Infectious bursal disease virus VP5 triggers host shutoff in a transcription-dependent manner
Xinxin Niu, Jinze Han, Mengmeng Huang, Guodong Wang, Yulong Zhang, Wenying Zhang, Hangbo Yu, Mengmeng Xu, Kai Li, Li Gao, Suyan Wang, Yuntong Chen, Hongyu Cui, Yanping Zhang, Changjun Liu, Xiaomei Wang, Yulong Gao, Xiaole Qi

TL;DR
This paper shows how a virus protein called VP5 from IBDV stops host cells from making proteins, helping the virus avoid detection and spread.
Contribution
The study reveals that IBDV's VP5 protein causes host shutoff by disrupting nucleocytoplasmic transport through binding to RanBP1.
Findings
IBDV infection suppresses host protein synthesis through VP5's shutoff activity.
VP5 disrupts the RanGDP/GTP gradient by binding to RanBP1, impairing nuclear transport.
This mechanism inhibits transcription of key immune-related genes like p65 and IRF7.
Abstract
Viruses have evolved intricate mechanisms to evade host antiviral responses and exploit cellular resources by manipulating the expression profile of host genes. During infection, viruses encode proteins with shutoff activity to globally inhibit host protein synthesis, which is an effective strategy for immune evasion. In this study, compelling evidence shows that infectious bursal disease virus (IBDV) infection triggers the suppression of host protein synthesis. Furthermore, using both in vitro and in vivo viral infection models, we have identified that IBDV specifically impedes the transcription of host genes via the shutoff activity of viral VP5, simultaneously conferring advantages to IBDV infection in these circumstances. The proposed mechanism suggests that VP5 competitively binds to RanBP1, disrupting the RanGDP/GTP gradient. This disruption interferes with cellular…
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Taxonomy
TopicsComparative constitutional jurisprudence studies
