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Human rhinovirus promotes STING trafficking to replication organelles to promote viral replication.

Martha TriantafilouJoshi RamanjuluLee M BootyGisela Jimenez-DuranHakan KelesKen A SaundersNeysa NevinsEmma KoppeLouise K ModisG Scott PesiridisJohn BertinKathy Triantafilou
Published in: Nature communications (2022)
Human rhinovirus (HRV), like coronavirus (HCoV), are positive-strand RNA viruses that cause both upper and lower respiratory tract illness, with their replication facilitated by concentrating RNA-synthesizing machinery in intracellular compartments made of modified host membranes, referred to as replication organelles (ROs). Here we report a non-canonical, essential function for stimulator of interferon genes (STING) during HRV infections. While the canonical function of STING is to detect cytosolic DNA and activate inflammatory responses, HRV infection triggers the release of STIM1-bound STING in the ER by lowering Ca 2+ , thereby allowing STING to interact with phosphatidylinositol 4-phosphate (PI4P) and traffic to ROs to facilitates viral replication and transmission via autophagy. Our results thus hint a critical function of STING in HRV viral replication and transmission, with possible implications for other RO-mediated RNA viruses.
Keyphrases
  • sars cov
  • endothelial cells
  • respiratory tract
  • cell death
  • reactive oxygen species
  • dna damage
  • nucleic acid
  • signaling pathway
  • oxidative stress
  • protein kinase
  • single molecule
  • endoplasmic reticulum