| Literature DB >> 29234321 |
Abstract
Viruses are suspected of significant roles in autoimmune diseases but the mechanisms are unclear. We get some insight by considering demands a virus places on host cells. Viruses not only require production of their own proteins, RNA and/or DNA, but also production of additional cellular machinery, such as ribosomes, to handle the increased demands. Since the nucleolus is a major site of RNA processing and ribonucleoprotein assembly, nucleoli are targeted by viruses, directly when viral RNA and proteins enter the nucleolus and indirectly when viruses induce increased expression of cellular polyamine genes. Polyamines are at high levels in nucleoli to assist in RNA folding. The size and activity of nucleoli increase directly with increases in polyamines. Nucleolar expansion due to abnormal increases in polyamines could disrupt nearby chromatin, such as the inactive X chromosome, leading to expression of previously sequestered DNA. Sudden expression of a large concentration of Alu elements from the disrupted inactive X can compete with RNA transcripts containing intronic Alu sequences that normally maintain nucleolar structural integrity. Such disruption of nucleolar activity can lead to misfolded RNAs, misassembled ribonucleoprotein complexes, and fragmentation of the nucleolus. Many autoantigens in lupus are, at least transiently, components of the nucleolus. Considering these effects of viruses, the "X chromosome-nucleolus nexus" hypothesis, which proposed disruption of the inactive X by the nucleolus during stress, is now expanded here to propose subsequent disruption of the nucleolus by previously sequestered Alu elements, which can fragment the nucleolus, leading to generation of autoantigens.Entities:
Keywords: X chromosome; autoimmune disease; nucleolus; polyamines; virus
Year: 2017 PMID: 29234321 PMCID: PMC5712313 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2017.01657
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Virus and autoimmune disease associations.
| Virus | Code | Genome | Family (sub-family) | Genus | Species | Putative autoimmune associations | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Coxsackievirus B1 | CV-B1 | +ssRNA | Human enterovirus B | T1D | ( | ||
| Cytomegalovirus (CMV) | CMV (HHV5) | dsDNA | Human CMV | AIH, SLE, others | ( | ||
| Dengue virus | DENV | +ssRNA | Dengue virus | Thrombocytopenia | ( | ||
| Echovirus | E | +ssRNA | Enterovirus B | T1D | ( | ||
| Epstein–Barr virus (EBV) | EBV (HHV-4) | dsDNA | Human gammaherpesvirus 4 | APS, MS, PV, SjS, SLE, RA, others | ( | ||
| Hepatitis B virus | HBV | Circular DNA, partially ds | Hepatitis B virus | AIH, AITD, APS, MS, RA, SLE, RA, T1D | ( | ||
| Hepatitis C virus | HCV | +ssRNA | Hepatitis C virus | AIH | ( | ||
| Herpes simplex virus 1 | HSV-1 | Linear dsDNA | Herpes simplex virus 1 | AIH, ALZ, MS, SLE, others | ( | ||
| Human immunodeficiency virus | HIV | +ssRNA | Human immunodeficiency virus 1 | Impaired CD4 and CD8 cells, autoantibodies | ( | ||
| Human endogenous retroviruses | HERVs | Genomic inserted dsDNA | Human endogenous retroviruses (various groups) | HERV-Es, HRES-1 | AGS, SLE | ( | |
| Human papilloma virus | HPV | dsDNA | Human papilloma virus | vaccine-associated onset/exacerbation of autoimmune diseases | ( | ||
| Human parvovirus B19 | B19 | Linear ssDNA | Human parvovirus B19 | APS, RA, SLE, SS | ( | ||
| Human herpes virus 6 | HHV-6 | dsDNA | Human herpes virus | ACTD, AIH, MS, SjS | ( | ||
| Measles virus | MeV | −ssRNA | Measles virus | MS | ( | ||
| Varicella zoster virus | VZV (HHV-3) | dsDNA | α | Human Herpes 3 | MS | ( | |
| West Nile virus | WNV | +ssRNA | West Nile virus | MG | ( | ||
| Zika virus | ZIKV | +ssRNA | Zika Virus | GBS | ( |
Association may be causative (virus induces autoimmune disease) or result (autoimmune disease facilitates viral expression). Some associations may be due to vaccines (e.g., HPV).
ACTD, autoimmune connective tissue diseases; AGS, Aicardi-Goutiéres syndrome; AIH, autoimmune hepatitis; AITD, autoimmune thyroid diseases including Hashimoto’s and Graves’ diseases; ALZ, Alzheimer’s disease; APS, anti-phospholipid syndrome; GBS, Guilian Barré syndrome; MG, myasthenia gravis; MS, multiple sclerosis; PV, pemphigus vulgaris; RA, rheumatoid arthritis; SjS, Sjögren’s syndrome; SLE, systemic lupus erythematosus; SS, systemic sclerosis; T1D, type 1 diabetes; dsDNA, double-stranded DNA; ssDNA, single-stranded DNA; ssRNA, single-stranded RNA.
