Literature DB >> 17551004

Involvement of host cellular multivesicular body functions in hepatitis B virus budding.

Tokiko Watanabe1, Ericka M Sorensen, Akira Naito, Meghan Schott, Seungtaek Kim, Paul Ahlquist.   

Abstract

Hepatitis B virus (HBV) is a major human pathogen that chronically infects approximately 350 million people, causing liver disease and liver cancer. HBV virions bud into an endoplasmic reticulum (ER)-associated intracellular compartment, but the mechanisms of HBV assembly, budding, and release remain poorly understood. Budding of retroviruses and some other enveloped RNA viruses from plasma membranes requires host functions involved in protein sorting into late endosomal multivesicular bodies (MVBs). To determine whether budding of DNA-containing HBV virions at intracellular membranes also involves MVB functions, we used immunofluorescence to show that, in human hepatoma cells, HBV envelope protein colocalizes with MVB proteins AIP1/ALIX and VPS4B. We also found that a dominant negative (DN) AIP1 mutant inhibited production and/or release of enveloped virions without significant effects on intracellular nucleocapsid formation, whereas DN VPS4B inhibited both nucleocapsid production and budding. By contrast, DN AIP1 and VPS4 had no effect on the efficiency of release of enveloped, nucleocapsid-lacking HBV subviral particles, which are produced in vast excess over virions, and dramatically increased the release of unenveloped, naked nucleocapsids by an apparently nonlytic route. Thus, host MVB functions are required for efficient budding and release of enveloped HBV virions and may be a valuable target for HBV control. Moreover, HBV enveloped virions, enveloped subviral particles, and unenveloped nucleocapsids are all released by distinct pathways with separate host factor requirements.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17551004      PMCID: PMC1891263          DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0704000104

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A        ISSN: 0027-8424            Impact factor:   11.205


  62 in total

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4.  Overexpression of the N-terminal domain of TSG101 inhibits HIV-1 budding by blocking late domain function.

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5.  Production of hepatitis B virus by a differentiated human hepatoma cell line after transfection with cloned circular HBV DNA.

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Journal:  Cell       Date:  2003-09-19       Impact factor: 41.582

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  105 in total

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6.  Functional interplay between a virus and the ESCRT machinery in archaea.

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7.  Hepatitis B virus molecular biology and pathogenesis.

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8.  No strings attached: the ESCRT machinery in viral budding and cytokinesis.

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9.  The Phe105 loop of Alix Bro1 domain plays a key role in HIV-1 release.

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10.  Exosomes Exploit the Virus Entry Machinery and Pathway To Transmit Alpha Interferon-Induced Antiviral Activity.

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