| Literature DB >> 33244624 |
Emiel Michiels1,2, Frederic Rousseau3,4, Joost Schymkowitz5,6.
Abstract
The aggregation of specific proteins and their amyloid deposition in affected tissue in disease has been studied for decades assuming a sole pathogenic role of amyloids. It is now clear that amyloids can also encode important cellular functions, one of which involves the interaction potential of amyloids with microbial pathogens, including viruses. Human expressed amyloids have been shown to act both as innate restriction molecules against viruses as well as promoting agents for viral infectivity. The underlying molecular driving forces of such amyloid-virus interactions are not completely understood. Starting from the well-described molecular mechanisms underlying amyloid formation, we here summarize three non-mutually exclusive hypotheses that have been proposed to drive amyloid-virus interactions. Viruses can indirectly drive amyloid depositions by affecting upstream molecular pathways or induce amyloid formation by a direct interaction with the viral surface or specific viral proteins. Finally, we highlight the potential of therapeutic interventions using the sequence specificity of amyloid interactions to drive viral interference.Entities:
Keywords: Antiviral; Protein aggregation; Seeding; Surface-catalyzed nucleation
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33244624 PMCID: PMC7690653 DOI: 10.1007/s00018-020-03711-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Mol Life Sci ISSN: 1420-682X Impact factor: 9.261
Overview of interactions between human amyloids and human-infecting viruses
| Amyloid | Virus | References |
|---|---|---|
| Alpha-synuclein | Influenza A | [ |
| Alpha-synuclein | West Nile Virus | [ |
| Amyloid beta | HSV-1 | [ |
| Amyloid beta | HSV-2 | [ |
| Amyloid beta | Varicella-zoster virus | [ |
| Amyloid beta | Cytomegalovirus | [ |
| Amyloid beta | HHV-6A and HHV-6B | [ |
| Amyloid beta precursor protein | HIV | [ |
| Amyloid beta | Influenza | [ |
| IAPP | Varicella-zoster virus | [ |
| IAPPa | Respiratory syncytial virus | [ |
| Seminal amyloids | HIV | [ |
| Seminal amyloids | Ebola virus | [ |
| Seminal amyloids | Cytomegalovirus | [ |
| Tau | HSV-1 | [ |
| Tau | HSV-2 | [ |
| Tau | Cytomegalovirus | [ |
aThe interaction was shown between a short amyloidogenic fragment of IAPP and varicella-zoster virus
Fig. 1A schematic overview of the mechanisms underlying amyloid–virus interactions. The three upper panels represent three different mechanisms by which amyloid formation can initiate: spontaneous nucleation, surface-catalyzed nucleation (SCN), and seed nucleation (SN). Each of these three mechanisms translates into a different process of amyloid–virus interactions, which are non-mutually exclusive
Fig. 2Human-expressed amyloids share homologous APRs with viral proteins. The graphs represent TANGO analyses to identify APRs in the amyloids [17]. The TANGO score is a value between 0 and 100 and higher scores represent higher aggregation potential of the amino acid sequence. As such, the yellow bars represent the APRs of the amyloids. Below each graph, amyloid hexamer APR sequences are visualized that share a homologous fragment within a viral protein. Only homologous sequences with one amino acid mismatch are shown
Fig. 3Design of synthetic antiviral amyloids solely based on homologous APRs. (a) A schematic overview of the design principle of synthetic antiviral amyloids: (1) APRs are identified in the proteome of a specific virus (here: LIQLIVS from the influenza A/PR8 PB2 protein), (2) peptides are designed based on this APR sequence in a tandem design format to stimulate amyloid formation, (3) this synthetic amyloidogenic peptide can interact with the viral target protein via the homologous APR sequence, (4) which leads to the aggregation and inactivation of that protein, and (5) finally reducing viral replication. b Incubating the peptide visualized in a for 1 h at 100 µM results in amyloid-like structures. c A plaque-size reduction assays showing that the amyloidogenic peptide (10 µM) inhibits influenza A (IAV) replication (blue area), while influenza B (IBV) is not affected. d Colocalisation of a fluorescent variant of the amyloidogenic peptide (10 µM) and PB2 in influenza A-infected MDCK cells. All data were taken and adjusted with permission from [158]