4.6 Article

Ebola virus replication is regulated by the phosphorylation of viral protein VP35

Journal

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.bbrc.2019.10.147

Keywords

VP35; Phosphorylation; S187; Minigenome; EBOV replication

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81590766]
  2. National Major Science and Technology Projects of China [2018ZX09711003-005-005]

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Ebola virus (EBOV) is a zoonotic pathogen, the infection often results in severe, potentially fatal, systematic disease in human and nonhuman primates. VP35, an essential viral RNA-dependent RNA polymerase cofactor, is indispensable for Ebola viral replication and host innate immune escape. In this study, VP35 was demonstrated to be phosphorylated at Serine/Threonine by immunoblotting, and the major phosphorylation sites was S187, S205, T206, S208 and S317 as revealed by LC-MS/MS. By an EBOV minigenomic system, EBOV minigenome replication was shown to be significantly inhibited by the phosphorylation-defective mutant, VP35 S187A, but was potentiated by the phosphorylation mimic mutant VP35 S187D. Together, our findings demonstrate that EBOV VP35 is phosphorylated on multiple residues in host cells, especially on S187, which may contribute to efficient viral genomic replication and viral proliferation. (C) 2019 Published by Elsevier Inc.

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