Interplay between the alpharetroviral Gag protein and SR Proteins SF2 and SC35 in the nucleus
Retroviruses are positive-sense, single-stranded RNA viruses that reverse transcribe their RNA genomes into double-stranded DNA for integration into the host cell chromosome. The integrated provirus is used as a template for the transcription of viral RNA. The full-length viral RNA can be used for t...
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doaj-a88d66b12abb49228e035ca809059abd2020-11-24T22:51:19ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Microbiology1664-302X2015-09-01610.3389/fmicb.2015.00925147026Interplay between the alpharetroviral Gag protein and SR Proteins SF2 and SC35 in the nucleusBreanna L. Rice0Rebecca J. Kaddis1Matthew S. Stake2Timothy L. Lochmann3Leslie J. Parent4Penn State College of MedicinePenn State College of MedicinePenn State College of MedicinePenn State College of MedicinePenn State College of MedicineRetroviruses are positive-sense, single-stranded RNA viruses that reverse transcribe their RNA genomes into double-stranded DNA for integration into the host cell chromosome. The integrated provirus is used as a template for the transcription of viral RNA. The full-length viral RNA can be used for the translation of the Gag and Gag-Pol structural proteins or as the genomic RNA (gRNA) for encapsidation into new virions by the Gag protein. The mechanism by which Gag selectively incorporates unspliced gRNA into virus particles is poorly understood. Although Gag was previously thought to localize exclusively to the cytoplasm and plasma membrane where particles are released, we found that the Gag protein of Rous sarcoma virus, an alpharetrovirus, undergoes transient nuclear trafficking. When the nuclear export signal of RSV Gag is mutated (Gag.L219A), the protein accumulates in discrete subnuclear foci reminiscent of nuclear bodies such as splicing speckles, paraspeckles, and PML bodies. In this report, we observed that RSV Gag.L219A foci appeared to be tethered in the nucleus, partially co-localizing with the splicing speckle components SC35 and SF2. Overexpression of SC35 increased the number of Gag.L219A nucleoplasmic foci, suggesting that SC35 may facilitate the formation of Gag foci. We previously reported that RSV Gag nuclear trafficking is required for efficient gRNA packaging. Together with the data presented herein, our findings raise the intriguing hypothesis that RSV Gag may co-opt splicing factors to localize near transcription sites. Because splicing occurs co-transcriptionally, we speculate that this mechanism could allow Gag to associate with unspliced viral RNA shortly after its transcription initiation in the nucleus, before the viral RNA can be spliced or exported from the nucleus as an mRNA template.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fmicb.2015.00925/fullnuclear bodiesSplicing factorsNuclear traffickingSF2SC35retroviral Gag proteins |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Breanna L. Rice Rebecca J. Kaddis Matthew S. Stake Timothy L. Lochmann Leslie J. Parent |
spellingShingle |
Breanna L. Rice Rebecca J. Kaddis Matthew S. Stake Timothy L. Lochmann Leslie J. Parent Interplay between the alpharetroviral Gag protein and SR Proteins SF2 and SC35 in the nucleus Frontiers in Microbiology nuclear bodies Splicing factors Nuclear trafficking SF2 SC35 retroviral Gag proteins |
author_facet |
Breanna L. Rice Rebecca J. Kaddis Matthew S. Stake Timothy L. Lochmann Leslie J. Parent |
author_sort |
Breanna L. Rice |
title |
Interplay between the alpharetroviral Gag protein and SR Proteins SF2 and SC35 in the nucleus |
title_short |
Interplay between the alpharetroviral Gag protein and SR Proteins SF2 and SC35 in the nucleus |
title_full |
Interplay between the alpharetroviral Gag protein and SR Proteins SF2 and SC35 in the nucleus |
title_fullStr |
Interplay between the alpharetroviral Gag protein and SR Proteins SF2 and SC35 in the nucleus |
title_full_unstemmed |
Interplay between the alpharetroviral Gag protein and SR Proteins SF2 and SC35 in the nucleus |
title_sort |
interplay between the alpharetroviral gag protein and sr proteins sf2 and sc35 in the nucleus |
publisher |
Frontiers Media S.A. |
series |
Frontiers in Microbiology |
issn |
1664-302X |
publishDate |
2015-09-01 |
description |
Retroviruses are positive-sense, single-stranded RNA viruses that reverse transcribe their RNA genomes into double-stranded DNA for integration into the host cell chromosome. The integrated provirus is used as a template for the transcription of viral RNA. The full-length viral RNA can be used for the translation of the Gag and Gag-Pol structural proteins or as the genomic RNA (gRNA) for encapsidation into new virions by the Gag protein. The mechanism by which Gag selectively incorporates unspliced gRNA into virus particles is poorly understood. Although Gag was previously thought to localize exclusively to the cytoplasm and plasma membrane where particles are released, we found that the Gag protein of Rous sarcoma virus, an alpharetrovirus, undergoes transient nuclear trafficking. When the nuclear export signal of RSV Gag is mutated (Gag.L219A), the protein accumulates in discrete subnuclear foci reminiscent of nuclear bodies such as splicing speckles, paraspeckles, and PML bodies. In this report, we observed that RSV Gag.L219A foci appeared to be tethered in the nucleus, partially co-localizing with the splicing speckle components SC35 and SF2. Overexpression of SC35 increased the number of Gag.L219A nucleoplasmic foci, suggesting that SC35 may facilitate the formation of Gag foci. We previously reported that RSV Gag nuclear trafficking is required for efficient gRNA packaging. Together with the data presented herein, our findings raise the intriguing hypothesis that RSV Gag may co-opt splicing factors to localize near transcription sites. Because splicing occurs co-transcriptionally, we speculate that this mechanism could allow Gag to associate with unspliced viral RNA shortly after its transcription initiation in the nucleus, before the viral RNA can be spliced or exported from the nucleus as an mRNA template. |
topic |
nuclear bodies Splicing factors Nuclear trafficking SF2 SC35 retroviral Gag proteins |
url |
http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fmicb.2015.00925/full |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT breannalrice interplaybetweenthealpharetroviralgagproteinandsrproteinssf2andsc35inthenucleus AT rebeccajkaddis interplaybetweenthealpharetroviralgagproteinandsrproteinssf2andsc35inthenucleus AT matthewsstake interplaybetweenthealpharetroviralgagproteinandsrproteinssf2andsc35inthenucleus AT timothyllochmann interplaybetweenthealpharetroviralgagproteinandsrproteinssf2andsc35inthenucleus AT lesliejparent interplaybetweenthealpharetroviralgagproteinandsrproteinssf2andsc35inthenucleus |
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1725670341985959936 |