During the nuclear export of nascent nucleocapsids of herpesviruses, the nucleocapsids bud through the inner nuclear membrane (INM) by acquiring the INM as a primary envelope (primary envelopment). We recently reported that herpes simplex virus 1 (HSV-1) nuclear egress complex (NEC), which consists of UL34 and UL31, interacts with an endosomal sorting complex required for transport III (ESCRT-III) adaptor ALIX and recruits ESCRT-III machinery to the INM for efficient primary envelopment. In this study, we identified a cluster of six arginine residues in the disordered domain of UL34 as a minimal region required for the interaction with ALIX, as well as the recruitment of ALIX and an ESCRT-III protein CHMP4B to the INM in HSV-1-infected cells. Mutations in the arginine cluster exhibited phenotypes similar to those with ESCRT-III inhibition reported previously, including the mislocalization of NEC, induction of membranous invagination structures containing enveloped virions, aberrant accumulation of enveloped virions in the invaginations and perinuclear space, and reduction of viral replication. We also showed that the effect of the arginine cluster in UL34 on HSV-1 replication was dependent primarily on ALIX. These results indicated that the arginine cluster in the disordered domain of UL34 was required for the interaction with ALIX and the recruitment of ESCRT-III machinery to the INM to promote primary envelopment. Herpesvirus UL34 homologs contain conserved amino-terminal domains that mediate vesicle formation through interactions with UL31 homologs during primary envelopment. UL34 homologs also comprise other domains adjacent to their membrane-anchoring regions, which differ in length, are variable in herpesviruses, and do not form distinguished secondary structures. However, the role of these disordered domains in infected cells remains to be elucidated. In this study, we present data suggesting that the arginine cluster in the disordered domain of HSV-1 UL34 mediates the interaction with ALIX, thereby leading to the recruitment of ESCRT-III machinery to the INM for efficient primary envelopment. This is the first study to report the role of the disordered domain of a UL34 homolog in herpesvirus infections.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8791252PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/JVI.01704-21DOI Listing

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