학술논문

Human SUMOylation Pathway Is Critical for Influenza B Virus
Document Type
article
Source
Viruses. 14(2)
Subject
Biochemistry and Cell Biology
Biological Sciences
Biotechnology
Emerging Infectious Diseases
Infectious Diseases
2.2 Factors relating to the physical environment
Aetiology
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Infection
Cell Line
Host-Pathogen Interactions
Humans
Influenza B virus
Influenza
Human
Sumoylation
Ubiquitin-Protein Ligases
Viral Matrix Proteins
Virus Replication
influenza B virus or IBV
critical host factor
SUMOylation
therapeutics
Microbiology
Language
Abstract
The identification and elucidation of host pathways for viral infection are critical for understanding the viral infection processes and novel therapeutics development. Here, for the first time, we discover that the human SUMOylation pathway is essential for the IBV viral life cycle. First, IBV viruses were completely inhibited by a novel SUMOylation specific inhibitor, STE025, discovered from our FRET-based high-throughput screening, and the inhibition was very potent, with IC50~ 0.1 µM in an IBV-induced cell death rescue assay; Second, we determined that the IBV M1 protein was SUMOylated, which was mediated by the SUMOylation E2 conjugation enzyme and the E3 ligase enzyme at very high affinities, of 0.20 µM and 0.22 µM, respectively; Third, the mutation of the IBV M1 SUMOylation site, K21R, completely abolished the viral particle generation, strongly suggesting the requirement of SUMOylation for the IBV life cycle. These results suggest that the blockage of the host human SUMOylation pathway is very effective for IBV inhibition. We therefore propose that the host SUMOylation pathway is a critical host factor for the IBV virus life cycle. The identification and inhibition of critical host factor(s) provide a novel strategy for future anti-viral therapeutics development, such as IBV and other viruses.