4.6 Article

Cell Cycle Arrest in G2/M Phase Enhances Replication of Interferon-Sensitive Cytoplasmic RNA Viruses via Inhibition of Antiviral Gene Expression

Journal

JOURNAL OF VIROLOGY
Volume 93, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/JVI.01885-18

Keywords

G(2)/M; Sendai virus; cell cycle; colchicine; mitotic inhibition of transcription; nonsegmented negative-strand RNA virus; paclitaxel; type I interferon; vesicular stomatitis virus

Categories

Funding

  1. National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health (Bethesda, MD, USA) [1R15CA195463-01A1]

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Vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) (a rhabdovirus) and its variant VSV-Delta M51 are widely used model systems to study mechanisms of virus-host interactions. Here, we investigated how the cell cycle affects replication of these viruses using an array of cell lines with different levels of impairment of antiviral signaling and a panel of chemical compounds arresting the cell cycle at different phases. We observed that all compounds inducing cell cycle arrest in G(2)/M phase strongly enhanced the replication of VSV-Delta M51 in cells with functional antiviral signaling. G(2)/M arrest strongly inhibited type I and type III interferon (IFN) production as well as expression of IFN-stimulated genes in response to exogenously added IFN. Moreover, G(2)/M arrest enhanced the replication of Sendai virus (a paramyxovirus), which is also highly sensitive to the type I IFN response but did not stimulate the replication of a wild-type VSV that is more effective at evading antiviral responses. In contrast, the positive effect of G(2)/M arrest on virus replication was not observed in cells defective in IFN signaling. Altogether, our data show that replication of IFN-sensitive cytoplasmic viruses can be strongly stimulated during G(2)/M phase as a result of inhibition of antiviral gene expression, likely due to mitotic inhibition of transcription, a global repression of cellular transcription during G(2)/M phase. The G(2)/M phase thus could represent an Achilles' heel of the infected cell, a phase when the cell is inadequately protected. This model could explain at least one of the reasons why many viruses have been shown to induce G(2)/M arrest. IMPORTANCE Vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) (a rhabdovirus) and its variant VSV-Delta M51 are widely used model systems to study mechanisms of virus-host interactions. Here, we investigated how the cell cycle affects replication of VSV and VSV-Delta M51. We show that G(2)/M cell cycle arrest strongly enhances the replication of VSV-Delta M51 (but not of wildtype VSV) and Sendai virus (a paramyxovirus) via inhibition of antiviral gene expression, likely due to mitotic inhibition of transcription, a global repression of cellular transcription during G(2)/M phase. Our data suggest that the G(2)/M phase could represent an Achilles' heel of the infected cell, a phase when the cell is inadequately protected. This model could explain at least one of the reasons why many viruses have been shown to induce G(2)/M arrest, and it has important implications for oncolytic virotherapy, suggesting that frequent cell cycle progression in cancer cells could make them more permissive to viruses.

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