4.6 Article

Cell Susceptibility to Baculovirus Transduction and Echovirus Infection Is Modified by Protein Kinase C Phosphorylation and Vimentin Organization

Journal

JOURNAL OF VIROLOGY
Volume 87, Issue 17, Pages 9822-9835

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/JVI.01004-13

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Funding

  1. Academy of Finland
  2. Alfred Kordelin Foundation

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Some cell types are more susceptible to viral gene transfer or virus infection than others, irrespective of the number of viral receptors or virus binding efficacy on their surfaces. In order to characterize the cell-line-specific features contributing to efficient virus entry, we studied two cell lines (Ea.hy926 and MG-63) that are nearly nonpermissive to insect-specific baculovirus (BV) and the human enterovirus echovirus 1 (EV1) and compared their characteristics with those of a highly permissive (HepG2) cell line. All the cell lines contained high levels of viral receptors on their surfaces, and virus binding was shown to be efficient. However, in nonpermissive cells, BV and its receptor, syndecan 1, were unable to internalize in the cells and formed large aggregates near the cell surface. Accordingly, EV1 had a low infection rate in nonpermissive cells but was still able to internalize the cells, suggesting that the postinternalization step of the virus was impaired. The nonpermissive and permissive cell lines showed differential expression of syntenin, filamentous actin, vimentin, and phosphorylated protein kinase C subtype alpha (pPKC alpha). The nonpermissive nature of the cells could be modulated by the choice of culture medium. RPMI medium could partially rescue infection/transduction and concomitantly showed lower syntenin expression, a modified vimentin network, and altered activities of PKC subtypes PKC alpha and PKC epsilon. The observed changes in PKC alpha and PKC epsilon activation caused alterations in the vimentin organization, leading to efficient BV transduction and EV1 infection. This study identifies PKC alpha, PKC epsilon, and vimentin as key factors affecting efficient infection and transduction by EV1 and BV, respectively.

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