Human herpesvirus-6 U14 induces cell-cycle arrest in G2/M phase by associating with a cellular protein, EDD

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Abstract

The human herpesvirus-6 (HHV-6) infection induces cell-cycle arrest. In this study, we found that the HHV-6-encoded U14 protein induced cell-cycle arrest at G2/M phase via an association with the cellular protein EDD, a mediator of DNA-damage signal transduction. In the early phase of HHV-6 infection, U14 colocalized with EDD dots in the nucleus, and similar colocalization was also observed in cells transfected with a U14 expression vector. When the carboxyl-terminal region of U14 was deleted, no association of U14 and EDD was observed, and the percentage of cells in G2/M decreased relative to that in cells expressing wild-type U14, indicating that the C-terminal region of U14 and the U14-EDD association are critical for the cell-cycle arrest induced by U14. These results indicate that U14 is a G2/M checkpoint regulator encoded by HHV-6. Copyright:

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Mori, J., Kawabata, A., Tang, H., Tadagaki, K., Mizuguchi, H., Kuroda, K., & Mori, Y. (2015). Human herpesvirus-6 U14 induces cell-cycle arrest in G2/M phase by associating with a cellular protein, EDD. PLoS ONE, 10(9). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0137420

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