Receptor transporter protein 4 (RTP4)-mediated repression of hepatitis C virus replication in mouse cells.

IF 4.9 1区 医学 Q1 MICROBIOLOGY
PLoS Pathogens Pub Date : 2025-09-08 eCollection Date: 2025-09-01 DOI:10.1371/journal.ppat.1013412
Michael P Schwoerer, Sebastian Carver, Aaron E Lin, Jianche Liu, Thomas R Cafiero, Keith A Berggren, Serene Dhawan, Saori Suzuki, Brigitte Heller, Celeste Rodriguez, Aoife K O'Connell, Hans P Gertje, Nicholas A Crossland, Alexander Ploss
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Hepatitis C virus (HCV) exhibits a narrow species tropism, causing robust infections only in humans and experimentally inoculated chimpanzees. While many host factors and restriction factors are known, many more likely remain unknown, which has limited the development of mouse or other small animal models for HCV. One putative restriction factor, the black flying fox orthologue of receptor transporter protein 4 (RTP4), was previously shown to potently inhibit viral genome replication of several ER-replicating RNA viruses. Since the murine but not the human ortholog is a potent inhibitor of HCV, we aimed to analyze the potential role for RTP4 in restricting HCV replication in mice. We demonstrated that mouse RTP4 (mmRTP4) functions as a dominant inhibitor of HCV infection. Via interspecies domain-mapping, we identified the zinc-finger domain (ZFD) of murine RTP4 as essential for inhibiting HCV, consistent with prior work. Introducing mmRTP4 into HCV-infected Huh7 cells profoundly reduced HCV NS5A protein production and virion release, demonstrating that mmRTP4 can also disrupt already established HCV replication complexes. This inhibition of HCV was not driven by induction of interferon-stimulated genes based on bulk RNA-seq, suggesting that mmRTP4 might directly act on HCV replication. Indeed, by in situ proximity ligation, we found that mmRTP4 directly associates with the HCV NS5A protein significantly more than human RTP4 during infection. However, disrupting RTP4 expression in mice expressing humanized alleles of CD81 and occludin (OCLN) - the species specific cellular factors mediating HCV uptake - did not increase permissiveness irrespective of the immunocompetence of the mice. Collectively, our work provides detailed insights into the role of RTP4 in contributing to HCV's narrow host range and will inform downstream development of a more comprehensive small-animal model for this important pathogen.

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受体转运蛋白4 (RTP4)介导的小鼠细胞中丙型肝炎病毒复制的抑制
丙型肝炎病毒(HCV)表现出狭窄的物种趋向性,仅在人类和实验接种的黑猩猩中引起强烈的感染。虽然许多宿主因素和限制因素是已知的,但更多的可能仍然未知,这限制了HCV小鼠或其他小动物模型的发展。一种假定的限制因子,即受体转运蛋白4 (RTP4)的黑狐同源物,先前已被证明能有效抑制几种er复制RNA病毒的病毒基因组复制。由于小鼠而非人类同源物是HCV的有效抑制剂,我们旨在分析RTP4在限制HCV在小鼠中的复制中的潜在作用。我们证明小鼠RTP4 (mmRTP4)作为HCV感染的显性抑制剂起作用。通过种间结构域定位,我们发现小鼠RTP4的锌指结构域(ZFD)对抑制HCV至关重要,与先前的工作一致。将mmRTP4引入HCV感染的Huh7细胞中,可以显著降低HCV NS5A蛋白的产生和病毒粒子的释放,表明mmRTP4也可以破坏已经建立的HCV复制复合物。这种对HCV的抑制不是由基于大量rna测序的干扰素刺激基因诱导驱动的,这表明mmRTP4可能直接作用于HCV复制。事实上,通过原位近距离结扎,我们发现mmRTP4在感染期间与HCV NS5A蛋白直接相关的程度明显高于人RTP4。然而,在表达CD81和occludin(介导HCV摄取的物种特异性细胞因子)人源化等位基因的小鼠中,破坏RTP4的表达并没有增加小鼠的容纳性,而与小鼠的免疫能力无关。总的来说,我们的工作提供了RTP4在HCV宿主范围狭窄中的作用的详细见解,并将为下游开发更全面的这种重要病原体的小动物模型提供信息。
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来源期刊
PLoS Pathogens
PLoS Pathogens MICROBIOLOGY-PARASITOLOGY
自引率
3.00%
发文量
598
期刊介绍: Bacteria, fungi, parasites, prions and viruses cause a plethora of diseases that have important medical, agricultural, and economic consequences. Moreover, the study of microbes continues to provide novel insights into such fundamental processes as the molecular basis of cellular and organismal function.
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