Campos Rafael K, Wong Benjamin, Xie Xuping, Lu Yi-Fan, Shi Pei-Yong, Pompon Julien, Garcia-Blanco Mariano A, Bradrick Shelton S
Department of Molecular Genetics and Microbiology, Center for RNA Biology, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina, USA.
Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston, Texas, USA.
J Virol. 2017 Jan 31;91(4). doi: 10.1128/JVI.01706-16. Print 2017 Feb 15.
The Flavivirus genus contains several arthropod-borne viruses that pose global health threats, including dengue viruses (DENV), yellow fever virus (YFV), and Zika virus (ZIKV). In order to understand how these viruses replicate in human cells, we previously conducted genome-scale RNA interference screens to identify candidate host factors. In these screens, we identified ribosomal proteins RPLP1 and RPLP2 (RPLP1/2) to be among the most crucial putative host factors required for DENV and YFV infection. RPLP1/2 are phosphoproteins that bind the ribosome through interaction with another ribosomal protein, RPLP0, to form a structure termed the ribosomal stalk. RPLP1/2 were validated as essential host factors for DENV, YFV, and ZIKV infection in two human cell lines: A549 lung adenocarcinoma and HuH-7 hepatoma cells, and for productive DENV infection of Aedes aegypti mosquitoes. Depletion of RPLP1/2 caused moderate cell-line-specific effects on global protein synthesis, as determined by metabolic labeling. In A549 cells, global translation was increased, while in HuH-7 cells it was reduced, albeit both of these effects were modest. In contrast, RPLP1/2 knockdown strongly reduced early DENV protein accumulation, suggesting a requirement for RPLP1/2 in viral translation. Furthermore, knockdown of RPLP1/2 reduced levels of DENV structural proteins expressed from an exogenous transgene. We postulate that these ribosomal proteins are required for efficient translation elongation through the viral open reading frame. In summary, this work identifies RPLP1/2 as critical flaviviral host factors required for translation.
Flaviviruses cause important diseases in humans. Examples of mosquito-transmitted flaviviruses include dengue, yellow fever and Zika viruses. Viruses require a plethora of cellular factors to infect cells, and the ribosome plays an essential role in all viral infections. The ribosome is a complex macromolecular machine composed of RNA and proteins and it is responsible for protein synthesis. We identified two specific ribosomal proteins that are strictly required for flavivirus infection of human cells and mosquitoes: RPLP1 and RPLP2 (RPLP1/2). These proteins are part of a structure known as the ribosomal stalk and help orchestrate the elongation phase of translation. We show that flaviviruses are particularly dependent on the function of RPLP1/2. Our findings suggest that ribosome composition is an important factor for virus translation and may represent a regulatory layer for translation of specific cellular mRNAs.
黄病毒属包含几种节肢动物传播病毒,这些病毒对全球健康构成威胁,包括登革病毒(DENV)、黄热病毒(YFV)和寨卡病毒(ZIKV)。为了了解这些病毒如何在人类细胞中复制,我们之前进行了全基因组规模的RNA干扰筛选,以确定候选宿主因子。在这些筛选中,我们确定核糖体蛋白RPLP1和RPLP2(RPLP1/2)是DENV和YFV感染所需的最关键的假定宿主因子。RPLP1/2是磷蛋白,通过与另一种核糖体蛋白RPLP0相互作用结合核糖体,形成一种称为核糖体柄的结构。RPLP1/2在两种人类细胞系(A549肺腺癌细胞和HuH-7肝癌细胞)以及埃及伊蚊的DENV有效感染中被验证为DENV、YFV和ZIKV感染的必需宿主因子。通过代谢标记测定,RPLP1/2的缺失对整体蛋白质合成产生中度细胞系特异性影响。在A549细胞中,整体翻译增加,而在HuH-7细胞中则减少,尽管这两种影响都较小。相比之下,RPLP1/2的敲低强烈降低了DENV早期蛋白积累,表明病毒翻译需要RPLP1/2。此外,RPLP1/2的敲低降低了从外源转基因表达的DENV结构蛋白水平。我们推测这些核糖体蛋白是通过病毒开放阅读框进行有效翻译延伸所必需的。总之,这项工作确定RPLP1/2是翻译所需的关键黄病毒宿主因子。
黄病毒在人类中引起重要疾病。蚊媒传播的黄病毒例子包括登革热、黄热病和寨卡病毒。病毒感染细胞需要大量细胞因子,核糖体在所有病毒感染中起重要作用。核糖体是由RNA和蛋白质组成的复杂大分子机器,负责蛋白质合成。我们确定了人类细胞和蚊子的黄病毒感染严格需要的两种特定核糖体蛋白:RPLP1和RPLP2(RPLP1/2)。这些蛋白质是称为核糖体柄结构的一部分,有助于协调翻译的延伸阶段。我们表明黄病毒特别依赖RPLP1/2的功能。我们的发现表明核糖体组成是病毒翻译的重要因素,可能代表特定细胞mRNA翻译的调控层。