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Publication : Human cytomegalovirus directly induces the antiviral protein viperin to enhance infectivity.

First Author  Seo JY Year  2011
Journal  Science Volume  332
Issue  6033 Pages  1093-7
PubMed ID  21527675 Mgi Jnum  J:185023
Mgi Id  MGI:5427072 Doi  10.1126/science.1202007
Citation  Seo JY, et al. (2011) Human cytomegalovirus directly induces the antiviral protein viperin to enhance infectivity. Science 332(6033):1093-7
abstractText  Viperin is an interferon-inducible protein that is directly induced in cells by human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) infection. Why HCMV would induce viperin, which has antiviral activity, is unknown. We show that HCMV-induced viperin disrupts cellular metabolism to enhance the infectious process. Viperin interaction with the viral protein vMIA resulted in viperin relocalization from the endoplasmic reticulum to the mitochondria. There, viperin interacted with the mitochondrial trifunctional protein that mediates beta-oxidation of fatty acids to generate adenosine triphosphate (ATP). This interaction with viperin, but not with a mutant lacking the viperin iron-sulfur cluster-binding motif, reduced cellular ATP generation, which resulted in actin cytoskeleton disruption and enhancement of infection. This function of viperin, which was previously attributed to vMIA, suggests that HCMV has coopted viperin to facilitate the infectious process.
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