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The Interactive Complex between Cytomegalovirus Kinase vCDK/pUL97 and Host Factors CDK7-Cyclin H Determines Individual Patterns of Transcription in Infected Cells.

Authors :
Schütz M
Cordsmeier A
Wangen C
Horn AHC
Wyler E
Ensser A
Sticht H
Marschall M
Source :
International journal of molecular sciences [Int J Mol Sci] 2023 Dec 13; Vol. 24 (24). Date of Electronic Publication: 2023 Dec 13.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

The infection of human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) is strongly determined by the host-cell interaction in a way that the efficiency of HCMV lytic replication is dependent on the regulatory interplay between viral and cellular proteins. In particular, the activities of protein kinases, such as cyclin-dependent kinases (CDKs) and the viral CDK ortholog (vCDK/pUL97), play an important role in both viral reproduction and virus-host interaction. Very recently, we reported on the complexes formed between vCDK/pUL97, human cyclin H, and CDK7. Major hallmarks of this interplay are the interaction between cyclin H and vCDK/pUL97, which is consistently detectable across various conditions and host cell types of infection, the decrease or increase in pUL97 kinase activity resulting from cyclin H knock-down or elevated levels, respectively, and significant trans-stimulation of human CDK7 activity by pUL97 in vitro. Due to the fact that even a ternary complex of vCDK/pUL97-cyclin H-CDK7 can be detected by coimmunoprecipitation and visualized by bioinformatic structural modeling, we postulated a putative impact of the respective kinase activities on the patterns of transcription in HCMV-infected cells. Here, we undertook a first vCDK/pUL97-specific transcriptomic analysis, which combined conditions of fully lytic HCMV replication with those under specific vCDK/pUL97 or CDK7 drug-mediated inhibition or transient cyclin H knockout. The novel results were further strengthened using bioinformatic modeling of the involved multi-protein complexes. Our data underline the importance of these kinase activities for the C-terminal domain (CTD) phosphorylation-driven activation of host RNA polymerase in HCMV-infected cells. The impact of the individual experimental conditions on differentially expressed gene profiles is described in detail and discussed.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1422-0067
Volume :
24
Issue :
24
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
International journal of molecular sciences
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
38139252
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms242417421