Enterovirus 71 Infection Cleaves a Negative Regulator for Viral Internal Ribosomal Entry Site-Driven Translation

  • Chen L
  • Kung Y
  • Weng K
  • et al.
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Abstract

Far-upstream element-binding protein 2 (FBP2) is an internal ribosomal entry site (IRES) trans -acting factor (ITAF) that negatively regulates enterovirus 71 (EV71) translation. This study shows that EV71 infection cleaved FBP2. Live EV71 and the EV71 replicon (but not UV-inactivated virus particles) induced FBP2 cleavage, suggesting that viral replication results in FBP2 cleavage. The results also showed that virus-induced proteasome, autophagy, and caspase activity co-contribute to EV71-induced FBP2 cleavage. Using FLAG-fused FBP2, we mapped the potential cleavage fragments of FBP2 in infected cells. We also found that FBP2 altered its function when its carboxyl terminus was cleaved. This study presents a mechanism for virus-induced cellular events to cleave a negative regulator for viral IRES-driven translation.

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Chen, L.-L., Kung, Y.-A., Weng, K.-F., Lin, J.-Y., Horng, J.-T., & Shih, S.-R. (2013). Enterovirus 71 Infection Cleaves a Negative Regulator for Viral Internal Ribosomal Entry Site-Driven Translation. Journal of Virology, 87(7), 3828–3838. https://doi.org/10.1128/jvi.02278-12

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