Enterovirus D68 capsid formation and stability requires acidic compartments

bioRxiv [Preprint]. 2023 Jun 13:2023.06.12.544695. doi: 10.1101/2023.06.12.544695.

Abstract

Enterovirus D68 (EV-D68), a picornavirus traditionally associated with respiratory infections, has recently been linked to a polio-like paralytic condition known as acute flaccid myelitis (AFM). EV-D68 is understudied, and much of the field's understanding of this virus is based on studies of poliovirus. For poliovirus, we previously showed that low pH promotes virus capsid maturation, but here we show that, for EV-D68, inhibition of compartment acidification during a specific window of infection causes a defect in capsid formation and maintenance. These phenotypes are accompanied by radical changes in the infected cell, with viral replication organelles clustering in a tight juxtanuclear grouping. Organelle acidification is critical during a narrow window from 3-4hpi, which we have termed the "transition point," separating translation and peak RNA replication from capsid formation, maturation and egress. Our findings highlight that acidification is crucial only when vesicles convert from RNA factories to virion crucibles.

Keywords: autophagosomes; autophagy; cellular acidification; enterovirus D68; multi-vesicular bodies (MVB); picornaviruses; poliovirus; replication organelles (ROs); virion assembly; virus maturation; “transition point”.

Publication types

  • Preprint