Literature DB >> 15367595

Increased ubiquitination and other covariant phenotypes attributed to a strain- and temperature-dependent defect of reovirus core protein mu2.

Cathy L Miller1, John S L Parker, Jason B Dinoso, Caroline D S Piggott, Michel J Perron, Max L Nibert.   

Abstract

Reovirus replication and assembly are thought to occur within cytoplasmic inclusion bodies, which we call viral factories. A strain-dependent difference in the morphology of these structures reflects more effective microtubule association by the mu2 core proteins of some viral strains, which form filamentous factories, than by those of others, which form globular factories. For this report, we identified and characterized another strain-dependent attribute of the factories, namely, the extent to which they colocalized with conjugated ubiquitin (cUb). Among 16 laboratory strains and field isolates, the extent of factory costaining for cUb paralleled factory morphology, with globular strains exhibiting higher levels by far. In reassortant viruses, factory costaining for cUb mapped primarily to the mu2-encoding M1 genome segment, although contributions by the lambda3- and lambda2-encoding L1 and L2 genome segments were also evident. Immunoprecipitations revealed that cells infected with globular strains contained higher levels of ubiquitinated mu2 (Ub-mu2). In M1-transfected cells, cUb commonly colocalized with aggregates formed by mu2 from globular strains but not with microtubules coated by mu2 from filamentous strains, and immunoprecipitations revealed that mu2 from globular strains displayed higher levels of Ub-mu2. Allelic changes at mu2 residue 208 determined these differences. Nocodazole treatment of cells infected with filamentous strains resulted in globular factories that still showed low levels of costaining for cUb, indicating that higher levels of costaining were not a direct result of decreased microtubule association. The factories of globular strains, or their mu2 proteins expressed in transfected cells, were furthermore shown to gain microtubule association and to lose colocalization with cUb when cells were grown at reduced temperature. From the sum of these findings, we propose that mu2 from globular strains is more prone to temperature-dependent misfolding and as a result displays increased aggregation, increased levels of Ub-mu2, and decreased association with microtubules. Because so few of the viral strains formed factories that were regularly associated with ubiquitinated proteins, we conclude that reovirus factories are generally distinct from cellular aggresomes.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15367595      PMCID: PMC516405          DOI: 10.1128/JVI.78.19.10291-10302.2004

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Virol        ISSN: 0022-538X            Impact factor:   5.103


  48 in total

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Authors:  Cathy L Miller; Teresa J Broering; John S L Parker; Michelle M Arnold; Max L Nibert
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Review 4.  Lessons from viral manipulation of protein disposal pathways.

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5.  RNA synthesis in a cage--structural studies of reovirus polymerase lambda3.

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9.  Reovirus sigma NS and mu NS proteins form cytoplasmic inclusion structures in the absence of viral infection.

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  19 in total

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3.  A Cytoplasmic RNA Virus Alters the Function of the Cell Splicing Protein SRSF2.

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4.  Polymorphisms in the Most Oncolytic Reovirus Strain Confer Enhanced Cell Attachment, Transcription, and Single-Step Replication Kinetics.

Authors:  Adil Mohamed; James R Smiley; Maya Shmulevitz
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5.  A single-amino-acid polymorphism in reovirus protein μ2 determines repression of interferon signaling and modulates myocarditis.

Authors:  Susan C Irvin; Jennifer Zurney; Laura S Ooms; James D Chappell; Terence S Dermody; Barbara Sherry
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6.  Amino acids 78 and 79 of Mammalian Orthoreovirus protein µNS are necessary for stress granule localization, core protein λ2 interaction, and de novo virus replication.

Authors:  Kate Carroll; Craig Hastings; Cathy L Miller
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8.  Identification of functional domains in reovirus replication proteins muNS and mu2.

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9.  Mammalian orthoreovirus particles induce and are recruited into stress granules at early times postinfection.

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10.  Reovirus replication protein μ2 influences cell tropism by promoting particle assembly within viral inclusions.

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