Protective role of cytosolic prion protein against virus infection in prion-infected cells.

NF-κB NLRP3 inflammasome influenza A virus necroptosis prion prion protein

Journal

Journal of virology
ISSN: 1098-5514
Titre abrégé: J Virol
Pays: United States
ID NLM: 0113724

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
28 Aug 2024
Historique:
medline: 28 8 2024
pubmed: 28 8 2024
entrez: 28 8 2024
Statut: aheadofprint

Résumé

Production of the amyloidogenic prion protein, PrP Cytosolic PrP has been detected in prion-infected cells and suggested to be involved in the neurotoxicity of prions. Here, we also detected cytosolic PrP in prion-infected cells. We further found that the nuclear translocation of NF-κB was disturbed in prion-infected cells and that the N-terminal potential nuclear translocation signal of PrP expressed in the cytosol disturbed the nuclear translocation of NF-κB. Thus, the N-terminal nuclear translocation signal of cytosolic PrP might play a role in prion neurotoxicity. Prion-like protein aggregates in other protein misfolding disorders, including Alzheimer's disease were reported to play a protective role against various environmental stimuli. We here showed that prion-infected cells were partially resistant to IAV/WSN infection due to the cytosolic PrP-mediated disturbance of the nuclear translocation of NF-κB, which consequently activated NLRP3 inflammasomes after IAV/WSN infection. It is thus possible that prions could also play a protective role in viral infections.

Identifiants

pubmed: 39194237
doi: 10.1128/jvi.01262-24
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

e0126224

Auteurs

Hideyuki Hara (H)

Division of Molecular Neurobiology, The Institute for Enzyme Research (KOSOKEN), Tokushima University, Tokushima, Japan.
Core Research Facility, Center for Infectious Disease Education and Research (CiDER), Osaka University, Osaka, Japan.

Junji Chida (J)

Division of Molecular Neurobiology, The Institute for Enzyme Research (KOSOKEN), Tokushima University, Tokushima, Japan.

Batzaya Batchuluun (B)

Division of Molecular Neurobiology, The Institute for Enzyme Research (KOSOKEN), Tokushima University, Tokushima, Japan.

Etsuhisa Takahashi (E)

Division of Enzyme Chemistry, The Institute for Enzyme Research, Tokushima University (KOSOKEN), Tokushima, Japan.

Hiroshi Kido (H)

Division of Enzyme Chemistry, The Institute for Enzyme Research, Tokushima University (KOSOKEN), Tokushima, Japan.

Suehiro Sakaguchi (S)

Division of Molecular Neurobiology, The Institute for Enzyme Research (KOSOKEN), Tokushima University, Tokushima, Japan.

Classifications MeSH