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ANP32 Proteins Are Essential for Influenza Virus Replication in Human Cells.

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TLDR
The approach has identified a pair of essential host factors for influenza virus replication and can be harnessed to inform future interventions.
Abstract
ANP32 proteins have been implicated in supporting influenza virus replication, but most of the work to date has focused on the ability of avian Anp32 proteins to overcome restriction of avian influenza polymerases in human cells. Using a CRISPR approach, we show that the human a cidic n uclear p hosphoproteins (ANPs) ANP32A and ANP32B are functionally redundant but essential host factors for mammalian-adapted influenza A virus (IAV) and influenza B virus (IBV) replication in human cells. When both proteins are absent from human cells, influenza polymerases are unable to replicate the viral genome, and infectious virus cannot propagate. Provision of exogenous ANP32A or ANP32B recovers polymerase activity and virus growth. We demonstrate that this redundancy is absent in the murine Anp32 orthologues; murine Anp32A is incapable of recovering IAV polymerase activity, while murine Anp32B can do so. Intriguingly, IBV polymerase is able to use murine Anp32A. We show, using a domain swap and point mutations, that the leucine-rich repeat (LRR) 5 region comprises an important functional domain for mammalian ANP32 proteins. Our approach has identified a pair of essential host factors for influenza virus replication and can be harnessed to inform future interventions.IMPORTANCE Influenza virus is the etiological agent behind some of the most devastating infectious disease pandemics to date, and influenza outbreaks still pose a major threat to public health. Influenza virus polymerase, the molecule that copies the viral RNA genome, hijacks cellular proteins to support its replication. Current anti-influenza drugs are aimed against viral proteins, including the polymerase, but RNA viruses like influenza tend to become resistant to such drugs very rapidly. An alternative strategy is to design therapeutics that target the host proteins that are necessary for virus propagation. Here, we show that the human proteins ANP32A and ANP32B are essential for influenza A and B virus replication, such that in their absence cells become impervious to the virus. We map the proviral activity of ANP32 proteins to one region in particular, which could inform future intervention.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Structure and function of the influenza virus transcription and replication machinery

TL;DR: Recent insights into the structure-function relationship of the viral RNA polymerase are discussed and its role in determining host range and virulence is discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Host ANP32A mediates the assembly of the influenza virus replicase

TL;DR: Structural and biochemical studies of influenza virus RNA polymerase in complex with host acidic nuclear phosphoprotein 32 (ANP32) show how ANP32-mediated polymerase dimerization enables the replication of influenza viral RNA in a host-dependent manner.
Journal ArticleDOI

Molecular basis of host-adaptation interactions between influenza virus polymerase PB2 subunit and ANP32A.

TL;DR: NMR spectroscopy and quantitative ensemble modelling are used to describe the highly dynamic assemblies formed by the human- Adapted or avian-adapted C-terminal domains with the respective ANP32A host proteins.
Journal ArticleDOI

Avian Influenza in Wild Birds and Poultry: Dissemination Pathways, Monitoring Methods, and Virus Ecology

TL;DR: In this article, the role of migratory birds in the spread and introduction of influenza strains on a global level, based on recent data, is assessed, which sheds light on the details of viral dissemination linked to avian migration, the viral exchange between migratory waterfowl and domestic poultry, virus ecology in general, and viral evolution as a process tightly linked to bird migration.
Journal ArticleDOI

A unique feature of swine ANP32A provides susceptibility to avian influenza virus infection in pigs.

TL;DR: It is found that swine ANP32A (swANP34A), unlike swineANP32B or other mammalian ANP 32A or B, shows stronger supporting activity to avian viral polymerase, which is unique to pigs among all the vertebrate species studied.
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TL;DR: A set of tools for Cas9-mediated genome editing via nonhomologous end joining (NHEJ) or homology-directed repair (HDR) in mammalian cells, as well as generation of modified cell lines for downstream functional studies are described.
Journal ArticleDOI

Double nicking by RNA-guided CRISPR Cas9 for enhanced genome editing specificity

TL;DR: In this paper, an approach that combines a Cas9 nickase mutant with paired guide RNAs to introduce targeted double-strand breaks is described. But the approach is limited to mouse zygotes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Optimized sgRNA design to maximize activity and minimize off-target effects of CRISPR-Cas9

TL;DR: Recently devised sgRNA design rules are used to create human and mouse genome-wide libraries, perform positive and negative selection screens and observe that the use of these rules produced improved results, and a metric to predict off-target sites is developed.
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