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A Single Amino Acid Switch in the Adenoviral DNA Binding Protein Abrogates Replication Center Formation and Productive Viral Infection

Adenoviruses are very efficient high-capacity vaccine vectors and are common gene delivery systems. Despite their extensive use in preclinical models and clinical trials over the past decades, adenoviral vectors still require optimization. To achieve that, more thorough characterizations of adenovir...

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Autores principales: Boddin, Jana, Ip, Wing-Hang, Wilkens, Britta, von Stromberg, Konstantin, Ching, Wilhelm, Koyuncu, Emre, Bertzbach, Luca D., Dobner, Thomas
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Society for Microbiology 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9040859/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35254132
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mbio.00144-22
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author Boddin, Jana
Ip, Wing-Hang
Wilkens, Britta
von Stromberg, Konstantin
Ching, Wilhelm
Koyuncu, Emre
Bertzbach, Luca D.
Dobner, Thomas
author_facet Boddin, Jana
Ip, Wing-Hang
Wilkens, Britta
von Stromberg, Konstantin
Ching, Wilhelm
Koyuncu, Emre
Bertzbach, Luca D.
Dobner, Thomas
author_sort Boddin, Jana
collection PubMed
description Adenoviruses are very efficient high-capacity vaccine vectors and are common gene delivery systems. Despite their extensive use in preclinical models and clinical trials over the past decades, adenoviral vectors still require optimization. To achieve that, more thorough characterizations of adenoviral genes and gene products, as well as pathogen-host interactions, are indispensable. The adenoviral DNA binding protein (DBP) is a key regulatory protein involved in various cellular and viral processes. Here, we show that single amino acid exchange mutations in human adenovirus C5 (HAdV-C5) DBP strongly influence adenoviral replication by altering interaction with the cellular ubiquitination machinery. Specifically, phenotypic analyses of DBP mutants demonstrate that single amino acid substitutions can regulate interactions with the cellular USP7 deubiquitinase, impede viral DNA synthesis, and completely abolish viral late protein expression and progeny production. Importantly, cells infected with the DBP mutant UBM5 consistently lack DBP-positive replication centers (RCs), which are usually formed during the transition from the early to the late phase of infection. Our findings demonstrate that DBP regulates a key step at the onset of the late phase of infection and that this activity is unambiguously linked to the formation and integrity of viral RCs. These data provide the experimental basis for future work that targets DBP and its interference with the formation of viral RCs during productive infection. Consequently, this work will have immediate impact on DNA virus and adenovirus research in general and, potentially, also on safety optimization of existing and development of novel adenoviral vectors and anti-adenoviral compounds.
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spelling pubmed-90408592022-04-27 A Single Amino Acid Switch in the Adenoviral DNA Binding Protein Abrogates Replication Center Formation and Productive Viral Infection Boddin, Jana Ip, Wing-Hang Wilkens, Britta von Stromberg, Konstantin Ching, Wilhelm Koyuncu, Emre Bertzbach, Luca D. Dobner, Thomas mBio Research Article Adenoviruses are very efficient high-capacity vaccine vectors and are common gene delivery systems. Despite their extensive use in preclinical models and clinical trials over the past decades, adenoviral vectors still require optimization. To achieve that, more thorough characterizations of adenoviral genes and gene products, as well as pathogen-host interactions, are indispensable. The adenoviral DNA binding protein (DBP) is a key regulatory protein involved in various cellular and viral processes. Here, we show that single amino acid exchange mutations in human adenovirus C5 (HAdV-C5) DBP strongly influence adenoviral replication by altering interaction with the cellular ubiquitination machinery. Specifically, phenotypic analyses of DBP mutants demonstrate that single amino acid substitutions can regulate interactions with the cellular USP7 deubiquitinase, impede viral DNA synthesis, and completely abolish viral late protein expression and progeny production. Importantly, cells infected with the DBP mutant UBM5 consistently lack DBP-positive replication centers (RCs), which are usually formed during the transition from the early to the late phase of infection. Our findings demonstrate that DBP regulates a key step at the onset of the late phase of infection and that this activity is unambiguously linked to the formation and integrity of viral RCs. These data provide the experimental basis for future work that targets DBP and its interference with the formation of viral RCs during productive infection. Consequently, this work will have immediate impact on DNA virus and adenovirus research in general and, potentially, also on safety optimization of existing and development of novel adenoviral vectors and anti-adenoviral compounds. American Society for Microbiology 2022-03-07 /pmc/articles/PMC9040859/ /pubmed/35254132 http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mbio.00144-22 Text en Copyright © 2022 Boddin 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 Research Article
Boddin, Jana
Ip, Wing-Hang
Wilkens, Britta
von Stromberg, Konstantin
Ching, Wilhelm
Koyuncu, Emre
Bertzbach, Luca D.
Dobner, Thomas
A Single Amino Acid Switch in the Adenoviral DNA Binding Protein Abrogates Replication Center Formation and Productive Viral Infection
title A Single Amino Acid Switch in the Adenoviral DNA Binding Protein Abrogates Replication Center Formation and Productive Viral Infection
title_full A Single Amino Acid Switch in the Adenoviral DNA Binding Protein Abrogates Replication Center Formation and Productive Viral Infection
title_fullStr A Single Amino Acid Switch in the Adenoviral DNA Binding Protein Abrogates Replication Center Formation and Productive Viral Infection
title_full_unstemmed A Single Amino Acid Switch in the Adenoviral DNA Binding Protein Abrogates Replication Center Formation and Productive Viral Infection
title_short A Single Amino Acid Switch in the Adenoviral DNA Binding Protein Abrogates Replication Center Formation and Productive Viral Infection
title_sort single amino acid switch in the adenoviral dna binding protein abrogates replication center formation and productive viral infection
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9040859/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35254132
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mbio.00144-22
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