| Literature DB >> 22405519 |
James P White1, Richard E Lloyd.
Abstract
Virus infection initiates a number of cellular stress responses that modulate gene regulation and compartmentalization of RNA. Viruses must control host gene expression and the localization of viral RNAs to be successful parasites. RNA granules such as stress granules and processing bodies (PBs) contain translationally silenced messenger ribonucleoproteins (mRNPs) and serve as extensions of translation regulation in cells, storing transiently repressed mRNAs. New reports show a growing number of virus families modulate RNA granule function to maximize replication efficiency. This review summarizes recent advances in understanding the relationship between viruses and mRNA stress granules in animal cells and will discuss important questions that remain in this emerging field.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22405519 PMCID: PMC3322245 DOI: 10.1016/j.tim.2012.02.001
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trends Microbiol ISSN: 0966-842X Impact factor: 17.079
Figure 1Stress granules (SGs) are intermediate compartments in mRNA metabolism. Inhibition of translation initiation leads to the disassembly of polysomes and the formation of stalled 48S initiation complexes. These messenger ribonucleoprotein (mRNP) complexes are recognized via an unknown mechanism and are remodeled, marking them for inclusion in SGs despite continued association with pro-translation initiation factors. SG components such as RasGAP SH3-domain binding protein 1 (G3BP1), Fragile X mental retardation protein (FMRP) and others are post-translationally modified, and small dispersed aggregates of remodeled mRNP complexes are transported by microtubule-associated motor proteins into larger SGs. The brackets around this central step indicate that it is not currently known which process is initially undertaken. SGs are thought to be sites of storage of stabilized mRNA, although it is known that mRNA can be released for translation or transported to processing bodies (PBs) for active decay by an unknown mechanism. Multiple virus systems (in red) have been found to interfere with the process of SG and PB formation and the points of interaction with the process are indicated. Stress granules also dock with PBs where mRNP modification and cargo exchange takes place. Initiation factors are lost except eukaryotic translation initiation factor (eIF4E) and deadenylase complexes (Pan2/3, Caf1/Ccr4) decapping complexes (Dcp1a/2) and exonucleases (Xrn1) become associated. Some viruses inhibit PB formation as indicated and poliovirus (PV) antagonizes specific PB components 43, 45, 71.
Stress granule mechanistic processes that viruses can potentially modulatea
| Process | How it can be modulated | Refs. |
|---|---|---|
| Inhibit translation ternary complex formation | Phosphorylate eIF2α via activation of PKR, HRI, GCN2 and PERK | |
| Block eIF4F function (scanning) | Hippuristanol inhibition of eIF4A, viral cleavage of eIF4G | |
| G3BP | RNA-binding protein can self-oligomerize, may sequester mRNA in SG, overexpression of mutants blocks SG formation | |
| TIA-1, TIAR | RNA-binding protein can self-oligomerize, may sequester mRNA in SG, overexpression of mutants blocks SG formation | |
| HDAC6 | Deacetylase function and SG infiltration associated with SG assembly | |
| Microtubule transport | Required for assembly but not maintenance | |
| O-GlcNAc on ribosomal proteins | Required for SG assembly, multiple proteins modified | |
| Acetylation | HDAC6 function associated with SG assembly | |
| Methylation | Methylation is recruitment tag that controls SG assembly | |
| Phosphorylation/dephosphorylation | G3BP dephosphorylation required for SG assembly | |
| Ubiquitination | SGs contain ubiquitinated proteins, Ub-binding domain of HDAC6 required for localization to SGs | |
| OGFOD | Interacts with G3BP, HRI, regulates eIF2α phosphorylation | |
Abbreviated list only, particularly in terms of factors that infiltrate SGs.
Phenotypes of virus–SG interactions
| Virus | Phenotype | Refs |
|---|---|---|
| Mammalian orthoreovirus | SG formation induced by viral binding | |
| Semliki Forest Virus | SG formation corresponds with host shutoff | |
| Hepatitis C virus | SG components localize to HCV core-containing structures | |
| Poliovirus | SGs induced early, correlated with translation shutoff | |
| Poliovirus | SG inhibition due to G3BP1 cleavage | |
| Poliovirus | Virus-induced vs. stress-induced SGs contain unique components | |
| Poliovirus | G3BP cleavage unlinks TIA-1 aggregates from stalled initiation complexes | |
| Junin virus | Inhibition of eIF2α phosphorylation and SG by nucleoprotein N and GPC | |
| Rotavirus | RV infection induces extended eIF2α phosphorylation; SGs not induced | |
| Cardiovirus | Inhibition due to expression of the L protein | |
| West Nile and dengue virus | TIA-1 interaction with viral genome inhibits SG formation | |
| Cricket paralysis virus | Poly(A) mRNA form foci with PABP that lack other protein markers | |
| Herpes simplex 1 | TIA-1 localizes to cytoplasm but not SGs; Vhs mutant virus forms SGs | |
| Herpes simplex 1 | Vhs mutant viruses induce SGs in cell type-dependent manner | |
| HIV-1 | Staufen–Gag interaction block SGs in favor of encapsidation | |
| HTLV-1 | Tax protein sequesters HDAC6 from required SG functions | |
| Influenza A virus | NS1 protein blocks eIF2α phosphorylation and SG formation | |
| Respiratory syncytial virus | SG induction associated with increased viral replication | |
| Respiratory syncytial virus | SG induction is PKR-dependent | |
| Respiratory syncytial virus | No SGs in wild-type infection, only in trailer-deficient mutant viruses | |
| Mouse hepatitis coronavirus | SG formation corresponds to translation inhibition | |
| Transmissible gastroenteritis virus | PTB localization to SGs corresponds to increased replication | |
| Mammalian orthoreovirus | SG induction is strain-specific and correlates with host shutoff | |
| Vaccinia virus | SG-like bodies form in proximity to replication factories promoting translation | |
| Vaccinia virus | Antiviral SG bodies form with ΔE3L mutant virus | |
Figure 2Inhibition of stress granule (SG) formation by several viral systems has been characterized in more detail and two types of mechanisms are illustrated: cleavage or sequestration of SG components. Cleavage of RasGAP SH3-domain binding protein 1 (G3BP1) by poliovirus (PV) 3C proteinase inhibits the inclusion of translation initiation factors, mRNA binding proteins and mRNA in SGs without modulating the ability of T-cell restricted intracellular antigen 1 (TIA-1) and TIA-1-related protein (TIAR) to aggregate. Human T-cell leukemia virus type-1 (HTLV-1) Tax protein interacts with histone deacetylase 6 (HDAC6) to inhibit SG formation, whereas the HIV Gag protein binds to Staufen1. The 3′ stem loop present in flavivirus negative sense RNA binds and sequesters TIA-1 and TIAR, leading to the inhibition of SGs. Through unknown mechanisms, cricket paralysis virus (CrPV) prevents accumulation of Drosophila homologs of TIA1 (Rox8) and G3BP (Rin) in SGs.