| Literature DB >> 31715204 |
Yukari Itakura1, Keita Matsuno2, Asako Ito1, Markus Gerber3, Matthias Liniger3, Yuri Fujimoto1, Tomokazu Tamura1, Ken-Ichiro Kameyama1, Masatoshi Okamatsu1, Nicolas Ruggli3, Hiroshi Kida4, Yoshihiro Sakoda5.
Abstract
Classical swine fever viruses (CSFVs) do typically not show cytopathic effect (CPE) in cell culture, while some strains such as vaccine strain the GPE- induce CPE in the swine kidney-derived CPK-NS cell line cultured in serum-free medium. These latter strains commonly lack Npro-mediated inhibition of type-I interferon (IFN) induction. In order to explore the molecular mechanisms of GPE--induced CPE, we analyzed the cellular pathways involved. In CPK-NS cells infected with the attenuated-vaccine-derived vGPE- strain, both, apoptosis and necroptosis were induced. Necroptosis was type-I IFN-dependent and critical for visible CPE. In contrast, the parental virulent vALD-A76 strain did not induce any of these pathways nor CPE. We used reverse genetics to investigate which viral factors regulate these cell-death pathways. Interestingly, a mutant vGPE- in which the Npro function was restored to inhibit type-I IFN induction did not induce necroptosis nor CPE but still induced apoptosis, while an Npro-mutant vALD-A76 incapable of inhibiting type-I IFN production induced necroptosis and CPE. Although Erns of CSFV is reportedly involved in controlling apoptosis, apoptosis induction by vGPE- or apoptosis inhibition by vALD-A76 were independent of the unique amino acid difference found in Erns of these two strains. Altogether, these results demonstrate that type-I IFN-dependent necroptosis related to non-functional Npro is the main mechanism for CPE induction by vGPE-, and that viral factor(s) other than Erns may induce or inhibit apoptosis in vGPE- or vALD-A76 infected CPK-NS cells, respectively.Entities:
Keywords: Apoptosis; Classical swine fever virus; Necroptosis; Type-I interferon
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31715204 DOI: 10.1016/j.virusres.2019.197809
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Virus Res ISSN: 0168-1702 Impact factor: 3.303