Abstract

During enteroviral infections, the canonical translation factor eukaryotic translation initiation factor 4 γ I (eIF4GI) is cleaved by viral protease 2A. The resulting C-terminal fragment is recruited by the viral internal ribosome entry site (IRES) for efficient translation of the viral RNA. However, the 2A protease is not present in the viral capsid and is synthesized only after the initial round of translation. This presents the conundrum of how the initial round of translation occurs in the absence of the C-terminal eIF4GI fragment. Interestingly, the host protein DAP5 (also known as p97, eIF4GIII, and eIF4G2), an isoform of eIF4GI, closely resembles the eIF4GI C-terminal fragment produced after 2A protease-mediated cleavage. Using the Coxsackievirus B3 (CVB3) IRES as a model system, here we demonstrate that DAP5, but not the full-length eIF4GI, is required for CVB3 IRES activity for translation of input viral RNA. Additionally, we show that DAP5 is specifically required by type I IRES but not by type II or type III IRES, in which cleavage of eIF4GI has not been observed. We observed that both DAP5 and C-terminal eIF4GI interact with CVB3 IRES in the same region, but DAP5 exhibits a lower affinity for CVB3 IRES compared with the C-terminal eIF4GI fragment. It appears that DAP5 is required for the initial round of viral RNA translation by sustaining a basal level of CVB3 IRES activity. This activity leads to expression of 2A protease and consequent robust CVB3 IRES-mediated translation by the C-terminal eIF4GI fragment.

Highlights

  • During enteroviral infections, the canonical translation factor eukaryotic translation initiation factor 4 ␥ I is cleaved by viral protease 2A

  • Using the Coxsackievirus B3 (CVB3) internal ribosome entry site (IRES) as a model system, here we demonstrate that death-associated protein 5 (DAP5), but not the full-length eIF4GI, is required for CVB3 IRES activity for translation of input viral RNA

  • DAP5 is required for the initial round of CVB3 IRES–mediated translation

Read more

Summary

ARTICLE cro

We observed that both DAP5 and C-terminal eIF4GI interact with CVB3 IRES in the same region, but DAP5 exhibits a lower affinity for CVB3 IRES compared with the C-terminal eIF4GI fragment It appears that DAP5 is required for the initial round of viral RNA translation by sustaining a basal level of CVB3 IRES activity. This activity leads to expression of 2A protease and consequent robust CVB3 IRESmediated translation by the C-terminal eIF4GI fragment. DAP5 interacts with stem loop V, similar to the C-terminal eIF4GI, but with a lower affinity Based on these results, we propose a model in which the viral RNA undergoes two different stages of translation. Our study provides new insights into the mechanism of translation initiation at the initial stages of virus infection and provides a model to explain how input viral RNA could be translated in the milieu of limited resources (host factors) in the cytoplasm, with better availability of ITAFs pending

Results
Discussion
Experimental procedures
Plasmids and protein purification
Virus preparation and infection
In vitro transcriptions
Western blotting
RNA immunoprecipitation
Surface plasmon resonance experiments
MTT assay
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