The following articles were published in 2016. Ma
Post# of 72440
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How a tumor suppressor indirectly inhibits coronaviruses
https://www.dzif.de/en/how-tumor-suppressor-i...onaviruses
p53 down-regulates SARS coronavirus replication and is targeted by the SARS-unique domain and PLpro via E3 ubiquitin ligase RCHY
https://www.pnas.org/content/113/35/E5192
"We show that p53 inhibits replication of infectious SARS-CoV as well as of replicons and human coronavirus NL63. / These results may open new possibilities to therapeutically target SARS infections in the future."
Von Brunn and his colleagues therefore carried out a screen for checkpoint proteins that interact with viral proteins and are required for the replication of the SARS-CoV. “We actually hadn’t considered the tumor suppressor protein p53 in this context at first, because we didn’t find a direct interaction with coronaviruses,” says von Brunn.
The screening procedure, however, revealed an indirect link between a protein component of SARS-CoV and p53: The researchers noticed that certain viral factors stabilized the host enzyme RCHY1. This enzyme is among those responsible for marking proteins for degradation by a host-cell complex called the proteasome – and p53 is known to be among RCHY1’s targets. By infecting cells in which the gene for p53 had been knocked out, the team went on to probe the functional significance of the link between SARS und p53 further.
“We found that in cells that lacked p53, the rate of virus replication is several orders of magnitude higher than that observed in cells in which the p53 is present. We believe this is because p53 normally activates genes that are involved in the cell’s non-specific antiviral defence system,” von Brunn says. By stabilizing RCHY1, the viral proteins with which it interacts promote the destruction of p53, thus drastically weakening the cell’s first line of defence against viral infections. This research was supported by the Federal Ministry for Education and Research (BMBF) and the German Center for Infection Research (DZIF).