Recently identified hepatitis C virus (HCV) isolates that are infectious in cell culture provide a genetic system to evaluate the significance of virus-host interactions for HCV replication. We have completed a systematic RNAi screen wherein siRNAs were designed that target 62 host genes encoding proteins that physically interact with HCV RNA or proteins or belong to cellular pathways thought to modulate HCV infection. This includes 10 host proteins that we identify in this study to bind HCV NS5A. siRNAs that target 26 of these host genes alter infectious HCV production >3-fold. Included in this set of 26 were siRNAs that target Dicer, a principal component of the RNAi silencing pathway. Contrary to the hypothesis that RNAi is an antiviral pathway in mammals, as has been reported for subgenomic HCV replicons, siRNAs that target Dicer inhibited HCV replication. Furthermore, siRNAs that target several other components of the RNAi pathway also inhibit HCV replication. MicroRNA profiling of human liver, human hepatoma Huh-7.5 cells, and Huh-7.5 cells that harbor replicating HCV demonstrated that miR-122 is the predominant microRNA in each environment. miR-122 has been previously implicated in positively regulating the replication of HCV genotype 1 replicons. We find that 2-O-methyl antisense oligonucleotide depletion of miR-122 also inhibits HCV genotype 2a replication and infectious virus production. Our data define 26 host genes that modulate HCV infection and indicate that the requirement for functional RNAi for HCV replication is dominant over any antiviral activity this pathway may exert against HCV.antivirals ͉ miR-122 ͉ RNAi ͉ HCVcc-siRNA H epatitis C virus (HCV) has a notable ability to establish persistent infections in Ϸ70% of cases, resulting in 130 million chronically infected people throughout the world (1). This prevalence has spurred considerable interest in the study of HCV-host interactions, on both cellular and molecular levels. The inability to grow HCV in cell culture led some groups to focus on the identification of cellular proteins that interact with individual HCV proteins or RNA elements, resulting in the accumulation of a large number of putative HCV-host interactions. Unfortunately, the significance of most of these with respect to the HCV life cycle is currently unknown (reviewed in ref.2). Over the past 6 years, cell culture systems have been developed that enable the characterization of HCV replication and entry (3-6). This effort recently culminated in the development of cell culture systems that reproduce the entire viral life cycle (7-9). A number of virus-host interactions have been characterized by using these experimental systems. For example, CD81 has been demonstrated to play a role in HCV entry (10-12).Sequence-specific gene silencing of RNAi is ideal for assessing the genetic phenotypes associated with virus-host interactions. We have previously shown that siRNAs are highly effective at silencing either host or viral RNAs in cells that contain replicating HCV, demonstrating th...
Menin is a 70-kDa protein encoded by MEN1, the tumor suppressor gene disrupted in multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1. In a yeast two-hybrid system based on reconstitution of Ras signaling, menin was found to interact with the 32-kDa subunit (RPA2) of replication protein A (RPA), a heterotrimeric protein required for DNA replication, recombination, and repair. The menin-RPA2 interaction was confirmed in a conventional yeast two-hybrid system and by direct interaction between purified proteins. Menin-RPA2 binding was inhibited by a number of menin missense mutations found in individuals with multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1, and the interacting regions were mapped to the N-terminal portion of menin and amino acids 43 to 171 of RPA2. This region of RPA2 contains a weak single-stranded DNA-binding domain, but menin had no detectable effect on RPA-DNA binding in vitro. Menin bound preferentially in vitro to free RPA2 rather than the RPA heterotrimer or a subcomplex consisting of RPA2 bound to the 14-kDa subunit (RPA3). However, the 70-kDa subunit (RPA1) was coprecipitated from HeLa cell extracts along with RPA2 by menin-specific antibodies, suggesting that menin binds to the RPA heterotrimer or a novel RPA1-RPA2-containing complex in vivo. This finding was consistent with the extensive overlap in the nuclear localization patterns of endogenous menin, RPA2, and RPA1 observed by immunofluorescence.Multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1 