| Literature DB >> 30011814 |
Ziying Han1, Michael P Schwoerer2, Philip Hicks3, Jingjing Liang4, Gordon Ruthel5, Corbett T Berry6, Bruce D Freedman7, Cari A Sagum8, Mark T Bedford9, Sachdev S Sidhu10, Marius Sudol11, Ronald N Harty12.
Abstract
Lassa fever virus (LFV) belongs to the Arenaviridae family and can cause acute hemorrhagic fever in humans. The LFV Z protein plays a central role in virion assembly and egress, such that independent expression of LFV Z leads to the production of virus-like particles (VLPs) that mimic egress of infectious virus. LFV Z contains both PTAP and PPPY L-domain motifs that are known to recruit host proteins that are important for mediating efficient virus egress and spread. The viral PPPY motif is known to interact with specific host WW-domain bearing proteins. Here we identified host WW-domain bearing protein BCL2 Associated Athanogene 3 (BAG3) as a LFV Z PPPY interactor using our proline-rich reading array of WW-domain containing mammalian proteins. BAG3 is a stress-induced molecular co-chaperone that functions to regulate cellular protein homeostasis and cell survival via Chaperone-Assisted Selective Autophagy (CASA). Similar to our previously published findings for the VP40 proteins of Ebola and Marburg viruses, our results using VLP budding assays, BAG3 knockout cells, and confocal microscopy indicate that BAG3 is a WW-domain interactor that negatively regulates egress of LFV Z VLPs, rather than promoting VLP release. Our results suggest that CASA and specifically BAG3 may represent a novel host defense mechanism, whereby BAG3 may dampen egress of several hemorrhagic fever viruses by interacting and interfering with the budding function of viral PPxY-containing matrix proteins.Entities:
Keywords: BAG3; Ebola; L-domain; Lassa fever virus; VLPs; WW-domain; autophagy; budding; virus-host interaction
Year: 2018 PMID: 30011814 PMCID: PMC6163595 DOI: 10.3390/diseases6030064
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diseases ISSN: 2079-9721
Figure 1Identification of an interaction between host BAG3 and LFV-Z. Schematic diagram of the GST-WW and GST-SH3 array chip is shown in the top panel. Each lettered square contains one mock (M) and 12 numbered GST-WW or -SH3 domain fusion proteins in duplicate. Fluorescence labeled biotinylated LFV-Z-WT (TAPPEIPPSQNPPPYSP-K-Biotin) and LFV-Z PY mutant (TAPPEIPPSQNAAPASP-K-Biotin) peptides were used to screen the array. A strong interaction between the LFV-Z-WT peptide and the WW-domain of BAG3 was indicated by bright green fluorescent spots shown in the red squares and indicated by the red arrows. No interaction was detected between LFV-Z-PY mutant peptide and BAG3 as shown in the bottom right panel (red squares and arrows).
Figure 2Analysis of viral PPxY-host WW-domain interactions between BAG3 and LFV-Z by peptide pull-down assays. (A) Flow chart of the peptide pull-down assay using LFV-Z peptides and cell lysates expressing BAG3-WT; (B) Schematic diagram of BAG3-WT, BAG3-ΔN, and BAG3-ΔC mutants with the various domains highlighted in color and amino acid positions indicated; (C) Western blot of peptide pull-down assay using streptavidin agarose beads conjugated with either the LFV-Z WT or LFV-Z PY mutant peptide. BAG3 proteins were detected using anti-c-myc antibody (top blot). Expression controls for BAG3 and actin are shown in the bottom blot. These results are from 1 of 2 independent experiments.
Figure 3BAG3-WT protein inhibits LFV-Z VLP budding in a PPxY/WW-domain dependent manner. (A) Western blot analysis of cell extracts and VLPs from HEK293T cells transfected with LFV-Z alone (lane 1), or LFV-Z + BAG3-WT (lane 2) or BAG3-ΔN mutant (lane 3); (B) Relative budding efficiency of LFV-Z VLPs in HEK293T cells transfected as indicated. Error bars represent the standard deviation of the mean from three independent experiments (n = 3).
Figure 4Budding of LFV-Z VLPs, eVP40 VLPs, and VSV-M40 virus from BAG3-WT or BAG3 knockout (KO) cells. (A) HAP1-BAG3-WT (WT) or HAP1-BAG3 knockout cells (KO) were transfected with LFV-Z, and the indicated proteins were detected in cell extracts and VLPs by Western blot analysis as shown in two independent experiments; (B) HAP1-BAG3-WT (WT) or HAP1-BAG3 knockout cells (KO) were transfected with eVP40, and the indicated proteins were detected in cell extracts and VLPs by Western blot analysis as shown in two independent experiments. The red arrows indicate the fold increase in budding of LFV-Z and eVP40 VLPs in BAG3-KO cells compared to BAG3-WT cells; (C) HAP1-BAG3-WT (WT) or HAP1-BAG3 knockout cells (KO) were infected with VSV-M40 recombinant virus, and the indicated proteins were detected in cell extracts by Western blot analysis as shown in three independent experiments. The bar graph depicts the average titers of infectious VSV-M40 virus from three independent experiments. VSV-M40 titers were log10 transformed before checking normality (via Shapiro Wilks normality test) and assessing equality of variance (via F-test). (** p = 0.003).
Figure 5Intracellular localization of LFV-Z and BAG3-WT using confocal microscopy. HEK293T cells were co-transfected with LFV-Z and BAG3-WT (A–C, top row), or LFV-Z with BAG3-ΔN mutant (D–F, bottom row). Abundant LFV-Z VLPs (red) were observed to be released from cells co-expressing the BAG3-ΔN mutant (bottom row, merge (F), white dotted squares), compared to that released from cells expressing LFV-Z + BAG3-WT (top row, merge (C), solid white square). Scale bar = 10 μm.