hnRNPM regulates influenza A virus replication through distinct mechanisms in human and avian cells: implications for cross-species transmission.

hnRNPM 通过不同的机制调节人类和禽类细胞中的甲型流感病毒复制:对跨物种传播的影响

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作者:Zhang Qin, Zhang Lei, Li Jinghua, Zhang Wenyu, Wang Jianwei, Deng Tao
The eight-segmented RNA genome of influenza A virus (IAV) is transcribed and spliced into 10 major viral mRNAs in the nucleus of infected cells. Both transcription and splicing are facilitated by the host RNA polymerase II (Pol II) machinery via interactions between the viral ribonucleoprotein (vRNP) complex and various host factors. In this study, we demonstrate that IAV vRNPs recruit species-specific heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein M (hnRNPM) to support their replication in human and avian cells through distinct mechanisms. In A549 cells, human hnRNPM specifically facilitates the efficient transcription of HA, NA, M, and NS segments of WSN virus in a gene coding sequence-dependent manner. In contrast, in DF-1 cells, chicken hnRNPM restricts excessive splicing of M segment mRNA to ensure proper M2 protein production. Notably, human hnRNPM, with 34 additional amino acids compared with its chicken counterpart, fails to inhibit the M2 expression in DF-1 cells, whereas both human and chicken hnRNPM regulate WSN virus replication similarly in A549 cells. These findings highlight the host-specific roles of M2 levels in IAV replication and reveal how IAV co-opts host factors through virus genome sequence-dependent and host species-specific mechanisms, underscoring its high flexibility and adaptability during cross-species transmission.IMPORTANCEThe transcription and splicing of IAV genome in the nucleus of infected cells are precisely regulated to produce optimal amounts of viral proteins, ensuring efficient virus replication. In this study, we discovered that human hnRNPM regulates the IAV segment-specific differential transcription in a coding sequence-dependent manner in human cells. In contrast, chicken hnRNPM specifically inhibits M2 mRNA splicing to maintain proper M2 protein levels in avian cells. These species-specific regulatory mechanisms highlight the distinct replication strategies employed by IAV in human versus avian cells and underscore the complexity of cross-species transmission.

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