Norovirus MLKL-like protein initiates cell death to induce viral egress
Guoxun Wang,
Di Zhang,
Robert C. Orchard,
Dustin C. Hancks () and
Tiffany A. Reese ()
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Guoxun Wang: University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center
Di Zhang: University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center
Robert C. Orchard: University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center
Dustin C. Hancks: University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center
Tiffany A. Reese: University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center
Nature, 2023, vol. 616, issue 7955, 152-158
Abstract:
Abstract Non-enveloped viruses require cell lysis to release new virions from infected cells, suggesting that these viruses require mechanisms to induce cell death. Noroviruses are one such group of viruses, but there is no known mechanism that causes norovirus infection-triggered cell death and lysis1–3. Here we identify a molecular mechanism of norovirus-induced cell death. We found that the norovirus-encoded NTPase NS3 contains an N-terminal four-helix bundle domain homologous to the membrane-disruption domain of the pseudokinase mixed lineage kinase domain-like (MLKL). NS3 has a mitochondrial localization signal and thus induces cell death by targeting mitochondria. Full-length NS3 and an N-terminal fragment of the protein bound the mitochondrial membrane lipid cardiolipin, permeabilized the mitochondrial membrane and induced mitochondrial dysfunction. Both the N-terminal region and the mitochondrial localization motif of NS3 were essential for cell death, viral egress from cells and viral replication in mice. These findings suggest that noroviruses have acquired a host MLKL-like pore-forming domain to facilitate viral egress by inducing mitochondrial dysfunction.
Date: 2023
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DOI: 10.1038/s41586-023-05851-w
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