context). Additional factors such as chromatin structure, histone or DNA modifications also influence the activity of individual target genes (individual context). The role of the global and individual context for post-transcriptional regulation has not systematically been investigated on a large-scale and is poorly understood. Here we show that global and individual context-dependency is a pervasive feature of microRNA-mediated regulation. Our comprehensive and highly consistent dataset from several high-throughput technologies (PAR-CLIP, RIP-Chip, 4sU-tagging and SILAC) provides strong evidence that context-dependent microRNA target sites (CDTS) are as frequent and functionally relevant as constitutive target sites (CTS). Furthermore, we found the global context to be insufficient to explain the CDTS and that flanking sequence motifs provide individual context that is an equally important factor. Our results demonstrate that, similar to TF-mediated regulation, global and individual context-dependency are prevalent in microRNA-mediated gene regulation implying a much more complex post-transcriptional regulatory network than currently known. The necessary tools to unravel post-transcriptional regulations and mechanisms need to be much more involved and much more data will be needed for particular cell types and cellular conditions to understand microRNA-mediated regulation and the context-dependent post-transcriptional regulatory network

    Abortive Lytic Reactivation of KSHV in CBF1/CSL Deficient Human B Cell Lines

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    Since Kaposi's sarcoma associated herpesvirus (KSHV) establishes a persistent infection in human B cells, B cells are a critical compartment for viral pathogenesis. RTA, the replication and transcription activator of KSHV, can either directly bind to DNA or use cellular DNA binding factors including CBF1/CSL as DNA adaptors. In addition, the viral factors LANA1 and vIRF4 are known to bind to CBF1/CSL and modulate RTA activity. To analyze the contribution of CBF1/CSL to reactivation in human B cells, we have successfully infected DG75 and DG75 CBF1/CSL knock-out cell lines with recombinant KSHV.219 and selected for viral maintenance by selective medium. Both lines maintained the virus irrespective of their CBF1/CSL status. Viral reactivation could be initiated in both B cell lines but viral genome replication was attenuated in CBF1/CSL deficient lines, which also failed to produce detectable levels of infectious virus. Induction of immediate early, early and late viral genes was impaired in CBF1/CSL deficient cells at multiple stages of the reactivation process but could be restored to wild-type levels by reintroduction of CBF1/CSL. To identify additional viral RTA target genes, which are directly controlled by CBF1/CSL, we analyzed promoters of a selected subset of viral genes. We show that the induction of the late viral genes ORF29a and ORF65 by RTA is strongly enhanced by CBF1/CSL. Orthologs of ORF29a in other herpesviruses are part of the terminase complex required for viral packaging. ORF65 encodes the small capsid protein essential for capsid shell assembly. Our study demonstrates for the first time that in human B cells viral replication can be initiated in the absence of CBF1/CSL but the reactivation process is severely attenuated at all stages and does not lead to virion production. Thus, CBF1/CSL acts as a global hub which is used by the virus to coordinate the lytic cascade

    Kaposi's Sarcoma Herpesvirus microRNAs Target Caspase 3 and Regulate Apoptosis

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    Kaposi's sarcoma herpesvirus (KSHV) encodes a cluster of twelve micro (mi)RNAs, which are abundantly expressed during both latent and lytic infection. Previous studies reported that KSHV is able to inhibit apoptosis during latent infection; we thus tested the involvement of viral miRNAs in this process. We found that both HEK293 epithelial cells and DG75 cells stably expressing KSHV miRNAs were protected from apoptosis. Potential cellular targets that were significantly down-regulated upon KSHV miRNAs expression were identified by microarray profiling. Among them, we validated by luciferase reporter assays, quantitative PCR and western blotting caspase 3 (Casp3), a critical factor for the control of apoptosis. Using site-directed mutagenesis, we found that three KSHV miRNAs, miR-K12-1, 3 and 4-3p, were responsible for the targeting of Casp3. Specific inhibition of these miRNAs in KSHV-infected cells resulted in increased expression levels of endogenous Casp3 and enhanced apoptosis. Altogether, our results suggest that KSHV miRNAs directly participate in the previously reported inhibition of apoptosis by the virus, and are thus likely to play a role in KSHV-induced oncogenesis

    Systematic analysis of viral and cellular microRNA targets in cells latently infected with human γ-herpesviruses by RISC immunoprecipitation assay

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    International audienceThe mRNA targets of microRNAs (miRNAs) can be identified by immunoprecipitation of Argonaute (Ago) protein-containing RNA-induced silencing complexes (RISCs) followed by microarray analysis (RIP-Chip). Here we used Ago2-based RIP-Chip to identify transcripts targeted by Kaposi's sarcoma-associated herpesvirus (KSHV) miRNAs (n = 114), Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) miRNAs (n = 44), and cellular miRNAs (n = 2337) in six latently infected or stably transduced human B cell lines. Of the six KSHV miRNA targets chosen for validation, four showed regulation via their 3'UTR, while two showed regulation via binding sites within coding sequences. Two genes governing cellular transport processes (TOMM22 and IPO7) were confirmed to be targeted by EBV miRNAs. A significant number of viral miRNA targets were upregulated in infected cells, suggesting that viral miRNAs preferentially target cellular genes induced upon infection. Transcript half-life both of cellular and viral miRNA targets negatively correlated with recruitment to RISC complexes, indicating that RIP-Chip offers a quantitative estimate of miRNA function

    Salmonella transforms follicle-associated epithelial cells into M cells to promote intestinal invasion

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    Salmonella Typhimurium specifically targets antigen-sampling microfold (M) cells to translocate across the gut epithelium. Although M cells represent a small proportion of the specialized follicular-associated epithelium (FAE) overlying mucosa-associated lymphoid tissues, their density increases during Salmonella infection, but the underlying molecular mechanism remains unclear. Using in vitro and in vivo infection models, we demonstrate that the S. Typhimurium type III effector protein SopB induces an epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) of FAE enterocytes into M cells. This cellular transdifferentiation is a result of SopB-dependent activation of Wnt/β-catenin signaling leading to induction of both receptor activator of NF-κB ligand (RANKL) and its receptor RANK. The autocrine activation of RelB-expressing FAE enterocytes by RANKL/RANK induces the EMT-regulating transcription factor Slug that marks epithelial transdifferentiation into M cells. Thus, via the activity of a single secreted effector, S. Typhimurium transforms primed epithelial cells into M cells to promote host colonization and invasion
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