Krishnan Manoj N, Ng Aylwin, Sukumaran Bindu, Gilfoy Felicia D, Uchil Pradeep D, Sultana Hameeda, Brass Abraham L, Adametz Rachel, Tsui Melody, Qian Feng, Montgomery Ruth R, Lev Sima, Mason Peter W, Koski Raymond A, Elledge Stephen J, Xavier Ramnik J, Agaisse Herve, Fikrig Erol
Section of Infectious Diseases, Department of Internal Medicine, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticutt 06520-8031, USA.
Nature. 2008 Sep 11;455(7210):242-5. doi: 10.1038/nature07207.
West Nile virus (WNV), and related flaviviruses such as tick-borne encephalitis, Japanese encephalitis, yellow fever and dengue viruses, constitute a significant global human health problem. However, our understanding of the molecular interaction of such flaviviruses with mammalian host cells is limited. WNV encodes only 10 proteins, implying that it may use many cellular proteins for infection. WNV enters the cytoplasm through pH-dependent endocytosis, undergoes cycles of translation and replication, assembles progeny virions in association with endoplasmic reticulum, and exits along the secretory pathway. RNA interference (RNAi) presents a powerful forward genetics approach to dissect virus-host cell interactions. Here we report the identification of 305 host proteins that affect WNV infection, using a human-genome-wide RNAi screen. Functional clustering of the genes revealed a complex dependence of this virus on host cell physiology, requiring a wide variety of molecules and cellular pathways for successful infection. We further demonstrate a requirement for the ubiquitin ligase CBLL1 in WNV internalization, a post-entry role for the endoplasmic-reticulum-associated degradation pathway in viral infection, and the monocarboxylic acid transporter MCT4 as a viral replication resistance factor. By extending this study to dengue virus, we show that flaviviruses have both overlapping and unique interaction strategies with host cells. This study provides a comprehensive molecular portrait of WNV-human cell interactions that forms a model for understanding single plus-stranded RNA virus infection, and reveals potential antiviral targets.
西尼罗河病毒(WNV)以及相关的黄病毒,如蜱传脑炎病毒、日本脑炎病毒、黄热病毒和登革病毒,构成了一个重大的全球人类健康问题。然而,我们对这类黄病毒与哺乳动物宿主细胞分子相互作用的了解有限。WNV仅编码10种蛋白质,这意味着它可能利用许多细胞蛋白进行感染。WNV通过pH依赖的内吞作用进入细胞质,经历翻译和复制循环,在内质网的参与下组装子代病毒粒子,并沿分泌途径排出。RNA干扰(RNAi)是一种强大的正向遗传学方法,用于剖析病毒与宿主细胞的相互作用。在此,我们报告了使用全人类基因组RNAi筛选鉴定出305种影响WNV感染的宿主蛋白。基因的功能聚类揭示了这种病毒对宿主细胞生理学的复杂依赖性,成功感染需要多种分子和细胞途径。我们进一步证明了泛素连接酶CBLL1在WNV内化中的需求,内质网相关降解途径在病毒感染中的进入后作用,以及单羧酸转运蛋白MCT4作为病毒复制抗性因子的作用。通过将这项研究扩展到登革病毒,我们表明黄病毒与宿主细胞既有重叠又有独特的相互作用策略。这项研究提供了WNV与人类细胞相互作用的全面分子图谱,形成了理解单正链RNA病毒感染的模型,并揭示了潜在的抗病毒靶点。