| Literature DB >> 35047417 |
Wenxian Wu1,2,3, Xiumei Luo1,2,3,4, Maozhi Ren1,2,3.
Abstract
Viruses typically hijack the cellular machinery of their hosts for successful infection and replication, while the hosts protect themselves against viral invasion through a variety of defense responses, including autophagy, an evolutionarily ancient catabolic pathway conserved from plants to animals. Double-membrane vesicles called autophagosomes transport trapped viral cargo to lysosomes or vacuoles for degradation. However, during an ongoing evolutionary arms race, viruses have acquired a strong ability to disrupt or even exploit the autophagy machinery of their hosts for successful invasion. In this review, we analyze the universal role of autophagy in antiviral defenses in animals and plants and summarize how viruses evade host immune responses by disrupting and manipulating host autophagy. The review provides novel insights into the role of autophagy in virus-host interactions and offers potential targets for the prevention and control of viral infection in both plants and animals.Entities:
Keywords: autophagy; immune response; infection; virus manipulation; virus–host interaction
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35047417 PMCID: PMC8761674 DOI: 10.3389/fcimb.2021.786348
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Infect Microbiol ISSN: 2235-2988 Impact factor: 5.293
Figure 1The autophagy machinery and its inhibition by viruses. The ATG1/ULK1 complex, the ATG6/Beclin1-PI3K/VPS34 complex, and the ATG12-ATG5-ATG16 and ATG8-PE conjugation systems, among others, are involved in key steps of the autophagy pathway, including initiation, elongation, completion, and fusion. Viral proteins block cellular autophagy and promote virus development by activating TOR, a conserved Ser/Thr kinase; interacting with autophagy-related proteins, thereby inhibiting or promoting their activity; targeting selective autophagy processes; and interfering with autophagosome–lysosome fusion or lysosomal acidification. Blue-grey ovals represent animal viral proteins. Plant viral proteins are shown in pink. TOR, target of rapamycin; PAS, pre-autophagosomal structure; PI3P, phosphatidylinositol-3-phosphate; E1/2/3, E1/2/3-like enzyme.
Figure 2The antiviral role of autophagy and its manipulation by viruses. The upper panel indicates the antiviral aspects of cellular autophagy (I and II). Viral proteins that manipulate host autophagy are shown in the lower part (III and IV). The left (I and III) and right (II and IV) parts represent the interaction of animal viruses and plant viruses with host autophagy, respectively. Selective autophagy mediated by cargo receptors is an antiviral mechanism common to both animal and plant cells. Viruses derived from both plants and animals hijack autophagy to degrade factors that positively regulate host immune responses to enhance their self-proliferation. Blue-grey ovals represent animal viral proteins. Plant viral proteins are shown in pink. The grass-green rectangle with rounded corners represents host selective autophagy cargo receptors. Factors that positively regulate host immune responses are displayed in red.
Autophagy-mediated antiviral immune responses.
| Host | Virus | Viral protein(s) | Host protein(s) | Functions | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Animal | SINV | Capsid | p62; LC3 | p62 adaptor protein mediates autophagic viral protein clearance, thus promoting cell survival | ( |
| SINV | Capsid | SMURF1 | Acts as a mediator of virophagy | ( | |
| SINV | Capsid | FANCC | Interacts with the capsid protein, facilitating virophagy | ( | |
| HIV-1 | Tat | p62 | Selective degradation of Tat in a ubiquitin-independent manner | ( | |
| IAV containing avian PB2 | PB2; vRNP | p62; LC3 | p62 targets vRNP to form an autophagosome through interaction with viral PB2 | ( | |
| IBDV | VP2 | p62; LC3 | p62 mediates the selective autophagic degradation of VP2, thus targeting IBDV replication | ( | |
| HCV | NS5A | Scotin; LC3 | Scotin recruits the NS5A protein to autophagosomes for degradation | ( | |
| HIV-1 | Capsid | TRIM5α; ATG8s | TRIM5α functions both as a regulator of autophagy and as an autophagic cargo receptor mediating HIV-1 restriction | ( | |
| Plant | CLCuMuV | βC1 | ATG8f | ATG8f targets βC1 for degradation | ( |
| TLCYnV | C1 | ATG8h; XPO1 | ATG8h interacts with C1, directing it for degradation in an XPO1-mediated, nuclear export pathway-dependent manner | ( | |
| CaMV | P4 and viral | NBR1; ATG8a | NBR1 targets P4 and viral particles, thus mediating their autophagy-dependent degradation | ( | |
| TuMV | HCPro | NBR1; ATG8a | HCPro is selectively degraded by the autophagy pathway through binding with NBR1 | ( | |
| TuMV | NIb | Beclin1; ATG8a | Beclin1 interacts with Nib, targeting it for selective degradation | ( | |
| RSV | p3 | P3IP; ATG8f | P3IP directs the selective autophagic degradation of p3 through interaction with ATG8, thereby limiting virus infection | ( | |
| CMV | 2b | rgs-CaM; ATG8 | rgs-CaM interacts with 2b for autophagy degradation | ( |
Autophagy is subverted by viruses.