is a rare, autosomal dominant tumor syndrome, typically defined by the presence of tumors in at least two of the following three tissues: the parathyroid, enteropancreatic endocrine tissue, and the anterior pituitary (reviewed in reference 46). The human MEN1 gene was identified by positional cloning in 1997 (13) and shown to encode a 610-amino-acid product (menin) with predominantly nuclear localization (24). Loss of heterozygosity in the region containing the MEN1 locus has been observed in tumor tissue obtained from individuals with multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1 (39) and from mice with an engineered deletion in one of their Men1 alleles (16), predictive of a tumor suppressor function. This is supported by the detection of MEN1 frameshift or nonsense mutations in approximately 70% of human multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1 tumors (46). Menin overexpression has also been shown to diminish the tumorigenic phenotype of Ras-transformed NIH 3T3 cells (36), consistent with its putative tumor suppressor function. Knockout of both Men1 alleles in mice has been shown to result in embryonic lethality (16), suggesting that menin is also important for early development. However, the absence of significant homology to other proteins has complicated efforts to elucidate the function(s) of menin and/or the mechanisms of its tumor suppressor activity.A number of menin-interacting proteins have been identified in an effort to obtain clues about menin function, including the AP-1 transcription factor JunD (2), the putative tumor metastasis suppressor/nucleoside diphosphate kinase nm23 (54), the...
Multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1 (MEN1), among all syndromes, causes tumors in the highest number of tissue types. Most of the tumors are hormone producing (e.g., parathyroid, enteropancreatic endocrine, anterior pituitary) but some are not (e.g., angiofibroma). MEN1 tumors are multiple for organ type, for regions of a discontinuous organ, and for subregions of a continuous organ. Cancer contributes to late mortality; there is no effective prevention or cure for MEN1 cancers. Morbidities are more frequent from benign than malignant tumor, and both are indicators for screening. Onset age is usually earlier in a tumor type of MEN1 than of nonhereditary cases. Broad trends contrast with those in nonneoplastic excess of hormones (e.g., persistent hyperinsulinemic hypoglycemia of infancy). Most germline or somatic mutations in the MEN1 gene predict truncation or absence of encoded menin. Similarly, 11q13 loss of heterozygosity in tumors predicts inactivation of the other MEN1 copy. MEN1 somatic mutation is prevalent in nonhereditary, MEN1-like tumor types. Compiled germline and somatic mutations show almost no genotype/phenotype relation. Normal menin is 67 kDa, widespread, and mainly nuclear. It may partner with junD, NF-kB, PEM, SMAD3, RPA2, FANCD2, NM23beta, nonmuscle myosin heavy chain II-A, GFAP, and/or vimentin. These partners have not clarified menin's pathways in normal or tumor tissues. Animal models have opened approaches to menin pathways. Local overexpression of menin in Drosophila reveals its interaction with the jun-kinase pathway. The Men1+/- mouse has robust MEN1; its most important difference from human MEN1 is marked hyperplasia of pancreatic islets, a tumor precursor stage.
Multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1 (MEN1) is a syndrome characterized by tumors in multiple endocrine tissues such as the parathyroid glands, the pituitary gland, and the enteropancreatic neuroendocrine tissues. MEN1 is usually caused by mutations in the MEN1 gene that codes for the protein menin. Menin interacts with proteins that regulate transcription, DNA repair and processing, and maintenance of cytoskeletal structure. We describe the identification of FBP1 as an interacting partner of menin in a large-scale pull-down assay that also immunoprecipitated RBBP5, ASH2, and LEDGF, which are members of complex proteins associated with SET1 (COMPASS), a protein complex that methylates histone H3. This interaction was confirmed by coimmunoprecipitation and Flag-pull-down assays. Furthermore, menin localized to the FUSE site on the MYC promoter, a site that is transactivated by FBP1. This investigation therefore places menin in a pathway that regulates MYC gene expression and has important implications for the biological function of menin.
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