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Use of a small DNA virus model to investigate mechanisms of CpG dinucleotide-induced attenuation of virus replication

Suppression of the CpG dinucleotide is widespread in RNA viruses infecting vertebrates and plants, and in the genomes of retroviruses and small mammalian DNA viruses. The functional basis for CpG suppression in the latter was investigated through the construction of mutants of the parvovirus, minute...

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Autores principales: Loew, Lisa, Goonawardane, Niluka, Ratcliff, Jeremy, Nguyen, Dung, Simmonds, Peter
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Microbiology Society 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7879557/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32783803
http://dx.doi.org/10.1099/jgv.0.001477
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author Loew, Lisa
Goonawardane, Niluka
Ratcliff, Jeremy
Nguyen, Dung
Simmonds, Peter
author_facet Loew, Lisa
Goonawardane, Niluka
Ratcliff, Jeremy
Nguyen, Dung
Simmonds, Peter
author_sort Loew, Lisa
collection PubMed
description Suppression of the CpG dinucleotide is widespread in RNA viruses infecting vertebrates and plants, and in the genomes of retroviruses and small mammalian DNA viruses. The functional basis for CpG suppression in the latter was investigated through the construction of mutants of the parvovirus, minute virus of mice (MVM) with increased CpG or TpA dinucleotides in the VP gene. CpG-high mutants displayed extraordinary attenuation in A9 cells compared to wild-type MVM (>six logs), while TpA elevation showed no replication effect. Attenuation was independent of Toll-like receptor 9 and STING-mediated DNA recognition pathways and unrelated to effects on translation efficiency. While translation from codon-optimized VP RNA was enhanced in a cell-free assay, MVM containing this sequence was highly attenuated. Further mutational analysis indicated that this arose through its increased numbers of CpG dinucleotides (7→70) and separately from its increased G+C content (42.3→57.4 %), which independently attenuated replication. CpG-high viruses showed impaired NS mRNA expression by qPCR and reduced NS and particularly VP protein expression detected by immunofluorescence and replication in A549 cells, effects reversed in zinc antiviral protein (ZAP) knockout cells, even though nuclear relocalization of VP remained defective. The demonstrated functional basis for CpG suppression in MVM and potentially other small DNA viruses and the observed intolerance of CpGs in coding sequences, even after codon optimization, has implications for the use of small DNA virus vectors in gene therapy and immunization.
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spelling pubmed-78795572021-02-12 Use of a small DNA virus model to investigate mechanisms of CpG dinucleotide-induced attenuation of virus replication Loew, Lisa Goonawardane, Niluka Ratcliff, Jeremy Nguyen, Dung Simmonds, Peter J Gen Virol Research Article Suppression of the CpG dinucleotide is widespread in RNA viruses infecting vertebrates and plants, and in the genomes of retroviruses and small mammalian DNA viruses. The functional basis for CpG suppression in the latter was investigated through the construction of mutants of the parvovirus, minute virus of mice (MVM) with increased CpG or TpA dinucleotides in the VP gene. CpG-high mutants displayed extraordinary attenuation in A9 cells compared to wild-type MVM (>six logs), while TpA elevation showed no replication effect. Attenuation was independent of Toll-like receptor 9 and STING-mediated DNA recognition pathways and unrelated to effects on translation efficiency. While translation from codon-optimized VP RNA was enhanced in a cell-free assay, MVM containing this sequence was highly attenuated. Further mutational analysis indicated that this arose through its increased numbers of CpG dinucleotides (7→70) and separately from its increased G+C content (42.3→57.4 %), which independently attenuated replication. CpG-high viruses showed impaired NS mRNA expression by qPCR and reduced NS and particularly VP protein expression detected by immunofluorescence and replication in A549 cells, effects reversed in zinc antiviral protein (ZAP) knockout cells, even though nuclear relocalization of VP remained defective. The demonstrated functional basis for CpG suppression in MVM and potentially other small DNA viruses and the observed intolerance of CpGs in coding sequences, even after codon optimization, has implications for the use of small DNA virus vectors in gene therapy and immunization. Microbiology Society 2020-11 2020-08-12 /pmc/articles/PMC7879557/ /pubmed/32783803 http://dx.doi.org/10.1099/jgv.0.001477 Text en © 2020 The Authors http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. This article was made open access via a Publish and Read agreement between the Microbiology Society and the corresponding author’s institution.
spellingShingle Research Article
Loew, Lisa
Goonawardane, Niluka
Ratcliff, Jeremy
Nguyen, Dung
Simmonds, Peter
Use of a small DNA virus model to investigate mechanisms of CpG dinucleotide-induced attenuation of virus replication
title Use of a small DNA virus model to investigate mechanisms of CpG dinucleotide-induced attenuation of virus replication
title_full Use of a small DNA virus model to investigate mechanisms of CpG dinucleotide-induced attenuation of virus replication
title_fullStr Use of a small DNA virus model to investigate mechanisms of CpG dinucleotide-induced attenuation of virus replication
title_full_unstemmed Use of a small DNA virus model to investigate mechanisms of CpG dinucleotide-induced attenuation of virus replication
title_short Use of a small DNA virus model to investigate mechanisms of CpG dinucleotide-induced attenuation of virus replication
title_sort use of a small dna virus model to investigate mechanisms of cpg dinucleotide-induced attenuation of virus replication
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7879557/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32783803
http://dx.doi.org/10.1099/jgv.0.001477
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