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Echovirus 1 infection depends on biogenesis of novel multivesicular bodies

Authors :
Mikko, Karjalainen
Nina, Rintanen
Moona, Lehkonen
Katri, Kallio
Anita, Mäki
Kirsi, Hellström
Valtteri, Siljamäki
Paula, Upla
Varpu, Marjomäki
Source :
Cellular microbiology. 13(12)
Publication Year :
2011

Abstract

Non-enveloped picornavirus echovirus 1 (EV1) clusters its receptor α2β1 integrin and causes their internalization and accumulation in α2β1 integrin enriched multivesicular bodies (α2-MVBs). Our results here show that these α2-MVBs are distinct from acidic late endosomes/lysosomes by several criteria: (i) live intra-endosomal pH measurements show that α2-MVBs are not acidic, (ii) they are not positive for the late endosomal marker LBPA or Dil-LDL internalized to lysosomes, and (iii) simultaneous stimulation of epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) and α2β1 integrin clustering leads to their accumulation in separate endosomes. EGFR showed downregulation between 15 min and 2 h, whereas accumulation of α2β1 integrin/EV1 led to an increase of integrin fluorescence in cytoplasmic vesicles further suggesting that EV1 pathway is separate from the lysosomal downregulation pathway. In addition, the results demonstrate the involvement of ESCRTs in the biogenesis of α2-MVBs. Overexpression of dominant-negative form of VPS4 inhibited biogenesis of α2-MVBs and efficiently prevented EV1 infection. Furthermore, α2-MVBs were positive for some members of ESCRTs such as Hrs, VPS37A and VPS24 and the siRNA treatment of TSG101, VPS37A and VPS24 inhibited EV1 infection. Our results show that the non-enveloped EV1 depends on biogenesis of novel multivesicular structures for successful infection.

Details

ISSN :
14625822
Volume :
13
Issue :
12
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cellular microbiology
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........7579fd9a94b911d66dee65bae294830b