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Figure 1Nucleolar integrity from RNA pol II intronic Alu sequences. (A) Caudron-Herger and colleagues reported that the nucleolus has a high content of RNA pol II transcripts with intronic Alu sequences (red) and these transcripts associate with nucleolin to maintain nucleolar integrity (59). (Since the actual localization in the nucleolus and structure of the nucleolin–RNA complexes are not known, they are shown simply as part of the nucleolar perimeter.) (B) Addition of RNA fragments from RNA pol III Alu sequences, even as short as 20 bases, leads to loss of nucleolar integrity which Caudron-Herger and colleagues attribute to Dicer degradation of hybridized Alu sequences. This leads to fragmentation of the nucleolus into subunits that are substantially less efficient in nucleolar functions of RNA folding and ribonucleoprotein assembly.
Figure 2Disruption of the inactive X by the nucleolus under stress. (A) The inactive X chromosome (Xi) is typically located at the nuclear periphery next to the nuclear membrane and is associated with a nucleolus in 90% of cells in S phase and one-third of cells throughout the cell cycle except during mitosis when nucleoli disappear (57). This places one of the most inactive structures in the cell, the inactive X, next to one of the most active, multi-functional, and dynamic structures, the nucleolus. (B) The nucleolus can rapidly expand during cellular stress, such as viral activation. Trapped between the nucleolus and the nuclear membrane, the Xi could be disrupted by the expanding nucleolus.
Figure 3Establishment of the inactive X chromosome (Xi). Early in embryogenesis one of the two X chromosomes in female cells is inactivated by persistent expression of the X inactivation specific transcript RNA (XIST) from the X inactivation center (XIC). XIST RNA does not code for protein but remains in the nucleus and binds contiguous chromatin (i.e., the Xi, a.k.a. the Barr body), recruiting epigenetic silencing effectors (e.g., DNA methyltransferases). Approximately 95% of genes from the long arm (Xq) and 65% of genes from the short arm (Xp) are silenced. Silenced genes shown as dark blue, while genes that escape inactivation are shown as light blue [based on Ref. (89)]. The result is the Barr body which appears as a dense heterochromatic structure near the nuclear membrane. The bulk of the heterochromatic core contains Xq genes with some Xp genes, and the euchromatic-like surface layer has primarily Xp genes that are: actively expressed; potentiated for expression; or silenced but adjacent to expressed genes. Particularly interesting in the Xp is the pseudo-autosomal region 1 (PAR1) which has an abundance of Alu elements (46). In addition, Xp22 contains a “hot” LINE-1 sequence that can code for a fully functional reverse transcriptase. Xp22 also contains a fragile site (FRAXB). Fragile sites are preferential locations for viral insertions. And Xp22 on the Xi contains epigenetically silenced genes for spermine synthase (SMS) and spermidine/spermine N1 acetyltransferase (SAT1). Overexpression of SMS and/or SAT1 that could occur with disruption of epigenetic silencing on the Xi can impact cellular methylation and polyamine types and levels. This could also impact polyamine activity in the nucleoli.
Figure 4Autoantigens generated by disruption of the nucleolus. (A) The original version of the “inactive X chromosome and nucleolus nexus” hypothesis proposed that there is disruption of the inactive X by the nucleolus due to an extraordinary expansion of the nucleolus under stress (Figure 2B). This disruption could open previously sequestered DNA, especially Alu sequences and genes in the short arm of the Xi that are located in the euchromatic-like surface layer of the Xi (1). Now, based on the work by Caudron-Herger and colleagues (59), we can propose additions to the hypothesis, that X-linked Alu transcripts generated by the abundant RNA pol III near the nucleolus can disrupt the nucleolin-RNA pol II intronic Alu complexes, either by Dicer degradation or by direct competition between the RNA pol III Alu transcripts and the intronic Alu sequences. (B) The subsequent fragmentation of the nucleolus could result in nucleolar fragments that contain conformationally abnormal autoantigenic structures due to improperly folded RNAs or improperly assembled ribonucleoprotein complexes (RNPs). For example, in some nucleolar fragments there may be insufficient quantities of ribosomal components (either RNAs or proteins) and, therefore, complete functional ribosomes cannot be formed. There may also be incorporation of viral RNA and/or viral proteins into the RNPs. Also, overexpression of X-linked spermine synthase and/or spermidine/spermine N1 acetyltransferase could result in abnormal types and levels of polyamines in the nucleolus and nucleolar fragments. For example, there may be putrescine, acetylated polyamines, and/or nuclear aggregates of polyamines in the nucleolus that interfere with RNA folding. Normally one would expect only spermine and spermidine to be present in large quantities. Extracellular release (by apoptosis, necrosis, NETosis) of these abnormal nucleolar products could provoke an autoimmune reaction that later targets the more abundant normal products due to epitope spreading.