Literature detail

Comprehensive proteomic analysis of influenza virus polymerase complex reveals a novel association with mitochondrial proteins and RNA polymerase accessory factors.

Birgit G Bradel-Tretheway1 Jonelle L Mattiacio Alexei Krasnoselsky Catherine Stevenson David Purdy Stephen Dewhurst Michael G Katze
Affiliations 1 institutions
  1. Department of Microbiology, School of Medicine, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington 98195, USA.
PMID 21715506 2011 J Virol eng ppublish
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Article

Publication summary

The trimeric RNA polymerase complex (3P, for PA-PB1-PB2) of influenza A virus (IAV) is an important viral determinant of pathogenicity and host range restriction. Specific interactions of the polymerase complex with host proteins may be determining factors in both of these characteristics and play important roles in the viral life cycle. To investigate this question, we performed a comprehensive proteomic analysis of human host proteins associated with the polymerase of the well-characterized H5N1 Vietnam/1203/04 isolate. We identified over 400 proteins by liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS), of which over 300 were found to bind to the PA subunit alone. The most intriguing and novel finding was the large number of mitochondrial proteins (∼20%) that associated with the PA subunit. These proteins mediate molecular transport across the mitochondrial membrane or regulate membrane potential and may in concert with the identified mitochondrion-associated apoptosis inducing factor (AIFM1) have roles in the induction of apoptosis upon association with PA. Additionally, we identified host factors that associated with the PA-PB1 (68 proteins) and/or the 3P complex (34 proteins) including proteins that have roles in innate antiviral signaling (e.g., ZAPS or HaxI) or are cellular RNA polymerase accessory factors (e.g., polymerase I transcript release factor [PTRF] or Supt5H). IAV strain-specific host factor binding to the polymerase was not observed in our analysis. Overall, this study has shed light into the complex contributions of the IAV polymerase to host cell pathogenicity and allows for direct investigations into the biological significance of these newly described interactions.

Host-Pathogen Interactions Virus Replication Cell Line Chromatography, Liquid DNA-Directed RNA Polymerases Humans Influenza A Virus, H5N1 Subtype Mitochondrial Proteins Protein Subunits Proteome Tandem Mass Spectrometry

Structured evidence records

Evidence records

1 total
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.80
Key finding

Influenza A (H5N1) polymerase subunits PA, PB1, and PB2 interact with multiple human mitochondrial and antiviral host proteins that may influence viral pathogenicity and host range.

Virus
Host
Not specified
Location
Not specified
Supporting text

The trimeric RNA polymerase complex (3P, for PA-PB1-PB2) of influenza A virus (IAV) is an important viral determinant of pathogenicity and host range restriction. ... We identified host proteins associated with the polymerase of the H5N1 Vietnam/1203/04 isolate, including mitochondrial and innate antiviral signaling proteins.

Genes or proteins
PA; PB1; PB2
Host factors
AIFM1; ZAPS; HaxI; PTRF; Supt5H
Mechanism types
polymerase_activity; host_factor_interaction; pathogenicity