| Literature DB >> 29438303 |
Christopher E Denes1, Monica Miranda-Saksena2, Anthony L Cunningham3, Russell J Diefenbach4,5.
Abstract
Actin filaments, microtubules and intermediate filaments form the cytoskeleton of vertebrate cells. Involved in maintaining cell integrity and structure, facilitating cargo and vesicle transport, remodelling surface structures and motility, the cytoskeleton is necessary for the successful life of a cell. Because of the broad range of functions these filaments are involved in, they are common targets for viral pathogens, including the alphaherpesviruses. Human-tropic alphaherpesviruses are prevalent pathogens carried by more than half of the world's population; comprising herpes simplex virus (types 1 and 2) and varicella-zoster virus, these viruses are characterised by their ability to establish latency in sensory neurons. This review will discuss the known mechanisms involved in subversion of and transport via the cytoskeleton during alphaherpesvirus infections, focusing on protein-protein interactions and pathways that have recently been identified. Studies on related alphaherpesviruses whose primary host is not human, along with comparisons to more distantly related beta and gammaherpesviruses, are also presented in this review. The need to decipher as-yet-unknown mechanisms exploited by viruses to hijack cytoskeletal components-to reveal the hidden cytoskeletons in the closet-will also be addressed.Entities:
Keywords: actin; alphaherpesvirus; cytoskeleton; herpes simplex virus; intermediate filaments; microtubules; virus transport
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29438303 PMCID: PMC5850386 DOI: 10.3390/v10020079
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Viruses ISSN: 1999-4915 Impact factor: 5.048
Figure 1Model of alphaherpesvirus entry, assembly and egress in non-neuronal cells. Alphaherpesviruses bind host cell receptors present on the cell surface. Numerous viral glycoproteins facilitate binding and subsequent fusion of the membranes for delivery of the tegument-wrapped nucleocapsid into the cytosol. An endocytosis entry pathway exists in certain cell types (not shown here). Much of the outer tegument layer is lost to the cytoplasm but dynein motors are recruited to capsid-bound inner tegument proteins to facilitate transport in a retrograde manner along microtubules towards the microtubule organising centre (MTOC). Here, kinesin motors probably take over and transport the nucleocapsid to a nuclear pore for delivery of viral DNA to the nucleus (shown in blue) through a capsid portal. Upon entry into the nucleus, viral DNA undergoes transcription and replication. Transcript mRNA is translated in the cytosol in a temporal manner with immediate early, early and late stage proteins involved in key maturation stages. Following DNA replication, the genome is packaged inside an immature capsid before undergoing nuclear egress. The widely-supported hypothesis for nuclear egress involves budding into the perinuclear space (attaining a primary envelope) before deenvelopment by fusion with the outer nuclear membrane and release into the cytoplasm. Once here the nucleocapsid matures further and attains its tegument layer from proteins in the cytoplasm and envelope proteins processed via the endoplasmic reticulum (ER)/Golgi. Transport by kinesin motors along microtubules via the trans-Golgi network (TGN) or endosome, where the virus obtains its final host-derived envelope in a process of secondary envelopment, occurs before the virus is exocytosed for release. Stages during which remodelling and/or transport along cytoskeletal filaments may be involved are marked with an asterisk. Microtubule polarity is shown with “+” and “−” signs indicating the plus- or minus-ended nature of the microtubule tip.
Alphaherpesvirus-host interactions that regulate actin dynamics.
