The effective multiplicity of infection for HCMV depends on the activity of the cellular 20S proteasome.

IF 4 2区 医学 Q2 VIROLOGY
Katie M Cataldo, Kathryn L Roche, Christopher E Monti, Ranjan K Dash, Eain A Murphy, Scott S Terhune
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) is a betaherpesvirus capable of infecting numerous cell types and persisting throughout an infected individual's life. Disease usually occurs in individuals with compromised or underdeveloped immune systems. Several antivirals exist but have limitations relating to toxicity and resistance. HCMV replication involves upregulation of host proteasomal activities, which play important roles in the temporal stages of replication. Here, we defined the impact on replication kinetics of the proteasome inhibitor, bortezomib. We demonstrate that bortezomib significantly reduces levels of viral genomes and infectious virions produced from a population of cells. Inhibition reduced expression of viral proteins that are influenced by genome synthesis. When added prior to 24 hpi, we observe decreases in PCNA and Cdk1 while increases in p21 whose regulations contribute to efficient replication. This response synergized with an antiviral, maribavir. Since some replication occurred, we tested the hypothesis that a subset of infected cells might break through inhibition. Initially, we simulated bortezomib activities using a mechanistic computational model of late-lytic replication. Upon reducing multiplicity of infection (MOI) in silico, we observed near-identical simulated results compared to experimental data. Next, we analyzed replication using live-cell imaging. This revealed treated cultures do contain a population of cells with fully developed late-stage cytoplasmic assembly compartments but at significantly lower numbers. We refer to this as the effective MOI. Overall, our studies support a hypothesis in which 20S proteasome inhibition disrupts HCMV replication by reducing the MOI to an effective MOI, defined by a fraction of infected cells capable of progressing to fulminant infection.IMPORTANCEHuman cytomegalovirus (HCMV) infection and reactivation continues to contribute to morbidity and mortality around the world. Antiviral compounds are available but have limitations. Here, we have defined the impact of the proteasome inhibitor bortezomib on HCMV replication. Proteasomal activities play a critical role in temporal changes required for replication. We demonstrate that disrupting these activities inhibits viral replication while likely supporting increased antiviral activity of the anti-HCMV agent, maribavir. Using a combination of live-cell imaging and computational tools, we discover that a subset of infected cells progresses to fulminant infection, which we define as the effective multiplicity of infection, and this subset would otherwise be missed when analyzing the average of the population.

人类巨细胞病毒(HCMV)是一种β疱疹病毒,能够感染多种类型的细胞,并在感染者的一生中持续存在。疾病通常发生在免疫系统受损或发育不全的人身上。目前已有多种抗病毒药物,但都存在毒性和耐药性方面的局限性。HCMV 复制涉及宿主蛋白酶体活动的上调,而蛋白酶体活动在复制的时间阶段中发挥着重要作用。在此,我们确定了蛋白酶体抑制剂硼替佐米对复制动力学的影响。我们证明,硼替佐米能显著降低病毒基因组水平和细胞群体产生的传染性病毒。抑制作用减少了受基因组合成影响的病毒蛋白的表达。如果在 24 hpi 之前添加,我们观察到 PCNA 和 Cdk1 的表达量减少,而 p21 的表达量增加,p21 的调节有助于高效复制。这种反应与抗病毒药物 maribavir 有协同作用。由于发生了一些复制,我们测试了一部分受感染细胞可能突破抑制的假设。最初,我们使用晚期裂解复制的机制计算模型模拟了硼替佐米的活性。在降低硅学感染倍率(MOI)后,我们观察到模拟结果与实验数据几乎相同。接下来,我们使用活细胞成像技术分析了复制情况。结果显示,经过处理的培养物中确实含有发育完全的晚期细胞质组装区,但数量明显较少。我们将此称为有效 MOI。总之,我们的研究支持一种假设,即 20S 蛋白酶体抑制通过将 MOI 降低到有效 MOI 来破坏 HCMV 复制,有效 MOI 的定义是能够发展为暴发性感染的受感染细胞的比例。 重要意义人类巨细胞病毒(HCMV)感染和再激活继续导致世界各地的发病率和死亡率。抗病毒化合物虽可获得,但存在局限性。在这里,我们确定了蛋白酶体抑制剂硼替佐米对 HCMV 复制的影响。蛋白酶体活动在复制所需的时间变化中起着关键作用。我们证明,破坏这些活动可抑制病毒复制,同时可能支持提高抗 HCMV 药物 maribavir 的抗病毒活性。通过活细胞成像和计算工具的结合使用,我们发现感染细胞的一个子集会发展为暴发性感染,我们将其定义为有效感染倍数,否则在分析群体平均值时就会漏掉这个子集。
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来源期刊
Journal of Virology
Journal of Virology 医学-病毒学
CiteScore
10.10
自引率
7.40%
发文量
906
审稿时长
1 months
期刊介绍: Journal of Virology (JVI) explores the nature of the viruses of animals, archaea, bacteria, fungi, plants, and protozoa. We welcome papers on virion structure and assembly, viral genome replication and regulation of gene expression, genetic diversity and evolution, virus-cell interactions, cellular responses to infection, transformation and oncogenesis, gene delivery, viral pathogenesis and immunity, and vaccines and antiviral agents.
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