Abstract

Viruses actively interact with host metabolism because viral replication relies on host cells to provide nutrients and energy. Vaccinia virus (VACV; the prototype poxvirus) prefers glutamine to glucose for efficient replication to the extent that VACV replication is hindered in glutamine-free medium. Remarkably, our data show that VACV replication can be fully rescued from glutamine depletion by asparagine supplementation. By global metabolic profiling, as well as genetic and chemical manipulation of the asparagine supply, we provide evidence demonstrating that the production of asparagine, which exclusively requires glutamine for biosynthesis, accounts for VACV's preference of glutamine to glucose rather than glutamine's superiority over glucose in feeding the tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle. Furthermore, we show that sufficient asparagine supply is required for efficient VACV protein synthesis. Our study highlights that the asparagine supply, the regulation of which has been evolutionarily tailored in mammalian cells, presents a critical barrier to VACV replication due to a high asparagine content of viral proteins and a rapid demand of viral protein synthesis. The identification of asparagine availability as a critical limiting factor for efficient VACV replication suggests a new direction of antiviral strategy development.IMPORTANCE Viruses rely on their infected host cells to provide nutrients and energy for replication. Vaccinia virus, the prototypic member of the poxviruses, which comprise many significant human and animal pathogens, prefers glutamine to glucose for efficient replication. Here, we show that the preference is not because glutamine is superior to glucose as the carbon source to fuel the tricarboxylic acid cycle for vaccinia virus replication. Rather interestingly, the preference is because the asparagine supply for efficient viral protein synthesis becomes limited in the absence of glutamine, which is necessary for asparagine biosynthesis. We provide further genetic and chemical evidence to demonstrate that asparagine availability plays a critical role in efficient vaccinia virus replication. This discovery identifies a weakness of vaccinia virus and suggests a possible direction to intervene in poxvirus infection.

Highlights

  • Viruses actively interact with host metabolism because viral replication relies on host cells to provide nutrients and energy

  • To test why Vaccinia virus (VACV) prefers glutamine to glucose for efficient replication, we examined whether ␣-KG and glutamate—the products of glutaminolysis that feed the tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle (Fig. 1A)— could rescue VACV replication from glutamine depletion

  • In asparagine synthetase (ASNS) siRNA-treated cells, VACV protein synthesis was downregulated (Fig. 6F). This agrees with the result that siRNAmediated interference of ASNS decreased nascent viral protein synthesis in VACVinfected cells (Fig. 6G). Since these experiments were performed in the presence of glutamine, the results indicate a critical role of asparagine biosynthesis in VACV replication

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Summary

Introduction

Viruses actively interact with host metabolism because viral replication relies on host cells to provide nutrients and energy. The prototypic member of the poxviruses, which comprise many significant human and animal pathogens, prefers glutamine to glucose for efficient replication. We provide further genetic and chemical evidence to demonstrate that asparagine availability plays a critical role in efficient vaccinia virus replication. This discovery identifies a weakness of vaccinia virus and suggests a possible direction to intervene in poxvirus infection. For efficient VACV replication in cell culture, VACV prefers glutamine to glucose; the depletion of glutamine, but not glucose, from culture medium significantly decreases VACV production [14, 15] In line with this finding, VACV infection upregulates glutamine metabolism [16]. Why VACV prefers glutamine to glucose for replication remains elusive

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