| Literature DB >> 27376632 |
Weinan Zheng1, Shuaishuai Cao1, Can Chen1,2, Jing Li1, Shuang Zhang1, Jingwen Jiang1,3, Yange Niu1,2, Wenhui Fan1, Yun Li1, Yuhai Bi1, George F Gao1,2,4,5, Lei Sun1, Wenjun Liu1.
Abstract
Influenza A virus evades host antiviral defense through hijacking innate immunity by its non-structural protein 1 (NS1). By using mass spectrometry, threonine 80 (T80) was identified as a novel phosphorylated residue in the NS1 of the influenza virus A/WSN/1933(H1N1). By generating recombinant influenza viruses encoding NS1 T80 mutants, the roles of this phosphorylation site were characterized during viral replication. The T80E (phosphomimetic) mutant attenuated virus replication, whereas the T80A (non-phosphorylatable) mutant did not. Similar phenotypes were observed for these mutants in a mouse model experiment. In further study, the T80E mutant decreased the binding capacity between NS1 and viral nucleoprotein (NP), leading to impaired viral ribonucleoprotein (vRNP)-mediated viral transcription. The T80E mutant was also unable to inhibit interferon (IFN) production by reducing the binding affinity between NS1 and retinoic acid-induced gene 1 protein (RIG-I), causing attenuation of virus replication. Taken together, the present study reveals that T80 phosphorylation of NS1 reduced influenza virus replication through controlling RIG-I-mediated IFN production and vRNP activity.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27376632 DOI: 10.1111/cmi.12643
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Microbiol ISSN: 1462-5814 Impact factor: 3.715