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Cytoplasmic Cargo Receptor p62 Inhibits Avibirnavirus Replication by Mediating Autophagic Degradation of Viral Protein VP2

Selective autophagy regulates the degradation of cytoplasmic cargos, such as damaged organelles, invading pathogens, and aggregated proteins. Furthermore, autophagy is capable of degrading avibirnavirus, but the mechanism responsible for this process is unclear. Here, we show that autophagy cargo re...

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Autores principales: Li, Yahui, Hu, Boli, Ji, Gang, Zhang, Yina, Xu, Chenyang, Lei, Jing, Ding, Chan, Zhou, Jiyong
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Society for Microbiology 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7925189/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32967959
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/JVI.01255-20
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author Li, Yahui
Hu, Boli
Ji, Gang
Zhang, Yina
Xu, Chenyang
Lei, Jing
Ding, Chan
Zhou, Jiyong
author_facet Li, Yahui
Hu, Boli
Ji, Gang
Zhang, Yina
Xu, Chenyang
Lei, Jing
Ding, Chan
Zhou, Jiyong
author_sort Li, Yahui
collection PubMed
description Selective autophagy regulates the degradation of cytoplasmic cargos, such as damaged organelles, invading pathogens, and aggregated proteins. Furthermore, autophagy is capable of degrading avibirnavirus, but the mechanism responsible for this process is unclear. Here, we show that autophagy cargo receptor p62 regulates the degradation of the avibirnavirus capsid protein VP2. Binding of p62 to VP2 enhances autophagic induction and promotes autophagic degradation of viral protein VP2. Further study showed that the interaction of p62 with viral protein VP2 is dependent on ubiquitination at the K411 site of VP2 and the ubiquitin-associated domain of p62. Mutation analysis showed that the K411R mutation of viral protein VP2 prohibits its p62-mediated degradation. Consistent with this finding, p62 lacking the ubiquitin-associated domain or the LC3-interacting region no longer promoted the degradation of VP2. Virus production revealed that the knockout of p62 but not the overexpression of p62 promotes the replication of avibirnavirus. Collectively, our findings suggest that p62 mediates selective autophagic degradation of avibirnavirus protein VP2 in a ubiquitin-dependent manner and is an inhibitor of avibirnavirus replication. IMPORTANCE Avibirnavirus causes severe immunosuppression and mortality in young chickens. VP2, the capsid protein of avibirnavirus, is responsible for virus assembly, maturation, and replication. Previous study showed that avibirnavirus particles could be engulfed into the autophagosome and degradation of virus particles took apart. Selective autophagy is a highly specific and regulated degradation pathway for the clearance of damaged or unwanted cytosolic components and superfluous organelles as well as invading microbes. However, whether and how selective autophagy removes avibirnavirus capsids is largely unknown. Here, we have shown that selective autophagy specifically clears ubiquitinated avibirnavirus protein VP2 by p62 recognition and that p62 is an inhibitor of avibirnavirus replication, highlighting the role of p62 as a potential drug target for mediating the removal of ubiquitinated virus components from cells.
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spelling pubmed-79251892021-03-09 Cytoplasmic Cargo Receptor p62 Inhibits Avibirnavirus Replication by Mediating Autophagic Degradation of Viral Protein VP2 Li, Yahui Hu, Boli Ji, Gang Zhang, Yina Xu, Chenyang Lei, Jing Ding, Chan Zhou, Jiyong J Virol Virus-Cell Interactions Selective autophagy regulates the degradation of cytoplasmic cargos, such as damaged organelles, invading pathogens, and aggregated proteins. Furthermore, autophagy is capable of degrading avibirnavirus, but the mechanism responsible for this process is unclear. Here, we show that autophagy cargo receptor p62 regulates the degradation of the avibirnavirus capsid protein VP2. Binding of p62 to VP2 enhances autophagic induction and promotes autophagic degradation of viral protein VP2. Further study showed that the interaction of p62 with viral protein VP2 is dependent on ubiquitination at the K411 site of VP2 and the ubiquitin-associated domain of p62. Mutation analysis showed that the K411R mutation of viral protein VP2 prohibits its p62-mediated degradation. Consistent with this finding, p62 lacking the ubiquitin-associated domain or the LC3-interacting region no longer promoted the degradation of VP2. Virus production revealed that the knockout of p62 but not the overexpression of p62 promotes the replication of avibirnavirus. Collectively, our findings suggest that p62 mediates selective autophagic degradation of avibirnavirus protein VP2 in a ubiquitin-dependent manner and is an inhibitor of avibirnavirus replication. IMPORTANCE Avibirnavirus causes severe immunosuppression and mortality in young chickens. VP2, the capsid protein of avibirnavirus, is responsible for virus assembly, maturation, and replication. Previous study showed that avibirnavirus particles could be engulfed into the autophagosome and degradation of virus particles took apart. Selective autophagy is a highly specific and regulated degradation pathway for the clearance of damaged or unwanted cytosolic components and superfluous organelles as well as invading microbes. However, whether and how selective autophagy removes avibirnavirus capsids is largely unknown. Here, we have shown that selective autophagy specifically clears ubiquitinated avibirnavirus protein VP2 by p62 recognition and that p62 is an inhibitor of avibirnavirus replication, highlighting the role of p62 as a potential drug target for mediating the removal of ubiquitinated virus components from cells. American Society for Microbiology 2020-11-23 /pmc/articles/PMC7925189/ /pubmed/32967959 http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/JVI.01255-20 Text en Copyright © 2020 Li et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) .
spellingShingle Virus-Cell Interactions
Li, Yahui
Hu, Boli
Ji, Gang
Zhang, Yina
Xu, Chenyang
Lei, Jing
Ding, Chan
Zhou, Jiyong
Cytoplasmic Cargo Receptor p62 Inhibits Avibirnavirus Replication by Mediating Autophagic Degradation of Viral Protein VP2
title Cytoplasmic Cargo Receptor p62 Inhibits Avibirnavirus Replication by Mediating Autophagic Degradation of Viral Protein VP2
title_full Cytoplasmic Cargo Receptor p62 Inhibits Avibirnavirus Replication by Mediating Autophagic Degradation of Viral Protein VP2
title_fullStr Cytoplasmic Cargo Receptor p62 Inhibits Avibirnavirus Replication by Mediating Autophagic Degradation of Viral Protein VP2
title_full_unstemmed Cytoplasmic Cargo Receptor p62 Inhibits Avibirnavirus Replication by Mediating Autophagic Degradation of Viral Protein VP2
title_short Cytoplasmic Cargo Receptor p62 Inhibits Avibirnavirus Replication by Mediating Autophagic Degradation of Viral Protein VP2
title_sort cytoplasmic cargo receptor p62 inhibits avibirnavirus replication by mediating autophagic degradation of viral protein vp2
topic Virus-Cell Interactions
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7925189/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32967959
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/JVI.01255-20
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