1. Academic Validation
  2. Enterovirus 71 2A Protease Inhibits P-Body Formation To Promote Viral RNA Synthesis

Enterovirus 71 2A Protease Inhibits P-Body Formation To Promote Viral RNA Synthesis

  • J Virol. 2021 Sep 9;95(19):e0092221. doi: 10.1128/JVI.00922-21.
Shanshan Fan 1 Zihang Xu 1 Pengfei Liu 1 Yali Qin 1 Mingzhou Chen 1
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 State Key Laboratory of Virology and Modern Virology Research Center, College of Life Sciences, Wuhan Universitygrid.49470.3e, Wuhan, China.
Abstract

Several viruses have been proven to inhibit the formation of RNA processing bodies (P-bodies); however, knowledge regarding whether Enterovirus blocks P-body formation remains unclear, and the detailed molecular mechanisms and functions of picornavirus regulation of P-bodies are limited. Here, we show the crucial role of 2A protease in inhibiting P-bodies to promote viral replication during Enterovirus 71 Infection. Moreover, we found that the activity of 2A protease is essential to inhibit P-body formation, which was proven by the result that Infection with EV71-2AC110S, a 2A protease activity-inactivated recombinant virus, failed to block the formation of P-bodies. Furthermore, we show that DDX6, a scaffolding protein of P-bodies, interacted with viral RNA to facilitate viral replication rather than viral translation, by using a Renilla luciferase mRNA reporter system and nascent RNA capture assay. Altogether, our data first demonstrate that the 2A protease of Enterovirus inhibits P-body formation to facilitate viral RNA synthesis by recruiting the P-body components to viral RNA. IMPORTANCE Processing bodies (P-bodies) are constitutively present in eukaryotic cells and play an important role in the mRNA cycle, including regulation of gene expression and mRNA degradation. The P-body is the structure that viruses manipulate to facilitate their survival. Here, we show that the 2A protease alone was efficient to block P-body formation during Enterovirus 71 Infection, and its activity is essential. When the assembly of P-bodies was blocked by 2A protease, DDX6 and 4E-T, which were required for P-body formation, bound to viral RNA to facilitate viral RNA synthesis. We propose a model revealing that EV71 manipulates P-body formation to generate an environment that is conducive to viral replication by facilitating viral RNA synthesis: 2A protease blocked P-body assembly to make it possible for virus to take advantage of P-body components.

Keywords

2A protease; DDX6/4E-T complex; enterovirus; processing body.

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