Abstract

Unpredictable influenza pandemics, annual epidemics, and sporadic poultry-to-human avian influenza virus infections with high morbidity and mortality rates dictate a need to develop new antiviral approaches. Targeting cellular pathways and processes is a promising antiviral strategy shown to be effective regardless of viral subtypes or viral evolution of drug-resistant variants. Proteomics-based searches provide a tool to reveal the druggable stages of the virus life cycle and to understand the putative antiviral mode of action of the drug(s). Ribonucleases (RNases) of different origins not only demonstrate antiviral effects that are mediated by the direct RNase action on viral and cellular RNAs but can also exert their impact by signal transduction modulation. To our knowledge, studies of the RNase-affected cell proteome have not yet been performed. To reveal cellular targets and explain the mechanisms underlying the antiviral effect employed by the small extra-cellular ribonuclease of Bacillus pumilus (binase) both in vitro and in vivo, qualitative shotgun and quantitative targeted proteomic analyses of the influenza A virus (IAV) H1N1pdm09-infected A549 cells upon binase treatment were performed. We compared proteomes of mock-treated, binase-treated, virus-infected, and virus-infected binase-treated cells to determine the proteins affected by IAV and/or binase. In general, IAV demonstrated a downregulating strategy towards cellular proteins, while binase had an upregulating effect. With the help of bioinformatics approaches, coregulated cellular protein sets were defined and assigned to their biological function; a possible interconnection with the progression of viral infection was conferred. Most of the proteins downregulated by IAV (e.g., AKR1B1, AKR1C1, CCL5, PFN1, RAN, S100A4, etc.) belong to the processes of cellular metabolism, response to stimulus, biological regulation, and cellular localization. Upregulated proteins upon the binase treatment (e.g., AKR1B10, CAP1, HNRNPA2B1, PFN1, PPIA, YWHAB, etc.) are united by the processes of biological regulation, cellular localization, and immune and metabolic processes. The antiviral activity of binase against IAV was expressed by the inversion of virus-induced proteomic changes, resulting in the inhibition of virus-associated processes, including nuclear ribonucleoprotein export (NCL, NPM1, Nup205, and Bax proteins involved) and cytoskeleton remodeling (RDX, PFN1, and TUBB) induced by IAV at the middle stage of single-cycle infection in A549 cells. Modulation of the immune response could be involved as well. Overall, it seems possible that binase exerts its antiviral effects in multiple ways.

Highlights

  • Influenza A virus (IAV) is an enveloped, single-stranded, negative-sense RNA virus

  • To study proteomic changes induced by binase in IAV-infected cells, we chose human lung adenocarcinoma epithelial (A549) cells, which are commonly used as a human in vitro model for IAV infection and replication

  • The successful infection of A549 cells was verified by titration of the infectious particles using the focus assay, which is based on the detection of the IAV nucleoprotein (NP) in MDCK cells (Figure 1)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Influenza A virus (IAV) is an enveloped, single-stranded, negative-sense RNA virus. Its genome consists of eight RNA segments encoding 10 to 20 different known proteins required for viral replication and pathogenesis [1]. The accumulation of point mutations (antigenic drift) due to the error-prone viral polymerase is responsible for the continuous evolution of IAV, while segment recombination during coinfections (antigenic shift) accounts for the emergence of potentially pandemic viruses [2]. These genomic changes even allow the virus to overcome species barriers. The ability of H1N1pdm to reassort with cocirculating IAV strains and to accumulate mutations could potentially lead to the emergence of a highly pathogenic variant [2,4] This demonstrates that IAV represent a global problem, despite the limited number of anti-influenza virus strategies applied

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call