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The effects of autophagy on the replication of Nelson Bay orthoreovirus

Authors :
Nian Liu
Xu-Peng Jin
Yanfei Shen
Lili Dou
Xiaoli Tao
Wei Tong
Wei Zhao
Yibo Zhang
Xiaofang Wang
Hong Jin
Ying Lu
Hong-Yan Zhao
Jiangman Chen
Yonggang Li
Source :
Virology Journal, Virology Journal, Vol 16, Iss 1, Pp 1-11 (2019)
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2019.

Abstract

Background Nelson Bay orthoreovirus (NBV) was first isolated over 40 years ago from a fruit bat in Australia. Normally, NBV does not cause human diseases, but recently several NBV strains have been associated with human respiratory tract infections, thus attracting clinical attention. Autophagy, an evolutionarily conserved process in eukaryotic cells, degrades intracellular substrates, participates in multiple physiological processes, and maintains cellular homeostasis. In addition, autophagy is intimately involved in viral infection. Methods A new strain of NBV, isolated from a patient with a respiratory tract infection who returned to Japan from Bali, Indonesia, in 2007, was used in this study. NBV was rescued using a reverse genetics system involving cotransfection of BHK cells with 11 plasmids (pT7-L1 MB, pT7-L2 MB, pT7-L3 MB, pT7-M1 MB, pT7-M2 MB, pT7-M3 MB, pT7-S1 MB, pT7-S2 MB, pT7-S3 MB, pT7-S4 MB, and pcDNA3.1-T7), yielding NBV-MB. Recovered viruses were confirmed by immunofluorescence. The effect of NBV-MB on autophagy was evaluated by measuring the LC3-I/II proteins by immunoblot analysis after infection of BHK cells. Furthermore, after treatment with rapamycin (RAPA), 3-methyladenine (3-MA), chloroquine (CQ), or plasmid (GFP-LC3) transfection, the changes in expression of the LC3 gene and the amount of LC3-I/II protein were examined. In addition, variations in viral titer were assayed after treatment of BHK cells with drugs or after transfection with plasmids pCAGM3 and pCAGS3, which encode virus nonstructural proteins μNS and σNS, respectively. Results NBV-MB infection induced autophagy in host cells; however, the level of induction was dependent on viral replication. Induction of autophagy increased viral replication. By contrast, inhibiting autophagy suppressed NBV replication, albeit not significantly. The NBV-MB nonstructural protein μNS was involved in the induction of autophagy with viral infection. Conclusions NBV-MB infection triggered autophagy. Also, the NBV nonstructural protein μNS may contribute to augmentation of autophagy upon viral infection.

Details

ISSN :
1743422X
Volume :
16
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Virology Journal
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....176b11868e5b2f2e1e2acc122319a28f