Litcius/Paper detail

Nuclear entry and egress of parvoviruses

Salla Mattola, Vesa Aho, Luisa Bustamante-Jaramillo, Edoardo Pizzioli, Michael Kann, Maija Vihinen‐Ranta

2022Molecular Microbiology23 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

domain on the capsid surface, and escape into the cytosol, parvovirus capsids enter the nucleus. Due to the small capsid diameter of 18-26 nm, intact capsids can potentially pass into the nucleus through nuclear pore complexes (NPCs). This might be facilitated by active nuclear import, but capsids may also follow an alternative entry pathway that includes activation of mitotic factors and local transient disruption of the nuclear envelope. The nuclear entry is followed by currently undefined events of viral genome uncoating. After genome release, viral replication compartments are initiated and infection proceeds. Parvoviral genomes replicate during cellular S phase followed by nuclear capsid assembly during virus-induced S/G2 cell cycle arrest. Nuclear egress of capsids occurs upon nuclear envelope degradation during apoptosis and cell lysis. An alternative pathway for nuclear export has been described using active transport through the NPC mediated by the chromosome region maintenance 1 protein, CRM1, which is enhanced by phosphorylation of the N-terminal domain of VP2. However, other alternative but not yet uncharacterized nuclear export pathways cannot be excluded.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyCapsidNuclear transportCell biologyMinute virus of miceNuclear laminaCell nucleusParvovirusNuclear export signalNuclear poreViral replicationNuclear proteinVirologyParvoviridaeGeneticsVirusNucleusGeneTranscription factorVirus-based gene therapy researchParvovirus B19 Infection StudiesNuclear Structure and Function