Abstract

ABSTRACTSmall ubiquitin-like modifier (SUMO) participates in a reversible posttranslational modification process (SUMOylation) that regulates a wide variety of cellular processes and plays important roles for numerous viruses during infection. However, the roles of viral protein SUMOylation in dengue virus (DENV) infection have not been elucidated. In this study, we found that the SUMOylation pathway was involved in the DENV life cycle, since DENV replication was reduced by silencing the cellular gene Ubc9, which encodes the sole E2-conjugating enzyme required for SUMOylation. By in vivo and in vitro SUMOylation assays, the DENV NS5 protein was identified as an authentic SUMO-targeted protein. By expressing various NS5 mutants, we found that the SUMO acceptor sites are located in the N-terminal domain of NS5 and that a putative SUMO-interacting motif (SIM) of this domain is crucial for its SUMOylation. A DENV replicon harboring the SUMOylation-defective SIM mutant showed a severe defect in viral RNA replication, supporting the notion that NS5 SUMOylation is required for DENV replication. SUMOylation-defective mutants also failed to suppress the induction of STAT2-mediated host antiviral interferon signaling. Furthermore, the SUMOylation of NS5 significantly increased the stability of NS5 protein, which could account for most of the biological functions of SUMOylated NS5. Collectively, these findings suggest that the SUMOylation of DENV NS5 is one of the mechanisms regulating DENV replication.IMPORTANCE SUMOylation is a common posttranslational modification that regulates cellular protein functions but has not been reported in the proteins of dengue virus. Here, we found that the replicase of DENV, nonstructural protein 5 (NS5), can be SUMOylated. It is well known that providing RNA-dependent RNA polymerase activity and antagonizing host antiviral IFN signaling are a “double indemnity” of NS5 to support DENV replication. Without SUMOylation, NS5 fails to maintain its protein stability, which consequently disrupts its function in viral RNA replication and innate immunity antagonism. DENV threatens billions of people worldwide, but no licensed vaccine or specific therapeutics are currently available. Thus, our findings suggest that rather than specifically targeting NS5 enzyme activity, NS5 protein stability is a novel drug target on the growing list of anti-DENV strategies.

Highlights

  • Small ubiquitin-like modifier (SUMO) participates in a reversible posttranslational modification process (SUMOylation) that regulates a wide variety of cellular processes and plays important roles for numerous viruses during infection

  • To determine whether the SUMO modification pathway is involved in dengue virus (DENV) replication, we suppressed the SUMOylation system by knocking down Ubc9 expression through RNA interference (RNAi) silencing approaches

  • Despite the incomplete knockdown of Ubc9 in A549 cells (Fig. 1E), these results consistently indicated that the cellular SUMO modification system is involved in the DENV life cycle

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Summary

Introduction

Small ubiquitin-like modifier (SUMO) participates in a reversible posttranslational modification process (SUMOylation) that regulates a wide variety of cellular processes and plays important roles for numerous viruses during infection. Without SUMOylation, NS5 fails to maintain its protein stability, which disrupts its function in viral RNA replication and innate immunity antagonism. The NS5 protein is the viral RNA-dependent RNA polymerase (RdRp) [4] and subverts STAT2-mediated antiviral interferon (IFN) signaling of host innate immunity [5, 6]. In contrast to SUMO2/3, SUMO1 is different in structure and charge distribution, which reflects the low (50%) identity shared between SUMO1 and SUMO2/3 [17] This might explain the distinct subcellular location of SUMO1 from that of SUMO2/3: SUMO1 is located in the nuclear envelope, nucleolus, and cytoplasmic foci, whereas SUMO2/3 accumulates on chromosomes at an earlier point in nuclear reformation processes [18]. As a conserved member of protein modifications, two SUMO paralogs, SUMO1 and SUMO3, have been predicted in insects [20], but the whole picture of SUMOylation in insects remains to be elucidated

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