1. Recruitment of Cellular Clathrin to Viral Factories and Disruption of Clathrin-Dependent Trafficking
- Author
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Aleksander A. Demidenko, Max L. Nibert, Marcelo Ehrlich, Tijana Ivanovic, Steeve Boulant, Tomas Kirchhausen, and Michelle M. Arnold
- Subjects
Recombinant Fusion Proteins ,Adaptor Protein Complex 1 ,Orthoreovirus, Mammalian ,Adaptor Protein Complex 2 ,Viral Nonstructural Proteins ,Biology ,Virus Replication ,Endocytosis ,Biochemistry ,Clathrin ,Article ,Cell Line ,Inclusion Bodies, Viral ,Mice ,Structural Biology ,Genetics ,Animals ,Secretion ,Molecular Biology ,Cytoplasmic Structure ,Coated Pits, Cell-Membrane ,Cell Biology ,Virology ,Reoviridae Infections ,Cell biology ,Transport protein ,Protein Transport ,Viral replication ,Cell culture ,biology.protein ,Viral genome replication - Abstract
The viral factories of mammalian reovirus (MRV) are cytoplasmic structures that serve as sites of viral genome replication and particle assembly. A 721-aa MRV nonstructural protein, μNS, forms the factory matrix and recruits other viral proteins to these structures. In this report, we show that μNS contains a conserved C-proximal sequence (711-LIDFS-715) that is similar to known clathrin-box motifs and is required for recruitment of clathrin to viral factories. Clathrin recruitment by μNS occurs independently of infecting MRV particles or other MRV proteins. Ala substitution for a single Leu residue (mutation L711A) within the putative clathrin-binding motif of μNS inhibits clathrin recruitment, but does not prevent formation or expansion of viral factories. Notably, clathrin-dependent cellular functions, including both endocytosis and secretion, are disrupted in cells infected with MRV expressing wild-type, but not L711A, μNS. These results demonstrate μNS as a novel adaptor-like protein that recruits cellular clathrin to viral factories, disrupting normal functions of clathrin in cellular membrane trafficking. To our knowledge, this is the only viral or bacterial protein yet shown to interfere with clathrin functions in this manner. The results additionally establish a new approach for studies of clathrin functions, based in μNS-mediated sequestration.
- Published
- 2011
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