| Virus | Viral Protein | Host Cell Proteins/System | Role | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| HSV-1 | gD | Nectins | gD binds to host-cell receptor nectin. Nectins regulate actin reorganisation by activating remodelling proteins like Ras/Rho GTPases (Rap1, Cdc42, Rac1). Rac1/Cdc42 have been implicated in signalling during early HSV-1 infection. However, evidence has shown that Rac1 and Cdc42 signalling does not occur in infected keratinocytes [ | [ |
| HSV-1 | gD | Likely nectin-1/HVEM | Following viral binding, there is activation of Cdc42 and RhoA, causing filopodium-like protrusions in corneal fibroblasts and nectin-1-expressing Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells. Virus associates with these protrusions during viral entry and actin depolymerisation drugs inhibit viral entry. Also observed in a zebrafish model. | [ |
| HSV-1 | Unknown | Na+/H+ exchangers (NHE), p21-activated kinases | Internalisation of HSV-1 relies on the activity of these NHEs on the plasma membrane of Vero, HeLa, HEp-2 and PtK2 cells. These are known to be involved in macropinocytosis, an actin-dependent endocytic process which takes up extracellular fluid and macromolecules. This process can withstand the endocytosis of large structures (0.2–5 μm) which a large pathogen like HSV-1 can exploit. | [ |
| HSV-2 | pUS3 | PAK1/PAK2 | pUS3 directly phosphorylates group A p21-activated kinases (PAKs). Actin stress fibre disassembly during PrV infection of mouse embryonic fibroblast (MEF) and swine testicle (ST) cells is pUS3-mediated and requires PAK2. Cellular projections are mediated by PAK1. pUS3 kinase activity leads to protein kinase A-dependent phosphorylation of RhoA in ST cells; this subverts the antagonistic RhoA and Cdc42/Rac1/PAK signalling cascades for actin remodelling. | [ |
Figure 2Identified alphaherpesvirus-host interactions involved in actin remodelling or myosin recruitment. This schematic highlights the findings of Table 1 and Table 2, representing the known specific interactions and pathways involved in alphaherpesviral regulation of actin dynamics. 1: Viral envelope glycoprotein gD binds nectins and/or the herpesvirus entry mediator (HVEM) to activate Ras/Rho GTPases. This triggers actin remodelling via the Arp2/3 complex, LIM domain kinases (LIMK), cofilin, Rho-associated protein kinase (ROCK) and formins. 2: gD binding to surface receptors can trigger the formation of filopodia. The virus can associate with these and undergo “surfing” to bring the virus closer to the main body of the cell for entry. 3: Non-muscle myosins, NM-IIA and NM-IIB, can act as entry coreceptors for viral envelope glycoprotein gB, activated by upstream myosin light chain kinase (MLCK) activation, leading to remodelling of F-actin. 4: Viral kinase pUS3 phosphorylation of the p21-activated kinases (PAKs) can lead to formation of protrusions (PAK1) and stress fibre disassembly (PAK2). 5: Viral protein pUL49 can sequester a subpopulation of NM-IIA at the perinuclear space which may rearrange actin for viral nuclear egress.
Alphaherpesvirus-host interactions that exploit actin-based myosin.
| Virus | Viral Protein | Host-Cell Proteins/System | Role | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| HSV-1 | Unknown | Myosin Va | Myosin Va is activated during infection, facilitating transport of virion- and glycoprotein-bearing vesicles from TGN to plasma membrane through cortical actin in HeLa cells. It is hypothesised that egressing virions (collected within TGN-derived vesicles) behave in a similar manner to other myosin-dependent cargo: kinesin motors (see
| [ |
| HSV-1 | pUL49 (VP22) | Non-muscle myosin heavy chain IIA (NM-IIA) | Affinity chromatography experiments with HSV-1-infected baby hamster kidney (BHK) cell extracts have shown tegument protein VP22 interacts with NM-IIA. HSV-1 infection of Vero cells redistributes NM-IIA but only a subpopulation of NM-IIA colocalises with VP22 in a perinuclear cluster. | [ |
| HSV-1 | gB | NM-IIA/myosin light chain kinase (MLCK) | NM-IIA is a functional coreceptor for gB in Vero cells. Inhibition of NM-IIA (by blebbistatin) and MLCK (by ML-7 and ML-9) decreased viral entry into corneal epithelial cells. Activation of NM-IIA by MLCK is necessary for the cytoskeletal rearrangements needed for HSV-1 infection of corneal cells. To regulate actin, NM-IIA cross-links and contracts F-actin. | [ |
| HSV-1 | gB | Non-muscle myosin heavy chain IIB (NM-IIB) | Interaction may serve as an entry coreceptor in the CV-1 in origin with SV40 genes (COS) cell line as above. Activation of NM-IIB by MLCK is also necessary for the cytoskeletal rearrangements. Likely to be important in a range of cell types. | [ |
Alphaherpesvirus-host interactions that regulate microtubule stabilisation.
| Virus | Viral Protein | Host-Cell Proteins/System | Role | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| HSV-1 | Capsid (unknown) | Microtubule plus–end tracking protein (+TIP) complex EB1, CLIP-170 and dynactin-1 | Studies in normal human dermal fibroblasts (NHDFs) show EB1 directs viral capsid interaction with plus end of microtubules. Stabilises microtubules and recruits molecular motor dynein for retrograde transport during initial viral entry. | [ |
| HSV-1 | pUS3 | Glycogen synthase kinase 3β | pUS3 phosphorylation inactivates the host cell kinase in NHDFs, leading to microtubule stabilisation by +TIP and cytoplasmic linker-associated proteins (CLASPs), to enhance viral spread. | [ |
| HSV-1 | ICP0 | Unknown | ICP0 is a viral E3 ligase which was found to destabilise and unbundle microtubules in Vero cells to aid in viral assembly and egress. | [ |
| HSV-1 | pUL37 | IKAP (Iκβ kinase complex associated protein) | Yeast two-hybrid screening indicated an interaction between tegument protein pUL37 and IKAP. IKAP has proposed roles in microtubule stabilisation [ | [ |
Alphaherpesvirus-host interactions that exploit microtubule-based motors dynein and kinesin.
