IFIBYNE   05513
INSTITUTO DE FISIOLOGIA, BIOLOGIA MOLECULAR Y NEUROCIENCIAS
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
The Dengue Virus NS5 Protein Intrudes in the Cellular Spliceosome and Modulates Splicing
Autor/es:
N.GABRIEL IGLESIAS; LEOPOLDO G. GEBHARD; MARCELO J. YANOVSKY; ANABELLA SREBROW; GUILLERMO RISSO; BERTA POZZI; ESTEFANIA MANCINI; NEGAN KROGAN; FEDERICO A. DE MAIO; PRIHA SHA; PABLO MAMMI; RAUL ANDINO; ANDREA V. GAMARNIK
Revista:
PLOS PATHOGENS
Editorial:
PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
Referencias:
Lugar: San Francisco; Año: 2016 vol. 12 p. 1 - 29
ISSN:
1553-7366
Resumen:
Dengue virus NS5 protein plays multiple functions in the cytoplasm of infected cells, enabling viral RNA replication and counteracting host antiviral responses. Here, we demonstrate a novel function of NS5 in the nucleus where it interferes with cellular splicing. Using global proteomic analysis of infected cells together with functional studies, we found that NS5 binds spliceosome complexes and modulates endogenous splicing as well as minigene-derived alternative splicing patterns. In particular, we show that NS5 alone, or in the context of viral infection, interacts with core components of the U5 snRNP particle, CD2BP2 and DDX23, alters the inclusion/exclusion ratio of alternative splicing events, and changes mRNA isoform abundance of known antiviral factors. Interestingly, a genome wide transcriptome analysis, using recently developed bioinformatics tools, revealed an increase of intron retention upon dengue virus infection, and viral replication was improved by silencing specific U5 components. Different mechanistic studies indicate that binding of NS5 to the spliceosome reduces the efficiency of pre-mRNA processing, independently of NS5 enzymatic activities. We propose that NS5 binding to U5 snRNP proteins hijacks the splicing machinery resulting in a less restrictive environment for viral replication.