| Literature DB >> 32703221 |
Yuanzhi Liu1,2,3, Mingshu Wang1,2,3, Anchun Cheng4,5,6, Qiao Yang1,2,3, Ying Wu1,2,3, Renyong Jia1,2,3, Mafeng Liu1,2,3, Dekang Zhu2,3, Shun Chen1,2,3, Shaqiu Zhang1,2,3, Xin-Xin Zhao1,2,3, Juan Huang1,2,3, Sai Mao1,2,3, Xumin Ou1,2,3, Qun Gao1,2,3, Yin Wang2, Zhiwen Xu2, Zhengli Chen2, Ling Zhu2, Qihui Luo2, Yunya Liu1,2,3, Yanling Yu1,2,3, Ling Zhang1,2,3, Bin Tian1,3, Leichang Pan1,3, Mujeeb Ur Rehman1,3, Xiaoyue Chen1,2,3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: eIF2α is a regulatory node that controls protein synthesis initiation by its phosphorylation or dephosphorylation. General control nonderepressible-2 (GCN2), protein kinase R-like endoplasmic reticulum kinase (PERK), double-stranded RNA (dsRNA)-dependent protein kinase (PKR) and heme-regulated inhibitor (HRI) are four kinases that regulate eIF2α phosphorylation. MAIN BODY: In the viral infection process, dsRNA or viral proteins produced by viral proliferation activate different eIF2α kinases, resulting in eIF2α phosphorylation, which hinders ternary tRNAMet-GTP-eIF2 complex formation and inhibits host or viral protein synthesis. The stalled messenger ribonucleoprotein (mRNP) complex aggregates under viral infection stress to form stress granules (SGs), which encapsulate viral RNA and transcription- and translation-related proteins, thereby limiting virus proliferation. However, many viruses have evolved a corresponding escape mechanism to synthesize their own proteins in the event of host protein synthesis shutdown and SG formation caused by eIF2α phosphorylation, and viruses can block the cell replication cycle through the PERK-eIF2α pathway, providing a favorable environment for their own replication. Subsequently, viruses can induce host cell autophagy or apoptosis through the eIF2α-ATF4-CHOP pathway.Entities:
Keywords: Autophagy/apoptosis; Cell replication cycle; General translation inhibition; Stress granule; Virus; eIF2α
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32703221 PMCID: PMC7376328 DOI: 10.1186/s12985-020-01362-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Virol J ISSN: 1743-422X Impact factor: 4.099
Fig. 1eIF2α phosphorylation inhibits translation initiation. The GTP conversion factor eIF2B converts inactive eIF2-GDP into active eIF2-GTP. The 43S complex containing eIF2-GTP scans along the mRNA for the initiation codon AUG. Once eIF2α is phosphorylated, the function of eIF2B to convert eIF2-GDP to eIF2-GTP is weakened or disappears, eventually leading to translational initiation inhibition [1–3]
Fig. 4Classical cap-dependent translation initiation in eukaryotic cells. The process consists of 43S preinitiation complex assembly, 43S preinitiation complex binding to mRNA, initiation codon (AUG) recognition, and 60S ribosomal subunit addition to form a complete initiation complex and start translation [4]
Fig. 2Three UPR signaling pathways. Under ER stress, ATF6 is processed to form active p50 ATF6, which is then transported to the nucleus to activate the transcription of genes containing an ERSE [25–27]. IRE1 cleaves 26 nucleotides from XBP1 mRNA to generate spliced XBP1 mRNA, which is translated into the active XBP1(s) protein. Subsequently, XBP1(s) activates the transcription of genes containing an UPRE [28–31]. Similarly, PERK is activated under cellular stress, which phosphorylates eIF2α and reduces protein synthesis to relieve ER stress [32, 33]
Fig. 3Viruses inhibit the antiviral effects of PKR. Viral dsRNA activates PKR, and activated PKR inhibits viral protein synthesis by phosphorylating eIF2α (green arrow). However, viruses have evolved many escape mechanisms (red arrows), such as hiding dsRNA (HSV-1 [55, 56]), blocking PKR activation (PRRSV [57], EMCV [58], IAV [59, 60], and MERS-CoV [61]), competing for PKR phosphorylation substrates (myxoma virus [62]), degrading PKR by the lysosome or proteasome pathway (MAV-1 [63] and FMDV [64]) and cleaving PKR via viral proteases (EV71 [65])
Fig. 5IRES-dependent and cap-independent translation initiation. a CVB3 RNA employs an IRES to recruit the 40S subunit to start translation. The host protein DAP5, some eIFs and ITAFs are required for IRES-driven translational initiation. Subsequently, the translated 2A protein cleaves eIF4GI into two parts. The N-terminus of eIF4GI recruited to the IRES effectively promotes viral replication [87]. b SINV contains a 5′ cap structure. The DSH structure on its sgRNA can initiate non-AUG codon translation to enhance viral protein synthesis [88, 89]
Strategies of some viruses for inhibiting SG formation. Viruses have evolved the following strategies to regulate SGs and thus promote their survival
| Virus | Viral protein | Strategies for resisting SG formation | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rotavirus | Changes the cellular localization of TIA-1 and PABP | [ | |
| MNV | Recruits G3BP1 to the viral replication complex | [ | |
| ZIKV | Alters the cellular localization of HuR | [ | |
| EV71 | 2A | Cleaves eIF4GI | [ |
| EV71 | 3C | Cleaves G3BP1 | [ |
| PV | 3C | Cleaves G3BP1 | [ |
| FMDV | L | Cleaves G3BP1 and G3BP2 | [ |
| EMCV | 3C | Cleaves G3BP1 | [ |
| Picornavirus | L or 2A | Interferes with the eIF4GI-G3BP1 interaction | [ |
| HPIV3 | Hides viral RNA | [ | |
| HIV-1 | Inhibits PKR and eIF2α phosphorylation | [ |
Fig. 6The translation regulation of ATF4 under stress conditions. ATF4 translation is regulated through upstream open reading frames (uORFs). The 5′-proximal uORF1 encodes three amino acid residues, and the uORF2 and ATF4 coding regions partially overlap. In nonstressed cells, uORF1 facilitates ribosome scanning and reinitiates at the downstream coding region, uORF2, which blocks ATF4 expression. Under stress conditions, the time required for scanning ribosomes to reinitiate translation increases; thus, uORF1 allows ribosomes to scan through uORF2 and to initiate the ATF4-coding region [129]
Fig. 7The role of host eIF2α in viral infection. Different viruses can stimulate specific eIF2α kinases, or the same virus can stimulate different eIF2α kinases, such as PRRSV, HCV, and EV71, which can activate PKR and PERK. eIF2α phosphorylation can affect host cell translation efficiency, SG formation, the cell cycle, and autophagy or apoptosis, thus facilitating viral infection