| Literature DB >> 35681452 |
Carly DeAntoneo1,2, Pranav Danthi3, Siddharth Balachandran1.
Abstract
Mammalian orthoreoviruses (ReoV) are non-enveloped viruses with segmented double-stranded RNA genomes. In humans, ReoV are generally considered non-pathogenic, although members of this family have been proven to cause mild gastroenteritis in young children and may contribute to the development of inflammatory conditions, including Celiac disease. Because of its low pathogenic potential and its ability to efficiently infect and kill transformed cells, the ReoV strain Type 3 Dearing (T3D) is clinical trials as an oncolytic agent. ReoV manifests its oncolytic effects in large part by infecting tumor cells and activating programmed cell death pathways (PCDs). It was previously believed that apoptosis was the dominant PCD pathway triggered by ReoV infection. However, new studies suggest that ReoV also activates other PCD pathways, such as autophagy, pyroptosis, and necroptosis. Necroptosis is a caspase-independent form of PCD reliant on receptor-interacting serine/threonine-protein kinase 3 (RIPK3) and its substrate, the pseudokinase mixed-lineage kinase domain-like protein (MLKL). As necroptosis is highly inflammatory, ReoV-induced necroptosis may contribute to the oncolytic potential of this virus, not only by promoting necrotic lysis of the infected cell, but also by inflaming the surrounding tumor microenvironment and provoking beneficial anti-tumor immune responses. In this review, we summarize our current understanding of the ReoV replication cycle, the known and potential mechanisms by which ReoV induces PCD, and discuss the consequences of non-apoptotic cell death-particularly necroptosis-to ReoV pathogenesis and oncolysis.Entities:
Keywords: MLKL; RIPK3; ZBP1; apoptosis; necroptosis; oncolysis; reovirus
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35681452 PMCID: PMC9179526 DOI: 10.3390/cells11111757
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cells ISSN: 2073-4409 Impact factor: 7.666
Figure 1ReoV structure and genome organization. (A) Schematic depiction of the mature virion, containing all virally encoded proteins (left); the ISVP, a replication intermediate which has shed the σ3 protein (middle); and the viral core, lacking σ3, σ1, and µ1 (right). Viral proteins are indicated by black lines. Viral dsRNA genome segments are portrayed as pink lines. (B) ReoV genome comprises 10 dsRNA segments, depicted as rectangles. The proteins encoded by each segment are portrayed below.
ReoV proteins and their known functions. This table lists all proteins encoded by the ReoV genome, the segment which encodes each protein, the known functions of the proteins, and their location in the virion.
| Encoded Protein | Genome Segment | Role in Viral Life Cycle | Role in the Immune Response | Location | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| λ3 | L1 | RNA-dependent RNA polymerase | Unknown | inner capsid | [ |
| λ2 | L2 | Capping (methyltransferase and guanylyltransferase activity) | Unknown | inner capsid | [ |
| λ1 | L3 | Possible helicase/NTPase | Unknown | inner capsid | [ |
| μ2 | M1 | RNA binding | Inhibits interferon signaling | inner capsid | [ |
| μ1 (cleaved into μ1C and μ1N) | M2 | Forms pores in endosomes | Induces apoptosis | outer capsid | [ |
| μNS + μNSC | M3 | Forms viral factories | Imhibits IRF3 signaling | non-structural | [ |
| σ1 + σ1s | S1 | σ1 binds to host cell receptor such as JAM-A | σ1 binds host cell | σ1 = outer capsid | [ |
| σ2 | S2 | Interacts with λ1 to form the viral core | Unknown | inner capsid | [ |
| σNS | S4 | RNA binding | Unknown | non-structrual | [ |
| σ3 | S3 | dsRNA binding | Blocks PKR | outer capsid | [ |
Figure 2Reovirus Life Cycle. ReoV enters cells (Step 1) following binding of σ1 protein to host cell receptor, such as JAM-A and, in some cases, sialic acids. Clathrin-mediated endocytosis is the most common entry mechanism, although caveolin-mediated endocytosis and macropinocytosis is also possible. The virions are then shuttled within endosomes. Proteolysis degrades the outer σ3 protein and cleavage of the unveiled µ1C into fragments δ and φ, leading to formation of the ISVP. The µ1C cleavage fragments, along with µ1N, form pores within the endosomal membrane, depositing the viral core now lacking both µ 1 and σ1. Transcription by the RdRp λ3 occurs within the viral core underneath channels formed by λ2 (Step 2). Capping of mRNA is mediated by λ2. Viral mRNA is exported from the viral core and into the cytoplasm, where translation occurs (Step 3). Viral proteins mediate nucleation of viral factories, where progeny cores begin to self-assemble (Step 4). Negative strand synthesis occurs within progeny cores, forming nascent viral genomes (Step 5). Progeny core transcription occurs, and outer capsid proteins begin to assemble around progeny cores (Step 6). Finally, progeny virons leave the cell, either via lytic or non-lytic egress (Step 7).
Figure 3Programmed Cell Death Pathways activated by ReoV. This figure illustrates four potential programmed cell death pathways activated by ReoV infection. Potential dsRNA sensors in these pathways are indicated by question marks.