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The Mammalian Cell Cycle Regulates Parvovirus Nuclear Capsid Assembly

It is unknown whether the mammalian cell cycle could impact the assembly of viruses maturing in the nucleus. We addressed this question using MVM, a reference member of the icosahedral ssDNA nuclear parvoviruses, which requires cell proliferation to infect by mechanisms partly understood. Constituti...

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Autores principales: Gil-Ranedo, Jon, Hernando, Eva, Riolobos, Laura, Domínguez, Carlos, Kann, Michael, Almendral, José M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4466232/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26067441
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1004920
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author Gil-Ranedo, Jon
Hernando, Eva
Riolobos, Laura
Domínguez, Carlos
Kann, Michael
Almendral, José M.
author_facet Gil-Ranedo, Jon
Hernando, Eva
Riolobos, Laura
Domínguez, Carlos
Kann, Michael
Almendral, José M.
author_sort Gil-Ranedo, Jon
collection PubMed
description It is unknown whether the mammalian cell cycle could impact the assembly of viruses maturing in the nucleus. We addressed this question using MVM, a reference member of the icosahedral ssDNA nuclear parvoviruses, which requires cell proliferation to infect by mechanisms partly understood. Constitutively expressed MVM capsid subunits (VPs) accumulated in the cytoplasm of mouse and human fibroblasts synchronized at G0, G1, and G1/S transition. Upon arrest release, VPs translocated to the nucleus as cells entered S phase, at efficiencies relying on cell origin and arrest method, and immediately assembled into capsids. In synchronously infected cells, the consecutive virus life cycle steps (gene expression, proteins nuclear translocation, capsid assembly, genome replication and encapsidation) proceeded tightly coupled to cell cycle progression from G0/G1 through S into G2 phase. However, a DNA synthesis stress caused by thymidine irreversibly disrupted virus life cycle, as VPs became increasingly retained in the cytoplasm hours post-stress, forming empty capsids in mouse fibroblasts, thereby impairing encapsidation of the nuclear viral DNA replicative intermediates. Synchronously infected cells subjected to density-arrest signals while traversing early S phase also blocked VPs transport, resulting in a similar misplaced cytoplasmic capsid assembly in mouse fibroblasts. In contrast, thymidine and density arrest signals deregulating virus assembly neither perturbed nuclear translocation of the NS1 protein nor viral genome replication occurring under S/G2 cycle arrest. An underlying mechanism of cell cycle control was identified in the nuclear translocation of phosphorylated VPs trimeric assembly intermediates, which accessed a non-conserved route distinct from the importin α2/β1 and transportin pathways. The exquisite cell cycle-dependence of parvovirus nuclear capsid assembly conforms a novel paradigm of time and functional coupling between cellular and virus life cycles. This junction may determine the characteristic parvovirus tropism for proliferative and cancer cells, and its disturbance could critically contribute to persistence in host tissues.
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spelling pubmed-44662322015-06-25 The Mammalian Cell Cycle Regulates Parvovirus Nuclear Capsid Assembly Gil-Ranedo, Jon Hernando, Eva Riolobos, Laura Domínguez, Carlos Kann, Michael Almendral, José M. PLoS Pathog Research Article It is unknown whether the mammalian cell cycle could impact the assembly of viruses maturing in the nucleus. We addressed this question using MVM, a reference member of the icosahedral ssDNA nuclear parvoviruses, which requires cell proliferation to infect by mechanisms partly understood. Constitutively expressed MVM capsid subunits (VPs) accumulated in the cytoplasm of mouse and human fibroblasts synchronized at G0, G1, and G1/S transition. Upon arrest release, VPs translocated to the nucleus as cells entered S phase, at efficiencies relying on cell origin and arrest method, and immediately assembled into capsids. In synchronously infected cells, the consecutive virus life cycle steps (gene expression, proteins nuclear translocation, capsid assembly, genome replication and encapsidation) proceeded tightly coupled to cell cycle progression from G0/G1 through S into G2 phase. However, a DNA synthesis stress caused by thymidine irreversibly disrupted virus life cycle, as VPs became increasingly retained in the cytoplasm hours post-stress, forming empty capsids in mouse fibroblasts, thereby impairing encapsidation of the nuclear viral DNA replicative intermediates. Synchronously infected cells subjected to density-arrest signals while traversing early S phase also blocked VPs transport, resulting in a similar misplaced cytoplasmic capsid assembly in mouse fibroblasts. In contrast, thymidine and density arrest signals deregulating virus assembly neither perturbed nuclear translocation of the NS1 protein nor viral genome replication occurring under S/G2 cycle arrest. An underlying mechanism of cell cycle control was identified in the nuclear translocation of phosphorylated VPs trimeric assembly intermediates, which accessed a non-conserved route distinct from the importin α2/β1 and transportin pathways. The exquisite cell cycle-dependence of parvovirus nuclear capsid assembly conforms a novel paradigm of time and functional coupling between cellular and virus life cycles. This junction may determine the characteristic parvovirus tropism for proliferative and cancer cells, and its disturbance could critically contribute to persistence in host tissues. Public Library of Science 2015-06-11 /pmc/articles/PMC4466232/ /pubmed/26067441 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1004920 Text en © 2015 Gil-Ranedo 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
Gil-Ranedo, Jon
Hernando, Eva
Riolobos, Laura
Domínguez, Carlos
Kann, Michael
Almendral, José M.
The Mammalian Cell Cycle Regulates Parvovirus Nuclear Capsid Assembly
title The Mammalian Cell Cycle Regulates Parvovirus Nuclear Capsid Assembly
title_full The Mammalian Cell Cycle Regulates Parvovirus Nuclear Capsid Assembly
title_fullStr The Mammalian Cell Cycle Regulates Parvovirus Nuclear Capsid Assembly
title_full_unstemmed The Mammalian Cell Cycle Regulates Parvovirus Nuclear Capsid Assembly
title_short The Mammalian Cell Cycle Regulates Parvovirus Nuclear Capsid Assembly
title_sort mammalian cell cycle regulates parvovirus nuclear capsid assembly
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4466232/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26067441
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1004920
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