Abstract

Viruses are useful tools that often reveal previously unrecognized levels of control within a cell. By studying the oncogenic Kaposi's sarcoma-associated herpesvirus (KSHV), we discovered a new signaling axis in endothelial cells (ECs) that links actin cytoskeleton dynamics to post-transcriptional control of gene expression. Translational repression and rapid decay of mRNAs containing AU-rich elements (AREs) occurs in cytoplasmic RNA granules known as processing bodies (PBs). Rho-GTPase activity influences PB dynamics but mechanistic details remain obscure. We have previously shown that the KSHV Kaposin B protein blocks the degradation of ARE-mRNAs that encode potent cytokines and angiogenic factors, at least in part by preventing PB formation. Moreover, Kaposin B is sufficient to cause marked alterations in endothelial cell physiology including the formation of long parallel actin stress fibers and accelerated migration and angiogenic phenotypes. All of these phenotypes depend on Kaposin B-mediated activation of a non-canonical signaling pathway comprising the stress-inducible kinase MK2, hsp27, p115RhoGEF and RhoA. Accelerated endothelial cell migration and angiogenesis depends on the subsequent activation of the RhoA-dependent kinase ROCK, but PB disruption is ROCK-independent. In this Commentary, we discuss implications of the activation of this signaling axis, and propose mechanistic links between RhoA activation and PB dynamics.

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