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Cyclical adaptation of measles virus quasispecies to epithelial and lymphocytic cells: To V, or not to V

Measles virus (MeV) is dual-tropic: it replicates first in lymphatic tissues and then in epithelial cells. This switch in tropism raises the question of whether, and how, intra-host evolution occurs. Towards addressing this question, we adapted MeV either to lymphocytic (Granta-519) or epithelial (H...

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Autores principales: Donohue, Ryan C., Pfaller, Christian K., Cattaneo, Roberto
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6395005/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30768648
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1007605
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author Donohue, Ryan C.
Pfaller, Christian K.
Cattaneo, Roberto
author_facet Donohue, Ryan C.
Pfaller, Christian K.
Cattaneo, Roberto
author_sort Donohue, Ryan C.
collection PubMed
description Measles virus (MeV) is dual-tropic: it replicates first in lymphatic tissues and then in epithelial cells. This switch in tropism raises the question of whether, and how, intra-host evolution occurs. Towards addressing this question, we adapted MeV either to lymphocytic (Granta-519) or epithelial (H358) cells. We also passaged it consecutively in both human cell lines. Since passaged MeV had different replication kinetics, we sought to investigate the underlying genetic mechanisms of growth differences by performing deep-sequencing analyses. Lymphocytic adaptation reproducibly resulted in accumulation of variants mapping within an 11-nucleotide sequence located in the middle of the phosphoprotein (P) gene. This sequence mediates polymerase slippage and addition of a pseudo-templated guanosine to the P mRNA. This form of co-transcriptional RNA editing results in expression of an interferon antagonist, named V, in place of a polymerase co-factor, named P. We show that lymphocytic-adapted MeV indeed produce minimal amounts of edited transcripts and V protein. In contrast, parental and epithelial-adapted MeV produce similar levels of edited and non-edited transcripts, and of V and P proteins. Raji, another lymphocytic cell line, also positively selects V-deficient MeV genomes. On the other hand, in epithelial cells V-competent MeV genomes rapidly out-compete the V-deficient variants. To characterize the mechanisms of genome re-equilibration we rescued four recombinant MeV carrying individual editing site-proximal mutations. Three mutations interfered with RNA editing, resulting in almost exclusive P protein expression. The fourth preserved RNA editing and a standard P-to-V protein expression ratio. However, it altered a histidine involved in Zn(2+) binding, inactivating V function. Thus, the lymphocytic environment favors replication of V-deficient MeV, while the epithelial environment has the opposite effect, resulting in rapid and thorough cyclical quasispecies re-equilibration. Analogous processes may occur in natural infections with other dual-tropic RNA viruses.
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spelling pubmed-63950052019-03-09 Cyclical adaptation of measles virus quasispecies to epithelial and lymphocytic cells: To V, or not to V Donohue, Ryan C. Pfaller, Christian K. Cattaneo, Roberto PLoS Pathog Research Article Measles virus (MeV) is dual-tropic: it replicates first in lymphatic tissues and then in epithelial cells. This switch in tropism raises the question of whether, and how, intra-host evolution occurs. Towards addressing this question, we adapted MeV either to lymphocytic (Granta-519) or epithelial (H358) cells. We also passaged it consecutively in both human cell lines. Since passaged MeV had different replication kinetics, we sought to investigate the underlying genetic mechanisms of growth differences by performing deep-sequencing analyses. Lymphocytic adaptation reproducibly resulted in accumulation of variants mapping within an 11-nucleotide sequence located in the middle of the phosphoprotein (P) gene. This sequence mediates polymerase slippage and addition of a pseudo-templated guanosine to the P mRNA. This form of co-transcriptional RNA editing results in expression of an interferon antagonist, named V, in place of a polymerase co-factor, named P. We show that lymphocytic-adapted MeV indeed produce minimal amounts of edited transcripts and V protein. In contrast, parental and epithelial-adapted MeV produce similar levels of edited and non-edited transcripts, and of V and P proteins. Raji, another lymphocytic cell line, also positively selects V-deficient MeV genomes. On the other hand, in epithelial cells V-competent MeV genomes rapidly out-compete the V-deficient variants. To characterize the mechanisms of genome re-equilibration we rescued four recombinant MeV carrying individual editing site-proximal mutations. Three mutations interfered with RNA editing, resulting in almost exclusive P protein expression. The fourth preserved RNA editing and a standard P-to-V protein expression ratio. However, it altered a histidine involved in Zn(2+) binding, inactivating V function. Thus, the lymphocytic environment favors replication of V-deficient MeV, while the epithelial environment has the opposite effect, resulting in rapid and thorough cyclical quasispecies re-equilibration. Analogous processes may occur in natural infections with other dual-tropic RNA viruses. Public Library of Science 2019-02-15 /pmc/articles/PMC6395005/ /pubmed/30768648 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1007605 Text en © 2019 Donohue 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 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Donohue, Ryan C.
Pfaller, Christian K.
Cattaneo, Roberto
Cyclical adaptation of measles virus quasispecies to epithelial and lymphocytic cells: To V, or not to V
title Cyclical adaptation of measles virus quasispecies to epithelial and lymphocytic cells: To V, or not to V
title_full Cyclical adaptation of measles virus quasispecies to epithelial and lymphocytic cells: To V, or not to V
title_fullStr Cyclical adaptation of measles virus quasispecies to epithelial and lymphocytic cells: To V, or not to V
title_full_unstemmed Cyclical adaptation of measles virus quasispecies to epithelial and lymphocytic cells: To V, or not to V
title_short Cyclical adaptation of measles virus quasispecies to epithelial and lymphocytic cells: To V, or not to V
title_sort cyclical adaptation of measles virus quasispecies to epithelial and lymphocytic cells: to v, or not to v
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6395005/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30768648
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1007605
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