Phospholipid synthesis fueled by lipid droplets drives the structural development of poliovirus replication organelles.

PLoS Pathog

Department of Veterinary Medicine and Virginia-Maryland College of Veterinary Medicine, University of Maryland, College Park, MD, United States of America.

Published: August 2018

AI Article Synopsis

  • The development of membranous structures during picornavirus infections shows significant changes in cellular membranes, but how this happens and its role in the virus's life cycle isn't fully clear.
  • Researchers found that CCTα, an enzyme crucial for phosphatidylcholine synthesis, moves from the nucleus to the cytoplasm during infection, altering lipid production to support viral replication.
  • While the complicated membranous structures help protect the virus from the immune response during replication, they aren't essential for the virus's RNA replication; targeting phospholipid synthesis could potentially make the virus more detectable to the immune system.

Article Abstract

Rapid development of complex membranous replication structures is a hallmark of picornavirus infections. However, neither the mechanisms underlying such dramatic reorganization of the cellular membrane architecture, nor the specific role of these membranes in the viral life cycle are sufficiently understood. Here we demonstrate that the cellular enzyme CCTα, responsible for the rate-limiting step in phosphatidylcholine synthesis, translocates from the nuclei to the cytoplasm upon infection and associates with the replication membranes, resulting in the rerouting of lipid synthesis from predominantly neutral lipids to phospholipids. The bulk supply of long chain fatty acids necessary to support the activated phospholipid synthesis in infected cells is provided by the hydrolysis of neutral lipids stored in lipid droplets. Such activation of phospholipid synthesis drives the massive membrane remodeling in infected cells. We also show that complex membranous scaffold of replication organelles is not essential for viral RNA replication but is required for protection of virus propagation from the cellular anti-viral response, especially during multi-cycle replication conditions. Inhibition of infection-specific phospholipid synthesis provides a new paradigm for controlling infection not by suppressing viral replication but by making it more visible to the immune system.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6128640PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1007280DOI Listing

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