| Literature DB >> 20504340 |
Lijing Sun1, Gun-Viol Hemgård, Sony A Susanto, Manfred Wirth.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The threat of recurring influenza pandemics caused by new viral strains and the occurrence of escape mutants necessitate the search for potent therapeutic targets. The dependence of viruses on cellular factors provides a weak-spot in the viral multiplication strategy and a means to interfere with viral multiplication.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20504340 PMCID: PMC2889940 DOI: 10.1186/1743-422X-7-108
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Virol J ISSN: 1743-422X Impact factor: 4.099
Figure 1Inhibition of influenza A/PR/8/34 multiplication in MDCK Cav-1 knock-down cells. Titres of A/PR8 infected MDCK Cav-1 knock-down cells at day 13-17 after RNAi vector treatment and infection with influenza A/PR/8/34. Standard errors are depicted. Analysis using a paired t-test (n = 9) revealed that the 1,5 to 3 fold reduction in titres compared to MDCK control cells is statistically highly significant (p > 0.001).
Figure 2Inhibition of influenza A/PR/8/34 multiplication in MDCK cells by means of a dominant-negative Cav-1 mutant. Top: Relative titres of MDCK cells expressing myc-tagged dominant-negative caveolin-1 (SD), wild-type (wt) Cav-1 cDNA or mock-transfected cells (Ctrl) 24 h after infection with influenza A/PR8 (m.o.i. = 1) and normalisation to wt MDCK infection (100%). Results of three independent experiments are shown. Bottom: Immunodetection of endogenous, myc-tagged wild-type (wt) and mutant caveolin-1 (SD) in transfected MDCK. Relative protein levels are indicated (endogeneous Cav-1 = 100%). Cav-1 appears in the two known isoforms (Cav-1α 24 kDa; Cav-1β 21 kDa), the β-isoform is missing 31 aminoterminal residues of the Cav-1 protein.
Cav-1 interactions with viral proteins
| Virus family | Virus | Protein | Protein function | Type of interaction with protein partner | Type of interaction with Cav-1 | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| HIV-1 | gp41 | Transmembrane, fusion | Binding to CBD in HIV-1, but not HIV-2 or SIV | Binding to CSD* | (Benferhat et al., 2008; Hovanessian et al., 2004) | |
| HIV-1 | gp41 | Transmembrane, fusion | Binding to six-helix bundle | Binding to CSD | (Huang et al., 2007) | |
| HIV-1 | Not known | Not known | Cav-1 membrane insertion domain | (Llano et al., 2002) | ||
| MLV-amphotropic, ecotropic | MA-Gag | Matrix, associates with membranes, link between capsid, plasma membrane, and viral membrane proteins | Binding mediated by a CBD in MA, interaction locates MA to lipid rafts domains in PM | Interaction with CSD*† | (Beer and Wirth, 2004; Yu et al., 2006) | |
| SARS | ORF3a | Not known, Functioning in Golgi localization? | Binding to several CBDs | Not known, interaction with CSD likely | (Padhan et al., 2007) | |
| Influenza A virus human | M2 | Early phase: Ion channel, viroporin | Binding. Protein regions presumably CBD aa47-55 | Binding to CSD*† | This investigation | |
| Influenza A virus human | HA | Receptor binding | Colocalization in perinuclear regions | (Scheiffele et al., 1998) | ||
| RSV | ? | ? | Colocalization with internal viral filaments, colocalization at lipid rafts | Binding not specified, redistribution of Cav-1 after phosphorylation | (Brown et al., 2002; Brown, Rixon, and Sugrue, 2002; McDonald et al., 2004) | |
| Rotavirus | NSP4 | Ion channel formation, ER and caveolae localization, important for morphogenesis | Binding aa114-135 (enterotoxic peptide) amphipatic helix at the C-terminus | Binding and colocalization, 2 independent binding sites at the N-terminus (aa2-22)and C-terminus (aa161-178) identified, influence on localization or transport? | (Mir et al., 2007; Parr et al., 2006; Storey et al., 2007) | |
*Pull-down experiments with biotinylated CBD-peptides
†Co-immunoprecipitation
‡ ELISA
Figure 3Schematic representation of M2 domains and conservation of a putative caveolin-1 binding domain in human influenza A viruses. A. For reasons of clearness, only a M2 monomer is indicated in the drawing. M2 tetramers function as an ion-pump (residing in a helical domain in the transmembrane region represented by cylinder 1). The C-terminal region is important for virus assembly and budding. A palmitoyl residue (jigsaw line) is linked to cysteine 50. The caveolin-1 binding domain resides in the loop and helical domain (cylinder 2) tilted perpendicularly with respect to the TM domain and is supposed to face the inner leaflet of the membrane. B. Conservation of a putative caveolin-1 binding domain. The core motif of the caveolin-1 binding domain (bold letters F47, Y52, F55) is highly conserved among most subtypes of human influenza A viruses (insert). C. Alignment of M2 (H1N1) sequences. The putative CBD core (bold) and adjacent sequences of influenza A viruses of pandemic H1N1 strains (2009 USA/Mexico, 1977 'Russian flu', 1918 'Spanish flu') were aligned to the M2 region (aa 41-65) of the Puerto Rico strain 8/1934. Conserved residues: asterisks *. Amino acid deviations: faint red.
Figure 4M2 competition decreases influenza A/PR/8/34 titres in MDCK cells. Titres from infected MDCK cells transiently transfected with M2 fusion vectors or mock-Cells were infected with influenza A/PR/8/34 virus 1 d after transfection, infectious titres were determined 1 d later using plaque assays. The average of two independent experiments is shown.
Figure 5Specificity of Cav-1 binding to M2 of human Influenza A virus and the participation of cholesterol. A. Pull-down experiments using biotinylated peptides representing the wt M2 CBD or a mutated sequence where aromatic residues in the CBD were changed to alanine. For Cav-1 detection after Western Blot a rabbit polyclonal antibody was used. B. Co-immunoprecipitation (Co-IP) experiments with pM2PR8-EGFP transfected or A/PR8 virus-infected cells. a. Lysates of pEP24c-transfected MDCK cells were processed for co-immumoprecipitation (polyclonal anti-Cav-1 antibody) followed by Western Blot detection of M2 (14C2). b. (Co-IP) of lysates of pM2PR8-EGFP transfected MDCK cells with or without cholesterol depletion by addition of methyl-β-cyclodextran (MβCD) (+) or mock-treatment (-) by rabbit polyclonal anti-Cav-1 antibody (Co-IP) and monoclonal mouse anti-EGFP antibody (indirect M2 detection) were used. MDCK ID: Lysates from transfected cells processed for immunodetection only. c. Lysates of A/PR8 Virus infected cells were processed for immunodetection (MDCK ID) or co-immunoprecipiation (CoIP) after cholesterol depletion with MBCD (+) or mock-treatment (-). Left panel: CoIP using rabbit anti-Cav-1 pAb and detection with anti-M2 antibody (14C2). Right panel: Co-IP: mouse anti-EGFP mAb.Detection: rabbit anti-Cav-1 pAb.MDCK ID: lysates from infected MDCK cells processed for immuno-detection.