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Host BAG3 Is Degraded by Pseudorabies Virus pUL56 C-Terminal (181)L-(185)L and Plays a Negative Regulation Role during Viral Lytic Infection

Bcl2-associated athanogene (BAG) 3, which is a chaperone-mediated selective autophagy protein, plays a pivotal role in modulating the life cycle of a wide variety of viruses. Both positive and negative modulations of viruses by BAG3 were reported. However, the effects of BAG3 on pseudorabies virus (...

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Autores principales: Lyu, Chuang, Li, Wei-Dong, Wang, Shu-Wen, Peng, Jin-Mei, Yang, Yong-Bo, Tian, Zhi-Jun, Cai, Xue-Hui
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7247713/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32365661
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms21093148
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author Lyu, Chuang
Li, Wei-Dong
Wang, Shu-Wen
Peng, Jin-Mei
Yang, Yong-Bo
Tian, Zhi-Jun
Cai, Xue-Hui
author_facet Lyu, Chuang
Li, Wei-Dong
Wang, Shu-Wen
Peng, Jin-Mei
Yang, Yong-Bo
Tian, Zhi-Jun
Cai, Xue-Hui
author_sort Lyu, Chuang
collection PubMed
description Bcl2-associated athanogene (BAG) 3, which is a chaperone-mediated selective autophagy protein, plays a pivotal role in modulating the life cycle of a wide variety of viruses. Both positive and negative modulations of viruses by BAG3 were reported. However, the effects of BAG3 on pseudorabies virus (PRV) remain unknown. To investigate whether BAG3 could modulate the PRV life cycle during a lytic infection, we first identified PRV protein UL56 (pUL56) as a novel BAG3 interactor by co-immunoprecipitation and co-localization analyses. The overexpression of pUL56 induced a significant degradation of BAG3 at protein level via the lysosome pathway. The C-terminal mutations of (181)L/A, (185)L/A, or (181)L/A-(185)L/A in pUL56 resulted in a deficiency in pUL56-induced BAG3 degradation. In addition, the pUL56 C-terminal mutants that lost Golgi retention abrogated pUL56-induced BAG3 degradation, which indicates a Golgi retention-dependent manner. Strikingly, BAG3 was not observed to be degraded in either wild-type or UL56-deleted PRV infected cells as compared to mock infected ones, whereas the additional two adjacent BAG3 cleaved products were found in the infected cells in a species-specific manner. Overexpression of BAG3 significantly suppressed PRV proliferation, while knockdown of BAG3 resulted in increased viral yields in HEK293T cells. Thus, these data indicated a negative regulation role of BAG3 during PRV lytic infection. Collectively, our findings revealed a novel molecular mechanism on host protein degradation induced by PRV pUL56. Moreover, we identified BAG3 as a host restricted protein during PRV lytic infection in cells.
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spelling pubmed-72477132020-06-10 Host BAG3 Is Degraded by Pseudorabies Virus pUL56 C-Terminal (181)L-(185)L and Plays a Negative Regulation Role during Viral Lytic Infection Lyu, Chuang Li, Wei-Dong Wang, Shu-Wen Peng, Jin-Mei Yang, Yong-Bo Tian, Zhi-Jun Cai, Xue-Hui Int J Mol Sci Article Bcl2-associated athanogene (BAG) 3, which is a chaperone-mediated selective autophagy protein, plays a pivotal role in modulating the life cycle of a wide variety of viruses. Both positive and negative modulations of viruses by BAG3 were reported. However, the effects of BAG3 on pseudorabies virus (PRV) remain unknown. To investigate whether BAG3 could modulate the PRV life cycle during a lytic infection, we first identified PRV protein UL56 (pUL56) as a novel BAG3 interactor by co-immunoprecipitation and co-localization analyses. The overexpression of pUL56 induced a significant degradation of BAG3 at protein level via the lysosome pathway. The C-terminal mutations of (181)L/A, (185)L/A, or (181)L/A-(185)L/A in pUL56 resulted in a deficiency in pUL56-induced BAG3 degradation. In addition, the pUL56 C-terminal mutants that lost Golgi retention abrogated pUL56-induced BAG3 degradation, which indicates a Golgi retention-dependent manner. Strikingly, BAG3 was not observed to be degraded in either wild-type or UL56-deleted PRV infected cells as compared to mock infected ones, whereas the additional two adjacent BAG3 cleaved products were found in the infected cells in a species-specific manner. Overexpression of BAG3 significantly suppressed PRV proliferation, while knockdown of BAG3 resulted in increased viral yields in HEK293T cells. Thus, these data indicated a negative regulation role of BAG3 during PRV lytic infection. Collectively, our findings revealed a novel molecular mechanism on host protein degradation induced by PRV pUL56. Moreover, we identified BAG3 as a host restricted protein during PRV lytic infection in cells. MDPI 2020-04-29 /pmc/articles/PMC7247713/ /pubmed/32365661 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms21093148 Text en © 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Lyu, Chuang
Li, Wei-Dong
Wang, Shu-Wen
Peng, Jin-Mei
Yang, Yong-Bo
Tian, Zhi-Jun
Cai, Xue-Hui
Host BAG3 Is Degraded by Pseudorabies Virus pUL56 C-Terminal (181)L-(185)L and Plays a Negative Regulation Role during Viral Lytic Infection
title Host BAG3 Is Degraded by Pseudorabies Virus pUL56 C-Terminal (181)L-(185)L and Plays a Negative Regulation Role during Viral Lytic Infection
title_full Host BAG3 Is Degraded by Pseudorabies Virus pUL56 C-Terminal (181)L-(185)L and Plays a Negative Regulation Role during Viral Lytic Infection
title_fullStr Host BAG3 Is Degraded by Pseudorabies Virus pUL56 C-Terminal (181)L-(185)L and Plays a Negative Regulation Role during Viral Lytic Infection
title_full_unstemmed Host BAG3 Is Degraded by Pseudorabies Virus pUL56 C-Terminal (181)L-(185)L and Plays a Negative Regulation Role during Viral Lytic Infection
title_short Host BAG3 Is Degraded by Pseudorabies Virus pUL56 C-Terminal (181)L-(185)L and Plays a Negative Regulation Role during Viral Lytic Infection
title_sort host bag3 is degraded by pseudorabies virus pul56 c-terminal (181)l-(185)l and plays a negative regulation role during viral lytic infection
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7247713/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32365661
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms21093148
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