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Centrosomal Latency of Incoming Foamy Viruses in Resting Cells

Completion of early stages of retrovirus infection depends on the cell cycle. While gammaretroviruses require mitosis for proviral integration, lentiviruses are able to replicate in post-mitotic non-dividing cells. Resting cells such as naive resting T lymphocytes from peripheral blood cannot be pro...

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Autores principales: Lehmann-Che, Jacqueline, Renault, Noémie, Giron, Marie Lou, Roingeard, Philippe, Clave, Emmanuel, Tobaly-Tapiero, Joelle, Bittoun, Patricia, Toubert, Antoine, de Thé, Hugues, Saïb, Ali
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2007
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1871606/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17530924
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.0030074
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author Lehmann-Che, Jacqueline
Renault, Noémie
Giron, Marie Lou
Roingeard, Philippe
Clave, Emmanuel
Tobaly-Tapiero, Joelle
Bittoun, Patricia
Toubert, Antoine
de Thé, Hugues
Saïb, Ali
author_facet Lehmann-Che, Jacqueline
Renault, Noémie
Giron, Marie Lou
Roingeard, Philippe
Clave, Emmanuel
Tobaly-Tapiero, Joelle
Bittoun, Patricia
Toubert, Antoine
de Thé, Hugues
Saïb, Ali
author_sort Lehmann-Che, Jacqueline
collection PubMed
description Completion of early stages of retrovirus infection depends on the cell cycle. While gammaretroviruses require mitosis for proviral integration, lentiviruses are able to replicate in post-mitotic non-dividing cells. Resting cells such as naive resting T lymphocytes from peripheral blood cannot be productively infected by retroviruses, including lentiviruses, but the molecular basis of this restriction remains poorly understood. We demonstrate that in G0 resting cells (primary fibroblasts or peripheral T cells), incoming foamy retroviruses accumulate in close proximity to the centrosome, where they lie as structured and assembled capsids for several weeks. Under these settings, virus uncoating is impaired, but upon cell stimulation, Gag proteolysis and capsid disassembly occur, which allows viral infection to proceed. The data imply that foamy virus uncoating is the rate-limiting step for productive infection of primary G0 cells. Incoming foamy retroviruses can stably persist at the centrosome, awaiting cell stimulation to initiate capsid cleavage, nuclear import, and viral gene expression.
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spelling pubmed-18716062007-05-24 Centrosomal Latency of Incoming Foamy Viruses in Resting Cells Lehmann-Che, Jacqueline Renault, Noémie Giron, Marie Lou Roingeard, Philippe Clave, Emmanuel Tobaly-Tapiero, Joelle Bittoun, Patricia Toubert, Antoine de Thé, Hugues Saïb, Ali PLoS Pathog Research Article Completion of early stages of retrovirus infection depends on the cell cycle. While gammaretroviruses require mitosis for proviral integration, lentiviruses are able to replicate in post-mitotic non-dividing cells. Resting cells such as naive resting T lymphocytes from peripheral blood cannot be productively infected by retroviruses, including lentiviruses, but the molecular basis of this restriction remains poorly understood. We demonstrate that in G0 resting cells (primary fibroblasts or peripheral T cells), incoming foamy retroviruses accumulate in close proximity to the centrosome, where they lie as structured and assembled capsids for several weeks. Under these settings, virus uncoating is impaired, but upon cell stimulation, Gag proteolysis and capsid disassembly occur, which allows viral infection to proceed. The data imply that foamy virus uncoating is the rate-limiting step for productive infection of primary G0 cells. Incoming foamy retroviruses can stably persist at the centrosome, awaiting cell stimulation to initiate capsid cleavage, nuclear import, and viral gene expression. Public Library of Science 2007-05 2007-05-25 /pmc/articles/PMC1871606/ /pubmed/17530924 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.0030074 Text en © 2007 Lehmann-Che et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Lehmann-Che, Jacqueline
Renault, Noémie
Giron, Marie Lou
Roingeard, Philippe
Clave, Emmanuel
Tobaly-Tapiero, Joelle
Bittoun, Patricia
Toubert, Antoine
de Thé, Hugues
Saïb, Ali
Centrosomal Latency of Incoming Foamy Viruses in Resting Cells
title Centrosomal Latency of Incoming Foamy Viruses in Resting Cells
title_full Centrosomal Latency of Incoming Foamy Viruses in Resting Cells
title_fullStr Centrosomal Latency of Incoming Foamy Viruses in Resting Cells
title_full_unstemmed Centrosomal Latency of Incoming Foamy Viruses in Resting Cells
title_short Centrosomal Latency of Incoming Foamy Viruses in Resting Cells
title_sort centrosomal latency of incoming foamy viruses in resting cells
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1871606/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17530924
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.0030074
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