Back to Search Start Over

Proteotype profiling unmasks a viral signalling network essential for poxvirus assembly and transcriptional competence

Authors :
Karel Novy
Samuel Kilcher
Jason Mercer
Ian R. White
Alessio Maiolica
Caroline K. Martin
Jakob Vowinckel
Corina Beerli
Christopher K. E. Bleck
Ulrich Omasits
Bernd Wollscheid
Mohammedyaseen Syedbasha
Source :
Nature Microbiology, 3 (5), Nature Microbiology
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2018.

Abstract

To orchestrate context-dependent signalling programmes, poxviruses encode two dual-specificity enzymes, the F10 kinase and the H1 phosphatase. These signalling mediators are essential for poxvirus production, yet their substrate profiles and systems-level functions remain enigmatic. Using a phosphoproteomic screen of cells infected with wild-type, F10 and H1 mutant vaccinia viruses, we systematically defined the viral signalling network controlled by these enzymes. Quantitative cross-comparison revealed 33 F10 and/or H1 phosphosites within 17 viral proteins. Using this proteotype dataset to inform genotype-phenotype relationships, we found that H1-deficient virions harbour a hidden hypercleavage phenotype driven by reversible phosphorylation of the virus protease I7 (S134). Quantitative phosphoproteomic profiling further revealed that the phosphorylation-dependent activity of the viral early transcription factor, A7 (Y367), underlies the transcription-deficient phenotype of H1 mutant virions. Together, these results highlight the utility of combining quantitative proteotype screens with mutant viruses to uncover proteotype-phenotype-genotype relationships that are masked by classical genetic studies.

Details

ISSN :
20585276
Volume :
3
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Microbiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a646dcab9e4200ee397d5218611e0312
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41564-018-0142-6