4.4 Article

The eIF4AIII RNA helicase is a critical determinant of human cytomegalovirus replication

Journal

VIROLOGY
Volume 489, Issue -, Pages 194-201

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.virol.2015.12.009

Keywords

Human herpesvirus; Human cytomegalovirus; Protein synthesis; mRNA export; Gene expression; eIF4AIII

Categories

Funding

  1. NIH [R01 AI03311]
  2. North Carolina University Cancer Research Fund [CA016086]
  3. UNC Virology Training Grant [T32 AI007419]

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Human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) was recently shown to encode a large number of spliced mRNAs. While the nuclear export of unspliced viral transcripts has been extensively studied, the role of host mRNA export factors in HCMV mRNA trafficking remains poorly defined. We found that the eIF4AIII RNA helicase, a component of the exon junction complex, was necessary for efficient virus replication. Depletion of eIF4AIII limited viral DNA accumulation, export of viral mRNAS from the nucleus, and the production of progeny virus. However eIF4AIII was dispensable for the association of viral transcripts with ribosomes. We found that pateamine A, a natural compound that inhibits both eIF4AI/II and eIF4AIII, has potent antiviral activity and inhibits HCMV replication throughout the virus lytic cycle. Our results demonstrate that eIF4AIII is required for efficient HCMV replication, and suggest that eIF4A family helicases may be a new class of targets for the development of host-directed antiviral therapeutics. (C) 2016 Published by Elsevier Inc.

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