| Virus | Viral Protein | Host-Cell Proteins/System | Role | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| HSV-1 | pUL34 | Intermediate chain of the dynein complex (IC-1a) | Pulldown experiments of infected Vero and HEp-2 cells with IC-1a (and reciprocal experiments) identified an interaction with pUL34. pUL34 localised to the nuclear membrane when expressed by a baculovirus vector, confirming the protein is involved in transport to the nuclear membrane in the viral context. pUL34 is not a structural protein [ | [ |
| HSV-1 | pUS11 | Kinesin-1 (KIF5) | Residues 867–894 of ubiquitous human kinesin-1 bind to a C-terminal RNA-binding domain of tegument pUS11 as evidenced by pulldown assays. HSV-1 pUS11 has 63% homology to HSV-2 pUS11, with variation in the N-terminal half, so this interaction could prove to be transferable. Not confirmed in vivo and one study suggests pUS11 is not a structural tegument protein [ | [ |
| HSV-1 | Tegument proteins | Dynein, dynactin, kinesin-1 | Tegumented capsids (lacking outer tegument and envelopes) were capable of binding microtubule associated proteins (MAPs) sourced from pig brain cytosol. 10% of capsids tested by in vitro single particle analysis had bound dynein and kinesin-1 simultaneously, suggesting HSV-1 capsid transport is not directed by exclusive presence of either minus- or plus-ended motors. Inner tegument, pUL36 and pUL37, suggested as most likely to bind motors or recruit other tegument proteins that bind motors at this stage, especially with early findings that without pUL36, HSV-1 particles form but have reduced infectivity and a decreased ability to bind to and transport along microtubules [ | [ |
| PrV | pUL36 | Dynein, dynactin | Immunoprecipitation of pUL36-transfected HEK293 cells showed that it interacts with dynein/dynactin and can drive transport in the absence of other viral proteins when transfected into Vero cells. pUL36 is capable of transporting viral capsid along microtubules in conjunction with capsid-binding pUL25. A large proline-rich domain in the pUL36 C-terminus contributes to the interaction. | [ |
| HSV-1 | pUL37 | Dystonin/BPAG1 | Tegument protein pUL37 recruits dystonin/BPAG1 in human foetal foreskin fibroblasts (HFFF2), which most likely functions to crosslink and stabilise microtubules, to facilitate viral capsid transport during viral entry. Plus-end directed transport is inhibited by dystonin depletion, providing evidence that pUL37-dystonin interaction is required for transport of capsids from the centrosome to the nucleus. | [ |
| HSV-1 | pUS9 | Kinesin-1 | Five arginine residues in the basic domain of envelope protein pUS9 bind host motor kinesin-1 as determined by truncation construct pulldown studies. This domain was shown to contribute to anterograde axonal transport in infected primary rat dorsal root ganglionic (DRG) neurons and a mouse zosteriform model. | [ |
| PrV | pUS9 | Kinesin-3 (KIF1A) | pUS9 was found to interact with kinesin-3 using GFP-Trap pulldown. This interaction was shown to mediate efficient axonal sorting and anterograde axonal transport of viral particles in primary rat superior cervical ganglion neurons [ | [ |
| HSV-1 | pUL35 (VP26) | Dynein light chains Tctex1 and RP3 | In vitro yeast two-hybrid evidence that capsid protein VP26 recruits these dynein light chains. Microinjection of HEp-2 cells with HSV-1 ± VP26 suggested VP26 was important for viral retrograde transport. Subsequent deletion studies in cell lines suggest this is a dispensable interaction [ | [ |
| HSV-2 | pUL56 | Kinesin-3 (KIF1A) | In vitro evidence that envelope protein pUL56 interacts with kinesin-3 with a C-terminal transmembrane domain important for this interaction in transfected Vero cells. Possible role in anterograde axonal transport. Shown in PrV to support virus dissemination in vivo in embryonic chick DRG and an infected mouse model but is dispensable for intra-axonal transport beyond the sorting barrier [ | [ |