32 research outputs found

    Vesicular Egress of Non-Enveloped Lytic Parvoviruses Depends on Gelsolin Functioning

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    The autonomous parvovirus Minute Virus of Mice (MVM) induces specific changes in the cytoskeleton filaments of infected permissive cells, causing in particular the degradation of actin fibers and the generation of ā€œactin patches.ā€ This is attributed to a virus-induced imbalance between the polymerization factor N-WASP (Wiscott-Aldrich syndrome protein) and gelsolin, a multifunctional protein cleaving actin filaments. Here, the focus is on the involvement of gelsolin in parvovirus propagation and virus-induced actin processing. Gelsolin activity was knocked-down, and consequences thereof were determined for virus replication and egress and for actin network integrity. Though not required for virus replication or progeny particle assembly, gelsolin was found to control MVM (and related H1-PV) transport from the nucleus to the cell periphery and release into the culture medium. Gelsolin-dependent actin degradation and progeny virus release were both controlled by (NS1)/CKIIĪ±, a recently identified complex between a cellular protein kinase and a MVM non-structural protein. Furthermore, the export of newly synthesized virions through the cytoplasm appeared to be mediated by (virus-modified) lysomal/late endosomal vesicles. By showing that MVM release, like entry, is guided by the cytoskeleton and mediated by vesicles, these results challenge the current view that egress of non-enveloped lytic viruses is a passive process

    NS1 Interaction with CKIIĪ±: Novel Protein Complex Mediating Parvovirus-Induced Cytotoxicity

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    During a productive infection, the prototype strain of the parvovirus minute virus of mice (MVMp) induces dramatic morphological alterations in permissive A9 fibroblasts, culminating in cell lysis at the end of infection. These cytopathic effects (CPE) result from rearrangements and destruction of the cytoskeletal micro- and intermediate filaments, while other structures such as the nuclear lamina and particularly the microtubule network remain protected throughout the infection (J. P. F. NĆ¼esch et al., Virology 331:159-174, 2005). In order to unravel the mechanism(s) by which parvoviruses trigger CPE, we searched for NS1 interaction partners by differential affinity chromatography, using distinct NS1 mutants debilitated specifically for this function. Thereby, we isolated an NS1 partner polypeptide, whose interaction with NS1 correlated with the competence of the viral product for CPE induction, and further identified it by tandem mass spectrometry and Western blotting analyses to consist of the catalytic subunit of casein kinase II, CKIIĪ±. This interaction of NS1 with CKIIĪ± suggested interference by the viral protein with intracellular signaling. Using permanent cell lines expressing dominant-negative CKIIĪ± mutants, we were able to show that this kinase activity was indeed specifically involved in parvoviral CPE and progeny particle release. Furthermore, the NS1/CKIIĪ± complex proved to be able to specifically phosphorylate viral capsids, indicating a mediator function of NS1 for CKII activity and specificity, at least in vitro. Altogether our data suggest that parvovirus-induced CPE is mediated by NS1 interference with intracellular CKII signaling

    Regulation of Minute Virus of Mice NS1 Replicative Functions by Atypical PKCĪ» In Vivo

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    Minute virus of mice NS1 protein is a multifunctional phosphoprotein endowed with a variety of enzymatic and regulatory activities necessary for progeny virus particle production. To regulate all of its different functions in the course of a viral infection, NS1 has been proposed to be modulated by posttranslational modifications, in particular, phosphorylation. Indeed, it was shown that the NS1 phosphorylation pattern is altered during the infectious cycle and that the biochemical profile of the protein is dependent on the phosphorylation state of the polypeptide. Moreover, in vitro approaches have identified members of the protein kinase C (PKC) family, in particular, atypical PKC, as regulators of viral DNA replication through the phosphorylation of NS1 residues T435 and S473, thereby activating the protein for DNA unwinding activities. In order to substantiate these findings in vivo, we produced NS1 in the presence of a dominant-negative PKCĪ» mutant and characterized the purified protein in vitro. The NS1 protein produced under these conditions was found to be only partially phosphorylated and as a consequence to be deficient for viral DNA replication. However, it could be rescued for this viral function by treatment with recombinant activated PKCĪ». Our data clearly demonstrate that NS1 is a target for PKCĪ» phosphorylation in vivo and that this modification is essential for the helicase activity of the viral polypeptide. In addition, the phosphorylation of NS1 at residues T435 and S473 appeared to occur mainly in the nucleus, providing further evidence for the involvement of PKCĪ» which, unlike PKCĪ¶, accumulates in the nuclear compartment of infected cells

    Novel PKCĪ· Is Required To Activate Replicative Functions of the Major Nonstructural Protein NS1 of Minute Virus of Mice

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    The multifunctional protein NS1 of minute virus of mice (MVMp) is posttranslationally modified and at least in part regulated by phosphorylation. The atypical lambda isoform of protein kinase C (PKCĪ») phosphorylates residues T435 and S473 in vitro and in vivo, leading directly to an activation of NS1 helicase function, but it is insufficient to activate NS1 for rolling circle replication. The present study identifies an additional cellular protein kinase phosphorylating and regulating NS1 activities. We show in vitro that the recombinant novel PKCĪ· phosphorylates NS1 and in consequence is able to activate the viral polypeptide in concert with PKCĪ» for rolling circle replication. Moreover, this role of PKCĪ· was confirmed in vivo. We thereby created stably transfected A9 mouse fibroblasts, a typical MVMp-permissive host cell line with Flag-tagged constitutively active or inactive PKCĪ· mutants, in order to alter the activity of the NS1 regulating kinase. Indeed, tryptic phosphopeptide analyses of metabolically (32)P-labeled NS1 expressed in the presence of a dominant-negative mutant, PKCĪ·DN, showed a lack of distinct NS1 phosphorylation events. This correlates with impaired synthesis of viral DNA replication intermediates, as detected by Southern blotting at the level of the whole cell population and by BrdU incorporation at the single-cell level. Remarkably, MVM infection triggers an accumulation of endogenous PKCĪ· in the nuclear periphery, suggesting that besides being a target for PKCĪ·, parvovirus infections may also affect the regulation of this NS1 regulating kinase. Altogether, our results underline the tight interconnection between PKC-mediated signaling and the parvoviral life cycle

    Ezrin-Radixin-Moesin Family Proteins Are Involved in Parvovirus Replication and Spreadingā–æ

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    The propagation of autonomous parvoviruses is strongly dependent on the phosphorylation of the major nonstructural protein NS1 by members of the protein kinase C (PKC) family. Minute virus of mice (MVM) replication is accompanied by changes in the overall phosphorylation pattern of NS1, which is newly modified at consensus PKC sites. These changes result, at least in part, from the ability of MVM to modulate the PDK-1/PKC pathway, leading to activation and redistribution of both PDK-1 and PKCĪ·. We show that proteins of the ezrin-radixin-moesin (ERM) family are essential for virus propagation and spreading through their functions as adaptors for PKCĪ·. MVM infection led to redistribution of radixin and moesin in the cell, resulting in increased colocalization of these proteins with PKCĪ·. Radixin was found to control the PKCĪ·-driven phosphorylation of NS1 and newly synthesized capsids in vivo. Conversely, radixin phosphorylation and activation were driven by the NS1/CKIIĪ± complex. Altogether, these data argue for ERM proteins being both targets and modulators of parvovirus infection
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