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  • Nucleophosmin (NPM1)/B23 in the Proteome of Human Astrocytic Cells Restricts Chikungunya Virus Replication.

Nucleophosmin (NPM1)/B23 in the Proteome of Human Astrocytic Cells Restricts Chikungunya Virus Replication.

Journal of proteome research (2017-09-30)
Rachy Abraham, Sneha Singh, Sreeja R Nair, Neha Vijay Hulyalkar, Arun Surendran, Abdul Jaleel, Easwaran Sreekumar
ABSTRACT

Chikungunya virus (CHIKV), a positive-stranded RNA virus, can cause neurological complications by infecting the major parenchymal cells of the brain such as neurons and astrocytes. A proteomic analysis of CHIKV-infected human astrocytic cell line U-87 MG revealed tight functional associations among the modulated proteins. The predominant cellular pathways involved were of transcription-translation machinery, cytoskeletol reorganization, apoptosis, ubiquitination, and metabolism. In the proteome, we could also identify a few proteins that are reported to be involved in host-virus interactions. One such protein, Nucleophosmin (NPM1)/B23, a nucleolar protein, showed enhanced cytoplasmic aggregation in CHIKV-infected cells. NPM1 aggregation was predominantly localized in areas wherein CHIKV antigen could be detected. Furthermore, we observed that inhibition of this aggregation using a specific NPM1 oligomerization inhibitor, NSC348884, caused a significant dose-dependent enhancement in virus replication. There was a marked increase in the amount of intracellular viral RNA, and ∼10

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Sigma-Aldrich
NSC348884 hydrate