Journal article
Norovirus-mediated translation repression promotes macrophage cell death
TE Aktepe, JM Deerain, JL Hyde, S Fritzlar, EM Mead, JC Montoya, A Hachani, JS Pearson, PA White, JM Mackenzie
Plos Pathogens | Published : 2024
Abstract
Norovirus infection is characterised by a rapid onset of disease and the development of debilitating symptoms including projectile vomiting and diffuse diarrhoea. Vaccines and antivirals are sorely lacking and developments in these areas are hampered by the lack of an adequate cell culture system to investigate human norovirus replication and pathogenesis. Herein, we describe how the model norovirus, Mouse norovirus (MNV), produces a viral protein, NS3, with the functional capacity to attenuate host protein translation which invokes the activation of cell death via apoptosis. We show that this function of NS3 is conserved between human and mouse viruses and map the protein domain attributabl..
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Awarded by University of Queensland
Funding Acknowledgements
JMM and PAW were funded by the National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia, grant number 1123135. JMD was supported by a PhD stipend provided by the University of Melbourne and the Miller Foundation. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.