Characterization of Mayaro virus (strain BeAn343102) biology in vertebrate and invertebrate cellular backgrounds

Author:

Pujhari Sujit12,Brustolin Marco31,Heu Chan C.41,Smithwick Ronald2,Larrosa Mireia51,Hafenstein Susan67,Rasgon Jason L.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Entomology, Center for Infectious Disease Dynamics and the Huck Institutes of the Life Sciences, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA, USA

2. Department of Pharmacology Physiology and Neuroscience, University of South Carolina School of Medicine, Columbia, South Carolina, USA

3. Unit of Entomology, Department of Biomedical Sciences, Institute of Tropical Medicine, Antwerp, Belgium

4. USDA-ARS, Maricopa, AZ, USA

5. Facultat de Veterinària, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain

6. Department of Medicine, The Pennsylvania State University College of Medicine, Hershey, PA, USA

7. Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA, USA

Abstract

Mayaro virus (MAYV) is an emerging New World alphavirus (genusAlphavirus, familyTogaviridae) that causes acute multiphasic febrile illness, skin rash, polyarthritis and occasional severe clinical phenotypes. The virus lifecycle alternates between invertebrate and vertebrate hosts. Here we characterize the replication features, cell entry, lifecycle and virus-related cell pathology of MAYV using vertebrate and invertebratein vitromodels. Electron-dense clathrin-coated pits in infected cells and reduced viral production in the presence of dynasore, ammonium chloride and bafilomycin indicate that viral entry occurs through pH-dependent endocytosis. Increase in FITC-dextran uptake (an indicator of macropinocytosis) in MAYV-infected cells, and dose-dependent infection inhibition by 5-(N-ethyl-N-isopropyl) amiloride (a macropinocytosis inhibitor), indicated that macropinocytosis is an additional entry mechanism of MAYV in vertebrate cells. Acutely infected vertebrate and invertebrate cells formed cytoplasmic or membrane-associated extracytoplasmic replication complexes. Mosquito cells showed modified hybrid cytoplasmic vesicles that supported virus replication, nucleocapsid production and maturation. Mature virus particles were released from cells by both exocytosis and budding from the cell membrane. MAYV replication was cytopathic and associated with induction of apoptosis by the intrinsic pathway, and later by the extrinsic pathway in infected vertebrate cells. Given that MAYV is expanding its geographical existence as a potential public health problem, this study lays the foundation for biological understanding that will be valuable for therapeutic and preventive interventions.

Funder

NIH

USDA

Pennsylvania Department of Health

Huck Institutes of the Life Sciences

School of Medicine, University of South Carolina

Publisher

Microbiology Society

Subject

Virology

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