Stimulation of neutral lipid synthesis via viral growth factor signaling and ATP citrate lyase during vaccinia virus infection.

IF 4 2区 医学 Q2 VIROLOGY Journal of Virology Pub Date : 2024-11-19 Epub Date: 2024-10-30 DOI:10.1128/jvi.01103-24
Anil Pant, Djamal Brahim Belhaouari, Lara Dsouza, Zhilong Yang
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Abstract

Fatty acid metabolism can provide various products essential for viral infections. How vaccinia virus (VACV), the prototype of poxviruses, modulates fatty acid metabolism is not well understood. Here, we show that VACV infection results in increased neutral lipid droplet synthesis, the organelles that play a crucial role in storing and mobilizing fatty acids for energy production via β-oxidation. Citrate is the first tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle intermediate that can be transported to the cytosol to be converted to acetyl-CoA for de novo fatty acid biosynthesis. We found that VACV infection stimulates the S455 phosphorylation of ATP citrate lyase (ACLY), a pivotal enzyme that links citrate metabolism with lipid metabolism. We demonstrate that the inhibition of neutral lipid droplet synthesis and ACLY severely suppresses VACV replication. Remarkably, we found that virus growth factor (VGF)-induced signaling is essential for the VACV-mediated upregulation of ACLY phosphorylation and neutral lipid droplets. Finally, we report that VGF-induced EGFR-Akt pathway and ACLY phosphorylation are important for VACV stimulation of neutral lipid synthesis. These findings identified a new way of rewiring cell metabolism by a virus and a novel function for VGF in the governance of virus-host interactions through the induction of a key enzyme at the crossroads of the TCA cycle and fatty acid metabolism. Our study also provides a mechanism for the role played by VGF and its downstream signaling cascades in the modulation of lipid metabolism in VACV-infected cells.IMPORTANCENeutral lipid droplets are vital players in cellular metabolism. Here, we showed that VACV induces neutral lipid droplet synthesis in infected primary human foreskin fibroblasts and identified the cellular and viral factors needed. We identified VACV encoded growth factor (VGF) as an essential viral factor that induces cellular EGFR-Akt signaling to increase lipid droplets. Interestingly, VACV increases the S455 phosphorylation of ACLY, a key metabolic enzyme that sits at the crossroads of carbohydrate and lipid metabolism in a VGF-EGFR-Akt-dependent manner. We also found that ACLY is vital for VACV-induced lipid droplet synthesis. Our findings identified the modulation of ACLY by a virus and identified it as a potential target for antiviral development against pathogenic poxviruses. Our study also expands the role of growth factor signaling in boosting VACV replication by targeting fatty acid metabolism.

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在疫苗病毒感染过程中,通过病毒生长因子信号和 ATP 柠檬酸溶解酶刺激中性脂质合成。
脂肪酸代谢可提供病毒感染所必需的各种产物。痘病毒的原型--疫苗病毒(VACV)如何调节脂肪酸代谢尚不十分清楚。在这里,我们发现 VACV 感染会导致中性脂滴合成增加,这种细胞器在储存和动员脂肪酸通过 β 氧化产生能量方面发挥着至关重要的作用。柠檬酸盐是三羧酸(TCA)循环的第一个中间产物,可被运送到细胞质转化为乙酰-CoA,用于脂肪酸的新生物合成。我们发现,VACV 感染会刺激 ATP 柠檬酸裂解酶(ACLY)的 S455 磷酸化,而 ACLY 是连接柠檬酸代谢与脂质代谢的关键酶。我们证明,抑制中性脂滴合成和 ACLY 会严重抑制 VACV 的复制。值得注意的是,我们发现病毒生长因子(VGF)诱导的信号传导对于 VACV 介导的 ACLY 磷酸化和中性脂滴上调至关重要。最后,我们报告了 VGF 诱导的 EGFR-Akt 通路和 ACLY 磷酸化对 VACV 刺激中性脂质合成的重要作用。这些发现确定了病毒重构细胞新陈代谢的一种新方法,以及 VGF 通过诱导 TCA 循环和脂肪酸代谢交叉点上的一种关键酶在治理病毒-宿主相互作用中的一种新功能。我们的研究还为 VGF 及其下游信号级联在 VACV 感染细胞的脂质代谢调节中发挥作用提供了一种机制。重要意义中性脂滴是细胞代谢的重要参与者。在这里,我们发现 VACV 能诱导受感染的原代人包皮成纤维细胞合成中性脂滴,并确定了所需的细胞和病毒因子。我们发现 VACV 编码的生长因子(VGF)是诱导细胞表皮生长因子受体-Akt 信号转导以增加脂滴的重要病毒因子。有趣的是,VACV 以一种依赖 VGF-EGFR-Akt 的方式增加了 ACLY 的 S455 磷酸化,而 ACLY 是一种关键的代谢酶,处于碳水化合物和脂质代谢的交叉点。我们还发现 ACLY 对 VACV 诱导的脂滴合成至关重要。我们的研究结果确定了病毒对 ACLY 的调节作用,并将其作为开发抗病毒药物以对抗致病性痘病毒的潜在靶点。我们的研究还拓展了生长因子信号通过靶向脂肪酸代谢促进 VACV 复制的作用。
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来源期刊
Journal of Virology
Journal of Virology 医学-病毒学
CiteScore
10.10
自引率
7.40%
发文量
906
审稿时长
1 months
期刊介绍: Journal of Virology (JVI) explores the nature of the viruses of animals, archaea, bacteria, fungi, plants, and protozoa. We welcome papers on virion structure and assembly, viral genome replication and regulation of gene expression, genetic diversity and evolution, virus-cell interactions, cellular responses to infection, transformation and oncogenesis, gene delivery, viral pathogenesis and immunity, and vaccines and antiviral agents.
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