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An upstream protein-coding region in enteroviruses modulates virus infection in gut epithelial cells

Authors :
Matthias Zilbauer
Nerea Irigoyen
Lee Sherry
Yasmin Chaudhry
Valeria Lulla
Myra Hosmillo
Nicola J. Stonehouse
Ian Goodfellow
Andrew E. Firth
Adam M. Dinan
Komal Nayak
Lulla, Valeria [0000-0002-6605-0727]
Dinan, Adam M [0000-0003-2812-1616]
Hosmillo, Myra [0000-0002-3514-7681]
Sherry, Lee [0000-0002-4367-772X]
Irigoyen, Nerea [0000-0001-6346-3369]
Stonehouse, Nicola J [0000-0003-1146-5519]
Zilbauer, Matthias [0000-0002-7272-0547]
Goodfellow, Ian [0000-0002-9483-510X]
Firth, Andrew E [0000-0002-7986-9520]
Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
Source :
Nature Microbiology

Abstract

Enteroviruses comprise a large group of mammalian pathogens that includes poliovirus. Pathology in humans ranges from sub-clinical to acute flaccid paralysis, myocarditis and meningitis. Until now, all of the enteroviral proteins were thought to derive from the proteolytic processing of a polyprotein encoded in a single open reading frame. Here we report that many enterovirus genomes also harbour an upstream open reading frame (uORF) that is subject to strong purifying selection. Using echovirus 7 and poliovirus 1, we confirmed the expression of uORF protein in infected cells. Through ribosome profiling (a technique for the global footprinting of translating ribosomes), we also demonstrated translation of the uORF in representative members of the predominant human enterovirus species, namely Enterovirus A, B and C. In differentiated human intestinal organoids, uORF protein-knockout echoviruses are attenuated compared to the wild-type at late stages of infection where membrane-associated uORF protein facilitates virus release. Thus, we have identified a previously unknown enterovirus protein that facilitates virus growth in gut epithelial cells—the site of initial viral invasion into susceptible hosts. These findings overturn the 50-year-old dogma that enteroviruses use a single-polyprotein gene expression strategy and have important implications for the understanding of enterovirus pathogenesis. Many enterovirus genomes harbour an upstream ORF (uORF) that is subject to strong purifying selection and encodes a protein (UP) that associates with membranes and facilitates virus release. UP-knockout echoviruses are attenuated at late stages of infection in human intestinal organoids.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20585276
Volume :
4
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Microbiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d3d6f98dc8aecaa8adf3c8cabc62d0ce
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41564-018-0297-1