| Literature DB >> 30210460 |
Haruka Kamiyama1,2, Mai Izumida2,3, Yuria Umemura3, Hideki Hayashi2,4, Toshifumi Matsuyama2,5, Yoshinao Kubo1,2,6.
Abstract
Host-cell expression of the ezrin protein is required for CXCR4 (X4)-tropic HIV-1 infection. Ezrin function is regulated by phosphorylation at threonine-567. This study investigates the role of ezrin phosphorylation in HIV-1 infection and virion release. We analyzed the effects of ezrin mutations involving substitution of threonine-567 by alanine (EZ-TA), a constitutively inactive mutant, or by aspartic acid (EZ-TD), which mimics phosphorylated threonine. We also investigated the effects of ezrin silencing on HIV-1 virion release using a specific siRNA. We observed that X4-tropic HIV-1 vector infection was inhibited by expression of the EZ-TA mutant but increased by expression of the EZ-TD mutant, suggesting that ezrin phosphorylation in target cells is required for efficient HIV-1 entry. Expression of a dominant-negative mutant of ezrin (EZ-N) and ezrin silencing in HIV-1 vector-producing cells significantly reduced the infectivity of released virions without affecting virion production. This result indicates that endogenous ezrin expression is required for virion infectivity. The EZ-TD but not the EZ-TA inhibited virion release from HIV-1 vector-producing cells. Taken together, these findings suggest that ezrin phosphorylation in target cells is required for efficient HIV-1 entry but inhibits virion release from HIV-1 vector-producing cells.Entities:
Keywords: HIV-1; ezrin; viral assembly; viral budding; viral entry
Year: 2018 PMID: 30210460 PMCID: PMC6119696 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2018.01912
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Microbiol ISSN: 1664-302X Impact factor: 5.640