Abstract
Human respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is an enveloped RNA virus and the leading viral agent responsible for severe pediatric respiratory infections worldwide. Identification of cellular factors able to restrict viral infection is one of the key strategies used to design new drugs against infection. Here, we report for the first time that the cellular protein BST2/Tetherin (a widely known host antiviral molecule) behaves as a restriction factor of RSV infection. We showed that BST2 silencing resulted in a significant rise in viral production during multi-cycle infection, suggesting an inhibitory role during the late steps of RSV's multiplication cycle. Conversely, BST2 overexpression resulted in diminution of the viral production. Furthermore, BST2 was found associated with envelope proteins and co-localized with viral filaments, suggesting that BST2 tethers RSV particles. Interestingly, RSV naturally downregulates cell surface and global BST2 expression, possibly through a mechanism dependent on ubiquitin. RSV's ability to enhance BST2 degradation was also validated in a model of differentiated cells infected by RSV. Additionally, we found that a virus deleted of NS1 is unable to downregulate BST2 and is significantly more susceptible to BST2 restriction compared to the wild type virus. Moreover, NS1 and BST2 interact in a co- immunoprecipitation experiment. Overall, our data support a model in which BST2 is a restriction factor against RSV infection and that the virus counteracts this effect by limiting the cellular factor's expression through a mechanism involving the viral protein NS1.
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