Characterization of recombinant human cytomegaloviruses encoding IE1 mutants L174P and 1-382 reveals that viral targeting of PML bodies perturbs both intrinsic and innate immune responses

Scherer M, Otto V, Stump J, Klingl S, Müller R, Reuter N, Muller Y, Sticht H, Stamminger T (2015)


Publication Status: Published

Publication Type: Journal article, Original article

Publication year: 2015

Journal

Book Volume: 90

Pages Range: 1190-1205

Journal Issue: 3

DOI: 10.1128/JVI.01973-15

Abstract

PML is the organizer of cellular structures termed nuclear domain 10 (ND10) or PML-nuclear bodies (PML-NBs) that act as key mediators of intrinsic immunity against human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) and other viruses. The antiviral function of ND10 is antagonized by viral regulatory proteins such as the immediate early protein IE1 of HCMV. IE1 interacts with PML through its globular core domain (IE1) and induces ND10 disruption in order to initiate lytic HCMV infection. Here, we investigate the consequences of a point mutation (L174P) in IE1CORE, which was shown to abrogate the interaction with PML, for lytic HCMV infection. We found that a recombinant HCMV encoding IE1-L174P displays a severe growth defect similar to that of an IE1 deletion virus. Bioinformatic modeling based on the crystal structure of IE1 suggested that insertion of proline into the highly alpha-helical domain severely affects its structural integrity. Consistently, L174P mutation abrogates the functionality of IE1 and results in degradation of the IE1 protein during infection. In addition, our data provide evidence that IE1 as expressed by a recombinant HCMV encoding IE1 1-382 not only is required to antagonize PML-mediated intrinsic immunity but also affects a recently described function of PML in innate immune signaling. We demonstrate a coregulatory role of PML in type I and type II interferon-induced gene expression and provide evidence that upregulation of interferon-induced genes is inhibited by IE1. In conclusion, our data suggest that targeting PML by viral regulatory proteins represents a strategy to antagonize both intrinsic and innate immune mechanisms.

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How to cite

APA:

Scherer, M., Otto, V., Stump, J., Klingl, S., Müller, R., Reuter, N.,... Stamminger, T. (2015). Characterization of recombinant human cytomegaloviruses encoding IE1 mutants L174P and 1-382 reveals that viral targeting of PML bodies perturbs both intrinsic and innate immune responses. Journal of Virology, 90(3), 1190-1205. https://dx.doi.org/10.1128/JVI.01973-15

MLA:

Scherer, Myriam, et al. "Characterization of recombinant human cytomegaloviruses encoding IE1 mutants L174P and 1-382 reveals that viral targeting of PML bodies perturbs both intrinsic and innate immune responses." Journal of Virology 90.3 (2015): 1190-1205.

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