| Host | Virus(s) | Viral protein(s) | Host protein(s) | Effects on host–virus interactions | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Animal | HIV-1 | Envelope | mTORC1 | The envelope protein activates the mTORC1 pathway, leading to autophagy exhaustion | ( |
| HSV-1 | Us3 | mTORC1 | Us3 activates mTORC1, which inhibits the ULK autophagy-promoting complex | ( | |
| HSV-1 | Us3 | Beclin1 | Us3 associates with and phosphorylates Beclin1, thus limiting autophagy and promoting virus replication | ( | |
| HSV-1 | ICP34.5 | Beclin1 | ICP34.5 interacts with Beclin1, thus inhibiting autophagy | ( | |
| HCMV | TRS1 | Beclin1 | TRS1 interacts with Beclin1, thus inhibiting autophagy | ( | |
| HCMV | IRS1 | Beclin1 | IRS1 blocks host autophagy by interacting with Beclin1 | ( | |
| KSHV | ORF16 | Beclin1 | ORF16 mimics cellular Bcl-2 and attenuates autophagy through direct interaction with Beclin1 | ( | |
| MHV68 | M11 | Beclin1 | M11 mimics cellular Bcl-2 and attenuates autophagy through direct interaction with Beclin1 | ( | |
| KSHV; HVS; MCV | vFLIPs | ATG3 | vFLIPs suppresses autophagy by preventing ATG3 from binding and processing LC3 | ( | |
| FMDV | 3Cpro | ATG5-ATG12 | 3Cpro suppresses autophagy | ( | |
| IAV | M2 | LC3 | M2 interacts with LC3 and promotes its relocalization to the host’s plasma membrane | ( | |
| DENV; ZIKV | NS3 | FAM134B | NS3 cleaves the FAM134B receptor, thereby suppressing the reticulophagy pathway | ( | |
| CB3 | 2Apro | p62 | 2Apro cleaves p62, resulting in disrupted selective autophagy | ( | |
| EBV | BPLF1 | p62 | BPLF1 targets p62 and decreases its ubiquitination, thus inhibiting selective autophagy | ( | |
| SARS-CoV-2 | ORF3a | VPS39 | ORF3a interacts with VPS39 and prevents the assembly of the SNARE complex | ( | |
| SARS-CoV-2 | ORF7a | Unknown | ORF7a interferes with autophagosome acidification | ( | |
| SARS-CoV-2 | ORF3a | UVRAG | ORF3a interacts with UVRAG to inhibit PI3KC3-C2 and promote the formation of PI3KC3-C1 | ( | |
| HPIV3 | P | SNAP29 | P binds to SNAP29 and prevents SNARE proteins from mediating autophagosome–lysosome fusion | ( | |
| IAV | M2 | TBC1D5 | M2 abrogates TBC1D5-Rab7 binding through interaction with TBC1D5 | ( | |
| HBV | HBx | Unknown | HBx impairs lysosomal acidification | ( | |
| PV | Unknown | Galectin 8; PLA2G16 | Galectin 8 initiates the autophagic degradation of viral RNA, the virus uses PLA2G16 to evade galectin 8-mediated detection | ( | |
| Plant | CaMV | P6 | TOR | P6 activates TOR kinase, which blocks cellular autophagy and promotes CaMV translation | ( |
| BSMV | γb | ATG7 | γb interacts with ATG7 and disrupts ATG7-ATG8 interaction, thus suppressing autophagy and promoting viral infection | ( | |
| CaMV | P6 | NBR1 | P6 disrupts the interaction between P4 and host NBR1, which protects viral replication factory inclusions from autophagic degradation | ( | |
| TuMV | VPg; 6K2 | Unknown | VPg and 6K2 antagonize the antiviral capacity of NBR1-dependent autophagy by blocking NBR1 and HCpro degradation | ( | |
| RSV | NSvc4 | Type-I J-domain proteins | NSvc4 hijacks UPR-activated type-I J-domain proteins, thus preventing its autophagic degradation | ( |
Autophagy is manipulated by viruses.
| Host | Virus(s) | Viral protein(s) | Host protein(s) | Effects on host–virus interactions | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Animal | SeV; VSV; EMCV | Unknown | CCDC50; RIG-I/MDA5 | Enhances CCDC50 expression, which delivers activated RIG-I/MDA5 for autophagic degradation | ( |
| CA16 | Unknown | p62; HDAC6 | Triggers p62-mediated selective autophagic degradation of HDAC6 | ( | |
| HPIV3 | M | LC3; TUFM | M mediates mitophagy | ( | |
| IAV | PB1-F2 | LC3; TUFM | PB1-F2 interacts with TUFM and LC3B, thus inducing complete mitochondrial autophagy | ( | |
| MCMV | M45 | VPS26B; TBC1D5; NEMO; RIPK1 | M45 promotes NEMO and RIPK1 aggregation and recruits VPS26B and TBC1D5 to facilitate the degradation of the aggregates through selective autophagy |
| |
| HBV | SHBs | LC3 | SHBs interacts with LC3 and induces autophagy | ( | |
| Plant | TuYV | P0 | AGO1; ATI1/2 | P0 triggers AGO1 degradation by the autophagy pathway | ( |
| TuMV | VPg | SGS3 | VPg mediates the degradation of SGS3 by autophagy and ubiquitination | ( | |
| TYLCCNB | βC1 | CaM; SGS3 | βC1 upregulates CaM expression and promotes CaM-mediated SGS3 degradation | ( | |
| CMV | Unknown | VISP1; SGS3/RDR6 | CMV induces VISP1 expression, VISP1 interacts with SGS3 and mediates the autophagic degradation of SGS3/RDR6 | ( | |
| RSV | NSsv4 | REM1 | NSsv4 interacts with REM1 and interferes with its S-acylation, inducing the autophagic degradation of unmodified REM1 | ( | |
| TuMV | VPg | REM1.2 | VPg interacts with REM1.2 and mediates REM1.2 degradation through autophagy and ubiquitination pathways | ( | |
| TuMV | 6K2; NIb | NBR1; ATG8f | TuMV activates UPR-dependent NBR1-ATG8f autophagy to target the VRC to the tonoplast, thus promoting viral replication | ( |