Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6139959 | Virology | 2014 | 13 Pages |
Abstract
Caveolin expression supports the multiplication of retro-, ortho- and paramyxoviruses in susceptible cells. However, human influenza A virus (IAV), an orthomyxovirus, does not multiply efficiently in mouse embryo fibroblasts (MEFs), which are abundant in caveolin-1 (Cav-1). Surprisingly, the absence of Cav-1 in a MEF cell line removed the block for IAV replication and raised the infectious titer 250-fold, whereas the re-introduction of Cav-1 reversed the effect. The monitoring of cellular pathways revealed that Cav-1 loss considerably increased activities of p53. Furthermore, infection of MEF Cav-1 (â/â) induced reactive oxygen species (ROS) and pronounced apoptosis in the late phase of viral multiplication, but no type I IFN response. Strikingly, pharmacological inactivation showed that the elevated levels of ROS together with apoptosis caused the increase of virus yield. Thus, Cav-1 represents a new negative regulator of IAV infection in MEF that diminishes IAV infectious titer by controlling virus-supportive pathways.
Keywords
A549PKCnuclear factor kappa-light-chain-enhancer of activated B-cellsIAVMDCKESCRTNACNrf2MEFvRNPHuman influenza A virusCBMNFATMadin–Darby canine kidney cellsNF-κBROSApoptosisNuclear Factor of Activated T Cellsmouse embryo fibroblastTRAILtumor necrosis factor-related apoptosis inducing ligandendosomal sorting complexes required for transportRestrictionNEPN-acetyl cysteinehemagglutininInfluenza A virusnuclear export proteinmatrix protein 2Protein kinase Ccaveolin-1Cav-1Reactive oxygen species
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Authors
Katrin Bohm, Lijing Sun, Divyeshsinh Thakor, Manfred Wirth,