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Japanese encephalitis virus infects neuronalcells through a clathrin-independent endocytic mechanism.
IR @ Translational Health Science and Technology Institute
Title
Japanese encephalitis virus infects neuronalcells through a clathrin-independent endocytic mechanism.
Creator
Kalia, M. Khasa, R. Sharma, M. Nain, M. Vrati, S.
Description
Japanese encephalitis virus (JEV) is a mosquito-borne pathogenic flavivirus responsible for acute viral encephalitis in humans. The cellular entry of JEV is poorly characterized in terms of molecular requirements and pathways. Here we present a systematic study of the internalization mechanism of JEV in fibroblasts and neuroblastoma cells. To verify the roles of distinct pathways of cell entry, we used fluorescently labeled virus particles, a combination of pharmacological inhibitors, RNA interference (RNAi), and dominant-negative (DN) mutants of regulatory proteins involved in endocytosis. Our study demonstrates that JEV infects fibroblasts in a clathrin-dependent manner, but it deploys a clathrin-independent mechanism to infect neuronal cells. The clathrin-independent pathway requires dynamin and plasma membrane cholesterol. Virus binding to neuronal cells leads to rapid actin rearrangements and an intact and dynamic actin cytoskeleton, and the small GTPase RhoA plays an important role in viral entry. Immunofluorescence analysis of viral colocalization with endocytic markers showed that JEV traffics through Rab5-positive early endosomes and that release of the viral nucleocapsid occurs at the level of the early and not the late endosomes.
Publisher
Date
2013
Type
Article PeerReviewed
Identifier
Kalia, M. and Khasa, R. and Sharma, M. and Nain, M. and Vrati, S. (2013) Japanese encephalitis virus infects neuronalcells through a clathrin-independent endocytic mechanism. Journal of Virology, 87 (1). pp. 148-162.
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