Metabolic manipulations in virus-infected cells
The
large quantities of viral macromolecules and virus particles that are produced
in an infected cell impose heavy demands on the host. Synthesis of the building
blocks of a virus particle – nucleotides, amino acids, and sometimes fatty
acids – requires energy, typically in the form of ATP. Synthesis of viral proteins
and genomes, and transport of viral components in the cell also require energy.
Because of these needs, viral infections often lead to alterations in the
energy-generating and precursor synthesizing pathways of a cell. Two recent
examples illustrate how virus infection can alter host metabolism.
The first study shows how a long non-coding RNA (incRNA) induced by viral infection binds a metabolic enzyme and enhances its catalytic activity. There are thousands of lncRNAs encoded in the mammalian
genome which appear to regulate gene expression. An lncRNA called
lncRNA-ACOD1 is induced in cells infected with a variety of viruses. Removal of
the gene for lncRNA-ACOD1 from cells or from mice significantly reduces viral
replication.
The positive effect of lncRNA-ACOD1 on viral replication is
a consequence of the binding of this RNA to glutamic-oxaloacetic transaminase,
an enzyme that participates in multiple metabolic processes. Binding of
lncRNA-ACOD1 increases activity of the enzyme and leads to the production of
metabolites that facilitate viral reproduction.
Perhaps even more amazing is that the increased synthesis of
lncRNA-ACOD1 in virus infected cells depends on the activation of nuclear
factor kappaB, a transcription factor which regulates metabolism and response
to infections. A subunit of NF-kappaB binds the promoter of the gene encoding
lncRNA-ACOD1, increasing its synthesis. Virus evolution has turned a cellular
defense into a positive regulator of virus replication!
Another example of metabolic manipulation in virus infected
cells comes from the study of a plant virus, tomato bushy stunt virus. This RNA virus replicates to
very high levels in a short time, requiring a great deal of ATP. This energy
requirement appears to be partially satisfied by the recruitment into the
replication compartments – vesicle-like structures that are formed during
viral replication – of the enzyme pyruvate kinase.
Pyruvate kinase catalyzes the last step of glycolysis, the
production of pyruvate and ATP from glucose (step 10 in the image – you do
remember your metabolism, right?). Glycolysis is a major metabolic pathway in
the cytoplasm which not only produces ATP, but also metabolites for
biosynthetic pathways such as the synthesis of lipids, amino acids, and nucleic
acids.
Pyruvate kinase is recruited into TBSV replication complexes
because it binds the viral RNA-dependent RNA polymerase. There it synthesizes
high levels of ATP which is used for the activity of helicases – also recruited
from the host cell – needed for the production of large amounts of
positive-strand genomic viral RNAs.
These are just two examples of how virus infection remodels
the metabolic profile of the cell. There are other fascinating examples, some
of which are apparently unique. One is the synthesis of the fatty acid
palmitate for its subsequent oxidation in cells infected with poxviruses. Another is the induction of autophagy in dengue virus infected cells, which leads to mobilization of lipid stores. Additional
examples of the ways that viral gene products regulate or redirect cellular
processes surely remain to be discovered.
http://www.virology.ws/2018/01/18/metabolic-manipulations-in-virus-infected-cells/

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