Abstract

BK polyomavirus (BKPyV) is a small, non-enveloped dsDNA virus that can establish a lifelong, silently persistent infection in the kidney and is estimated to infect 70–90 % of the world’s population. In immunocompromised individuals, particularly bone marrow and kidney transplant patients, increases in BKPyV replication can result in significant pathological conditions. In the case of kidney transplant patients, this can result in nephropathy, which in severe cases can result in the deterioration of allograft function and loss of the transplanted organ. There are currently no antiviral treatments with strong evidence of clinical efficacy against BKPyV. Though little is known about BKPyV egress from infected cells, we have evidence showing that BKPyV can be released in a non-lytic manner by an unconventional cellular secretory pathway that bypasses the Golgi apparatus. Here, we investigate the mechanisms behind BKPyV non-lytic egress through studying the effects of knocking out candidate host proteins involved in unconventional secretory pathways on BKPyV release, examining the effects of BKPyV infection on host cell protein secretion, and ascertaining which host proteins are essential for the BKPyV life cycle via a whole-genome CRISPR screen. These experiments are uncovering novel virus-host interactions that, when targeted, could lead to antiviral effects.

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