Parvovirus minute virus of mice interacts with sites of cellular DNA damage to establish and amplify its lytic infection.
Kinjal MajumderJuexin WangMaria BoftsiMatthew S FullerJordan E RedeTrupti JoshiDavid J PintelPublished in: eLife (2018)
We have developed a generally adaptable, novel high-throughput Viral Chromosome Conformation Capture assay (V3C-seq) for use in trans that allows genome-wide identification of the direct interactions of a lytic virus genome with distinct regions of the cellular chromosome. Upon infection, we found that the parvovirus Minute Virus of Mice (MVM) genome initially associated with sites of cellular DNA damage that in mock-infected cells also exhibited DNA damage as cells progressed through S-phase. As infection proceeded, new DNA damage sites were induced, and virus subsequently also associated with these. Sites of association identified biochemically were confirmed microscopically and MVM could be targeted specifically to artificially induced sites of DNA damage. Thus, MVM established replication at cellular DNA damage sites, which provide replication and expression machinery, and as cellular DNA damage accrued, virus spread additionally to newly damaged sites to amplify infection. MVM-associated sites overlap significantly with previously identified topologically-associated domains (TADs).
Keyphrases
- dna damage
- dna repair
- oxidative stress
- high throughput
- induced apoptosis
- diabetic rats
- type diabetes
- cell cycle arrest
- high glucose
- genome wide
- sars cov
- transcription factor
- gene expression
- single cell
- cell death
- pi k akt
- molecular dynamics simulations
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- copy number
- signaling pathway
- high fat diet induced