mBio (Oct 2024)
Classical swine fever virus inhibits serine metabolism-mediated antiviral immunity by deacetylating modified PHGDH
Abstract
ABSTRACT Classical swine fever virus (CSFV), an obligate intracellular pathogen, hijacks cellular metabolism to evade immune surveillance and facilitate its replication. The precise mechanisms by which CSFV modulates immune metabolism remain largely unknown. Our study reveals that CSFV infection disrupts serine metabolism, which plays a crucial role in antiviral immunity. Notably, we discovered that CSFV infection leads to the deacetylation of PHGDH, a key enzyme in serine metabolism, resulting in autophagic degradation. This deacetylation impairs PHGDH’s enzymatic activity, reduces serine biosynthesis, weakens innate immunity, and promotes viral proliferation. Molecularly, CSFV infection induces the association of HDAC3 with PHGDH, leading to deacetylation at the K364 site. This modification attracts the E3 ubiquitin ligase RNF125, which facilitates the addition of K63-linked ubiquitin chains to PHGDH-K364R. Subsequently, PHGDH is targeted for lysosomal degradation by p62 and NDP52. Furthermore, the deacetylation of PHGDH disrupts its interaction with the NAD+ substrate, destabilizing the PHGDH-NAD complex, impeding the active site, and thereby inhibiting de novo serine synthesis. Additionally, our research indicates that deacetylated PHGDH suppresses the mitochondria-MAVS-IRF3 pathway through its regulatory effect on serine metabolism, leading to decreased IFN-β production and enhanced viral replication. Overall, our findings elucidate the complex interplay between CSFV and serine metabolism, revealing a novel aspect of viral immune evasion through the lens of immune metabolism.IMPORTANCEClassical swine fever (CSF) seriously restricts the healthy development of China’s aquaculture industry, and the unclear pathogenic mechanism and pathogenesis of classical swine fever virus (CSFV) are the main obstacle to CSF prevention, control, and purification. Therefore, it is of great significance to explore the molecular mechanism of CSFV and host interplay, to search for the key signaling pathways and target molecules in the host that regulate the replication of CSFV infection, and to elucidate the mechanism of action of host immune dysfunction and immune escape due to CSFV infection for the development of novel CSFV vaccines and drugs. This study reveals the mechanism of serine metabolizing enzyme post-translational modifications and antiviral signaling proteins in the replication of CSFV and enriches the knowledge of CSFV infection and immune metabolism.
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