Effect of the CSFV NS5A protein on key proteins in the MAPK and PI3K-mTOR signaling pathways in porcine macrophages
Yidan Wang, Xiaoru Zheng, Yingying Yang, Xinru Zhao, Min Li, Juan Huang, Qiaoya Zhang, Xiaobing Qin, Ying Yu, Qing Pan, Zhi Cao

TL;DR
This study explores how a viral protein from classical swine fever virus affects key proteins in immune-related pathways in pig macrophages.
Contribution
The study identifies specific proteins in MAPK and PI3K-mTOR pathways modulated by the CSFV NS5A protein in porcine macrophages.
Findings
NS5A modulates 23 upregulated and 16 downregulated proteins in the MAPK pathway.
In the PI3K-mTOR pathway, NS5A affects 5 upregulated and 15 downregulated proteins.
Protein expression levels of IKBKG and KRAS2 increased, while others like MAP3K7 and AKT1 decreased over time.
Abstract
Classical swine fever (CSF) is a highly contagious disease caused by classical swine fever virus (CSFV). NS5A, a non-structural protein of CSFV, plays an important role in regulating viral replication and protein translation. The purpose of this study was to investigate the effects of the CSFV NS5A protein on key proteins in the mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) and phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K)-mechanistic target of rapamycin (mTOR) pathways in porcine macrophages. In this study, an NS5A lentivirus was constructed, and 3D4/21 cells were infected. The cells infected for 48 h were collected for proteomic analysis to screen the differential proteins in the two signaling pathways in the NS5A/control group, and the expression levels of key proteins were verified by Western blotting (Wb). CSFV NS5A lentivirus was successfully constructed and used to infect porcine macrophages, and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAnimal Disease Management and Epidemiology · Animal Virus Infections Studies · Virus-based gene therapy research
