Montero Hilda, Rojas Margarito, Arias Carlos F, López Susana
Instituto de Biotecnología, UNAM, Avenida Universidad 2001, Colonia Chamilpa, Cuernavaca, Morelos 62210, Mexico.
J Virol. 2008 Feb;82(3):1496-504. doi: 10.1128/JVI.01779-07. Epub 2007 Nov 21.
Early during the infection process, rotavirus causes the shutoff of cell protein synthesis, with the nonstructural viral protein NSP3 playing a vital role in the phenomenon. In this work, we have found that the translation initiation factor 2alpha (eIF2alpha) in infected cells becomes phosphorylated early after virus infection and remains in this state throughout the virus replication cycle, leading to a further inhibition of cell protein synthesis. Under these restrictive conditions, however, the viral proteins and some cellular proteins are efficiently translated. The phosphorylation of eIF2alpha was shown to depend on the synthesis of three viral proteins, VP2, NSP2, and NSP5, since in cells in which the expression of any of these three proteins was knocked down by RNA interference, the translation factor was not phosphorylated. The modification of this factor is, however, not needed for the replication of the virus, since mutant cells that produce a nonphosphorylatable eIF2alpha sustained virus replication as efficiently as wild-type cells. In uninfected cells, the phosphorylation of eIF2alpha induces the formation of stress granules, aggregates of stalled translation complexes that prevent the translation of mRNAs. In rotavirus-infected cells, even though eIF2alpha is phosphorylated these granules are not formed, suggesting that the virus prevents the assembly of these structures to allow the translation of its mRNAs. Under these conditions, some of the cellular proteins that form part of these structures were found to change their intracellular localization, with some of them having dramatic changes, like the poly(A) binding protein, which relocates from the cytoplasm to the nucleus in infected cells, a relocation that depends on the viral protein NSP3.
在感染过程早期,轮状病毒会导致细胞蛋白质合成停止,非结构病毒蛋白NSP3在这一现象中起着至关重要的作用。在这项研究中,我们发现受感染细胞中的翻译起始因子2α(eIF2α)在病毒感染后早期就会发生磷酸化,并在整个病毒复制周期中保持这种状态,从而进一步抑制细胞蛋白质合成。然而,在这些限制性条件下,病毒蛋白和一些细胞蛋白仍能有效翻译。结果表明,eIF2α的磷酸化依赖于三种病毒蛋白VP2、NSP2和NSP5的合成,因为在通过RNA干扰敲低这三种蛋白中任何一种蛋白表达的细胞中,翻译因子不会发生磷酸化。然而,这种因子的修饰对于病毒复制并非必需,因为产生不可磷酸化eIF2α的突变细胞能够像野生型细胞一样有效地维持病毒复制。在未感染的细胞中,eIF2α的磷酸化会诱导应激颗粒的形成,应激颗粒是停滞翻译复合物的聚集体,会阻止mRNA的翻译。在轮状病毒感染的细胞中,尽管eIF2α发生了磷酸化,但这些颗粒并未形成,这表明病毒会阻止这些结构的组装,从而使其mRNA得以翻译。在这些条件下,发现构成这些结构一部分的一些细胞蛋白会改变其细胞内定位,其中一些蛋白会发生显著变化,比如多聚腺苷酸结合蛋白,它在感染细胞中会从细胞质重新定位到细胞核,这种重新定位依赖于病毒蛋白NSP3。