» Articles » PMID: 11689607

Reovirus Infection Activates JNK and the JNK-dependent Transcription Factor C-Jun

Overview
Journal J Virol
Date 2001 Nov 2
PMID 11689607
Citations 34
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Viral infection often perturbs host cell signaling pathways including those involving mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPKs). We now show that reovirus infection results in the selective activation of c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK). Reovirus-induced JNK activation is associated with an increase in the phosphorylation of the JNK-dependent transcription factor c-Jun. Reovirus serotype 3 prototype strains Abney (T3A) and Dearing (T3D) induce significantly more JNK activation and c-Jun phosphorylation than does the serotype 1 prototypic strain Lang (T1L). T3D and T3A also induce more apoptosis in infected cells than T1L, and there was a significant correlation between the ability of these viruses to phosphorylate c-Jun and induce apoptosis. However, reovirus-induced apoptosis, but not reovirus-induced c-Jun phosphorylation, is inhibited by blocking TRAIL/receptor binding, suggesting that apoptosis and c-Jun phosphorylation involve parallel rather than identical pathways. Strain-specific differences in JNK activation are determined by the reovirus S1 and M2 gene segments, which encode viral outer capsid proteins (sigma1 and mu1c) involved in receptor binding and host cell membrane penetration. These same gene segments also determine differences in the capacity of reovirus strains to induce apoptosis, and again a significant correlation between the capacity of T1L x T3D reassortant reoviruses to both activate JNK and phosphorylate c-Jun and to induce apoptosis was shown. The extracellular signal-related kinase (ERK) is also activated in a strain-specific manner following reovirus infection. Unlike JNK activation, ERK activation could not be mapped to specific reovirus gene segments, suggesting that ERK activation and JNK activation are triggered by different events during virus-host cell interaction.

Citing Articles

L. Derived Active Fraction Ameliorates Perioperative Neurocognitive Disorders Through Alleviating Hippocampal Neuroinflammation.

Chu J, Abulimiti A, Wong B, Zhao G, Xiong S, Zhao M Front Pharmacol. 2022; 13:846631.

PMID: 35370714 PMC: 8969099. DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2022.846631.


Nonclassical autophagy activation pathways are essential for production of infectious Influenza A virus in vitro.

Bell T, Velappan N, Gleasner C, Xie G, Starkenburg S, Waldo G Mol Microbiol. 2021; 117(2):508-524.

PMID: 34931347 PMC: 9305535. DOI: 10.1111/mmi.14865.


The Good, the Bad and the Tick.

Cabezas-Cruz A, Estrada-Pena A, de la Fuente J Front Cell Dev Biol. 2019; 7:79.

PMID: 31157221 PMC: 6529820. DOI: 10.3389/fcell.2019.00079.


The Loop Formed by Residues 340 to 343 of Reovirus μ1 Controls Entry-Related Conformational Changes.

Snyder A, Danthi P J Virol. 2017; 91(20).

PMID: 28794028 PMC: 5625490. DOI: 10.1128/JVI.00898-17.


Comparative proteomic analyses demonstrate enhanced interferon and STAT-1 activation in reovirus T3D-infected HeLa cells.

Ezzati P, Komher K, Severini G, Coombs K Front Cell Infect Microbiol. 2015; 5:30.

PMID: 25905045 PMC: 4388007. DOI: 10.3389/fcimb.2015.00030.


References
1.
Cobb M, Boulton T, Robbins D . Extracellular signal-regulated kinases: ERKs in progress. Cell Regul. 1991; 2(12):965-78. PMC: 361897. DOI: 10.1091/mbc.2.12.965. View

2.
Sontag E, Fedorov S, Kamibayashi C, Robbins D, Cobb M, Mumby M . The interaction of SV40 small tumor antigen with protein phosphatase 2A stimulates the map kinase pathway and induces cell proliferation. Cell. 1993; 75(5):887-97. DOI: 10.1016/0092-8674(93)90533-v. View

3.
Hibi M, Lin A, Smeal T, Minden A, Karin M . Identification of an oncoprotein- and UV-responsive protein kinase that binds and potentiates the c-Jun activation domain. Genes Dev. 1993; 7(11):2135-48. DOI: 10.1101/gad.7.11.2135. View

4.
Derijard B, Hibi M, Wu I, Barrett T, Su B, Deng T . JNK1: a protein kinase stimulated by UV light and Ha-Ras that binds and phosphorylates the c-Jun activation domain. Cell. 1994; 76(6):1025-37. DOI: 10.1016/0092-8674(94)90380-8. View

5.
Kyriakis J, Banerjee P, Nikolakaki E, Dai T, Rubie E, Ahmad M . The stress-activated protein kinase subfamily of c-Jun kinases. Nature. 1994; 369(6476):156-60. DOI: 10.1038/369156a0. View