Abstract

Human Cytomegalovirus (HCMV) infection induces several metabolic activities that have been found to be important for viral replication. The cellular AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) is a metabolic stress response kinase that regulates both energy-producing catabolic processes and energy-consuming anabolic processes. Here we explore the role AMPK plays in generating an environment conducive to HCMV replication. We find that HCMV infection induces AMPK activity, resulting in the phosphorylation and increased abundance of several targets downstream of activated AMPK. Pharmacological and RNA-based inhibition of AMPK blocked the glycolytic activation induced by HCMV-infection, but had little impact on the glycolytic pathway of uninfected cells. Furthermore, inhibition of AMPK severely attenuated HCMV replication suggesting that AMPK is an important cellular factor for HCMV replication. Inhibition of AMPK attenuated early and late gene expression as well as viral DNA synthesis, but had no detectable impact on immediate-early gene expression, suggesting that AMPK activity is important at the immediate early to early transition of viral gene expression. Lastly, we find that inhibition of the Ca2+-calmodulin-dependent kinase kinase (CaMKK), a kinase known to activate AMPK, blocks HCMV-mediated AMPK activation. The combined data suggest a model in which HCMV activates AMPK through CaMKK, and depends on their activation for high titer replication, likely through induction of a metabolic environment conducive to viral replication.

Highlights

  • Upon infection, viruses must create a cellular environment conducive to viral replication

  • Our results indicate that Human Cytomegalovirus (HCMV)-mediated activation of AMPK is necessary to flip the metabolic switch thereby driving host-cell metabolic activation and viral replication

  • AMPK activity increases upon HCMV infection To determine if AMPK might be responsible for the metabolic induction observed during HCMV infection, we analyzed mock or HCMV-infected extracts for AMPK activity using a well described in vitro AMPK activity assay [27]

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Summary

Introduction

Viruses must create a cellular environment conducive to viral replication. Numerous viruses, ranging from small, non-enveloped RNA viruses to large enveloped DNA viruses have been reported to target the host-cell metabolic machinery [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9]. This suggests that cellular metabolic function is a key virus-host interaction. We explore the role of the AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK)

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