Back to Search Start Over

The cargo adaptor protein CLINT1 is phosphorylated by the Numb-associated kinase BIKE and mediates dengue virus infection

Authors :
Stanford Schor
Szuyuan Pu
Vlad Nicolaescu
Siavash Azari
Mardo Kõivomägi
Marwah Karim
Patricia Cassonnet
Sirle Saul
Gregory Neveu
Andrew Yueh
Caroline Demeret
Jan M. Skotheim
Yves Jacob
Glenn Randall
Shirit Einav
Stanford School of Medicine [Stanford]
Stanford Medicine
Stanford University-Stanford University
University of Illinois [Chicago] (UIC)
University of Illinois System
Stanford University
Génétique Moléculaire des Virus à ARN - Molecular Genetics of RNA Viruses (GMV-ARN (UMR_3569 / U-Pasteur_2))
Institut Pasteur [Paris] (IP)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Université Paris Cité (UPCité)
We thank investigators who have provided plasmids (see Methods). We thank Dr. Ryan Leib, Dr. Fang Liu, and the Vincent Coates Foundation Mass Spectrometry Laboratory, Stanford University Mass Spectrometry (http://mass-spec.stanford.edu) for help with relevant experiments.
Source :
Journal of Biological Chemistry, Journal of Biological Chemistry, 2022, pp.101956. ⟨10.1016/j.jbc.2022.101956⟩
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
HAL CCSD, 2022.

Abstract

International audience; The signaling pathways and cellular functions regulated by the four Numb-associated kinases (NAKs) are largely unknown. We previously reported that AAK1 and GAK control intracellular trafficking of RNA viruses, and recently revealed a requirement for BIKE in early and late stages of dengue virus (DENV) infection. However, the downstream targets phosphorylated by BIKE in this process have not yet been identified. Here, to identify BIKE substrates, we conducted a barcode fusion genetics-yeast two-hybrid screen and retrieved publicly available data generated via affinity-purification mass spectrometry. We subsequently validated 19 of 47 putative BIKE interactors using mammalian cell-based protein-protein interaction assays. We found that CLINT1, a cargo-specific adaptor implicated in bidirectional Golgi-to-endosome trafficking, emerged as a predominant hit in both screens. Our experiments indicated that BIKE catalyzes phosphorylation of a threonine 294 (T294) CLINT1 residue both in vitro and in cell culture. Our findings revealed that CLINT1 phosphorylation mediates its binding to the DENV nonstructural 3 protein and subsequently promotes DENV assembly and egress. In addition, using live-cell imaging we revealed that CLINT1 cotraffics with DENV particles and is involved in mediating BIKE's role in DENV infection. Finally, our data suggest that additional cellular BIKE interactors implicated in the host immune and stress responses and the ubiquitin proteasome system might also be candidate phosphorylation substrates of BIKE. In conclusion, these findings reveal cellular substrates and pathways regulated by the understudied NAK enzyme BIKE, a mechanism for CLINT1 regulation, and control of DENV infection via BIKE signaling, with potential implications for cell biology, virology, and host-targeted antiviral design.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00219258 and 1083351X
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Biological Chemistry, Journal of Biological Chemistry, 2022, pp.101956. ⟨10.1016/j.jbc.2022.101956⟩
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9e9961ff199620304c8a2dda090507e7