Abstract
Rab GTPases control intracellular vesicular transport, including retrograde trafficking of human papillomavirus (HPV) during cell entry, guiding the virus from the endosome to the trans-Golgi network (TGN), the Golgi apparatus, and eventually the nucleus. Rab proteins have been identified that act prior to the arrival of HPV at the TGN, but Rab proteins operating in later stages of entry remain elusive. Here, we report that knockdown of Rab6a impairs HPV entry by preventing HPV exit from the TGN and impeding intra-Golgi transport of the incoming virus. Rab6a supports HPV trafficking by facilitating the association of HPV with dynein, a motor protein complex, and BICD2, a dynein adaptor, in the TGN. L2 can bind directly to GTP-Rab6a in vitro, and excess of either GTP-Rab6a or GDP-Rab6 inhibits HPV entry, suggesting that cycling between GDP-Rab6 and GTP-Rab6 is critical. Notably, Rab6a is crucial for HPV-BICD2 and HPV-dynein association in the TGN of infected cells but not in the endosome. Our findings reveal important features of the molecular basis of HPV infection, including the discovery that HPV uses different mechanisms to engage dynein at different times during entry, and identify potential targets for therapeutic approaches to inhibit HPV infection.
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Choi, J., Speckhart, K., Tsai, B., & DiMaio, D. (2024). Rab6a enables BICD2/dynein-mediated trafficking of human papillomavirus from the trans-Golgi network during virus entry. MBio, 15(11). https://doi.org/10.1128/mbio.02811-24
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