| Literature DB >> 30886609 |
Lei Tan1, Xiaomin Yuan1, Yisong Liu1, Xiong Cai2, Shiyin Guo3, Aibing Wang1.
Abstract
Currently, the major measures of preventing and controlling microbial infection are vaccinations and drugs. However, the appearance of drug resistance microbial mounts is main obstacle in current anti-microbial therapy. One of the most ubiquitous actin-binding proteins, non-muscle myosin II (NM II) plays a crucial role in a wide range of cellular physiological activities in mammals, including cell adhesion, migration, and division. Nowadays, growing evidence indicates that aberrant expression or activity of NM II can be detected in many diseases caused by microbes, including viruses and bacteria. Furthermore, an important role for NM II in the infection of some microbes is verified. Importantly, modulating the expression of NM II with small hairpin RNA (shRNA) or the activity of it by inhibitors can affect microbial-triggered phenotypes. Therefore, NM II holds the promise to be a potential target for inhibiting the infection of microbes and even treating microbial-triggered discords. In spite of these, a comprehensive view on the functions of NM II in microbial infection and the regulators which have an impact on the roles of NM II in this context, is still lacking. In this review, we summarize our current knowledge on the roles of NM II in microbial-triggered discords and provide broad insights into its regulators. In addition, the existing challenge of investigating the multiple roles of NM II in microbial infection and developing NM II inhibitors for treating these microbial-triggered discords, are also discussed.Entities:
Keywords: co-factors/receptors; mammalian cells; microbial-triggered discords; non-muscle myosin II; regulators; regulatory pathways
Year: 2019 PMID: 30886609 PMCID: PMC6409350 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2019.00401
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Microbiol ISSN: 1664-302X Impact factor: 5.640
Involvement of non-muscle myosin II (NM II) in microbial-triggered discords.
| Pathogen | Alteration of NM II expression or activity | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| EBV | Increased NM IIA expression in nasopharyngeal epithelial cells | |
| KSHV | Increased activity and expression of NM IIA in HMVEC-d cells; | |
| HSV-1 | Increased both NM IIA and NM IIB cell-surface expression on Vero cells; | |
| EHV-1 | Increased NMII activity in murine neurons | |
| GIV | Induced variable expression of NM IIA | |
| HIV-1 | Decreased NM IIA expression in podocyte, murine and human glomerular | |
| SFTSV | Increased NM IIA expression; | |
| PRRSV | Increased NM IIA expression; | |
| RDV | Increased NM II expression | |
| LM | Increased activity and expression of NM IIA; | |
| NG | Increased NM II activity at pathogen adherent site | |
FIGURE 1The involvement of NM II in the different processes of microbial infection.During the process of intracellular bacterial attachment, the potential roles of NM IIA in NG (Neisseria gonorrhoeae) adhesion to the target cells (Wang et al., 2017) were determined;In the process of viral entry, the interactions between the glycoprotein H/glycoprotein L (gH/gL) protein of EBV and the C-terminal 1,665–1,960 aa region of NM IIA (Xiong et al., 2015); the adaptor protein (c-Cbl) and NM IIA (KSHV) (Valiya Veettil et al., 2010); the HSV-1 glycoprotein B and NM IIA, NM IIB (Arii et al., 2010, 2015); the glycoprotein Gn of SFTSV and NM IIA (Sun et al., 2014); and the glycoprotein GP5 of PRRSV and the C-terminal domain of NM IIA (Gao et al., 2016) were confirmed. In addition, the potential roles of NM II in EHV-1 (Cymerys et al., 2016), SGIV (Wang et al., 2014) entry were also speculated;During the process of KSHV particle uncoating (Valiya Veettil et al., 2010), the vital roles of NM IIA were conjectured;During the process of viral replication, the potential roles of NM IIA in KSHV infection (Zhu et al., 2005; Lyman and Enquist, 2009) were surmised;During the process of viral intracellular capsid assembling and transport, the vital roles of NM IIA in KSHV (Valiya Veettil et al., 2010), RDV (Wei et al., 2008b) infection were suggested;During the process of microbial release, the essential roles of NM IIA/NM II in KSHV (Valiya Veettil et al., 2010), EHV-1 (Cymerys et al., 2016), PRRSV (Guo J. et al., 2016), RDV (Wei et al., 2008b), and NG (Wang et al., 2017) intercellular spread were concluded. Note: The infection of microorganisms that NM II or its specific isoform was involved was marked with blue, that NM II or its specific isoform might be involved was marked with green and a “?”.
NM II inhibitors with potential drug application.
| NM II inhibitors | NM II isoforms | Chemotherapeutic effects | Microbial-triggered discords (references) |
|---|---|---|---|
| MicroRNAs (let-7f-5p) | NM IIA | Directly bind to 3′ UTR of MYH9 gene | PRRSV ( |
| SiRNA | NM IIA NM IIB | Act on the target mRNA | SFTSV ( |
| ML-7 and ML-9 | NM II | Potently inhibits MLCK activity | HSV-1 ( |
| BDM | NM II | Potently inhibits actin-activated ATPase activity | EHV-1 ( |
| Blebbistatin | NM II | Potently inhibits ATPase activity | EHV-1 ( |