Literature detail

Elucidating the Interactions between Influenza Virus Polymerase and Host Factor ANP32A.

Bhakti Mistry1 Jason S Long1 Jocelyn Schreyer1 Ecco Staller1 Raul Yusef Sanchez-David1 Wendy S Barclay2
Affiliations 2 institutions
  1. Section of Molecular Virology, Imperial College London, London, United Kingdom.
  2. Section of Molecular Virology, Imperial College London, London, United Kingdom [email protected].
PMID 31694956 2020 J Virol eng epublish
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Article

Publication summary

The avian-origin influenza A virus polymerase is restricted in human cells. This restriction has been associated with species differences in host factor ANP32A. Avian ANP32A supports the activity of an avian-origin polymerase. However, the avian-origin polymerase is incompatible with human ANP32A. Avian ANP32A proteins harbor an additional 33 amino acids compared to human ANP32A proteins, which are crucial for their ability to support the avian-origin influenza virus polymerase. Here, we elucidate the interactions between ANP32A proteins and the influenza A virus polymerase using split luciferase complementation assays, coimmunoprecipitation, and <i>in situ</i> split Venus interaction assays. We show greater interaction of chicken ANP32A than human ANP32A with the viral polymerase and visualize these interactions <i>in situ</i> in the cell nucleus. We demonstrate that the 33 amino acids of chicken ANP32A and the PB2 627 domain of viral polymerase complex both contribute to this enhanced interaction. Finally, we show how these interactions are affected by the presence of viral RNA and the processivity of the polymerase, giving insights into the way that ANP32A might act during virus infection.<b>IMPORTANCE</b> Successful zoonotic transmission of influenza A virus into humans can lead to pandemics in an immunologically naive population. Host-encoded ANP32A proteins are required to support influenza A virus polymerase activity, and species differences in ANP32A can restrict the host range of influenza virus. Understanding how ANP32A proteins support the viral polymerase and how differences in ANP32A affect the ability of the polymerase to coopt these proteins will enhance our understanding of viral replication and species restriction as well as suggesting targeted antiviral approaches to treat influenza virus infection.

host factor influenza polymerase Host Specificity Amino Acid Sequence Animals Avian Proteins Chickens HEK293 Cells Humans Immunoprecipitation Influenza A virus Influenza in Birds Influenza, Human Luciferases Nuclear Proteins Orthomyxoviridae Infections RNA, Viral

Structured evidence records

Evidence records

1 total
1 records
Extraction confidence 0.95
Key finding

Species-specific differences in ANP32A, including an extra 33 amino acids, and the PB2 627 domain mediate influenza A virus polymerase compatibility between avian and human hosts, explaining molecular determinants of host adaptation.

Virus
Host
Not specified
Location
Not specified
Supporting text

Avian-origin influenza A virus polymerase is restricted in human cells due to species differences in host factor ANP32A. Avian ANP32A proteins harbor an additional 33 amino acids compared to human ANP32A, which are crucial for supporting the avian-origin influenza polymerase. The PB2 627 domain of the viral polymerase complex contributes to enhanced interaction with chicken ANP32A.

Genes or proteins
PB2; polymerase; ANP32A
Host factors
ANP32A
Mutations
PB2 627 domain
Mechanism types
polymerase_activity; host_factor_interaction; replication_efficiency; host_range_adaptation