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Published online ahead of print on 4 November 2009 as doi:10.1099/vir.0.016899-0
J Gen Virol (2009), DOI 10.1099/vir.0.016899-0
© 2009 Society for General Microbiology

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Hepatitis C virus RNA replication is regulated by Ras-Erk signalling

Sarah Gretton, Mair Hughes and Mark Harris1

University of Leeds

1 E-mail: m.harris{at}leeds.ac.uk

The hepatitis C virus NS5A protein has been previously demonstrated to partially attenuate activation of the Ras-Erk signalling pathway, via a conserved class II polyproline motif located towards the C-terminus of the protein. However, the role of Ras-Erk signalling in the virus life cycle remains undetermined. To investigate this, levels of RNA replication were measured in genotype 1 and 2 transient luciferase subgenomic replicon systems in the context of either pharmacological or genetic (dominant negative) inhibition of MEK1, a kinase in the Ras-Erk signalling cascade. Incubation in the presence of two inhibitors (U0126 and PD184352), resulted in a decrease in the levels of RNA replication, conversely incubation with inhibitor PD98059 resulted in a modest increase in replication. The results obtained with PD98059 could not be explained by an off-target effect on Cox-2, stability of replicon RNA or stimulation of global translation levels, suggesting stimulation by a yet uncharacterised mechanism. To verify data obtained using pharmacological inhibitors the transient replicon RNA was co-electroporated with a dominant negative mutant of MEK1. This resulted in a reduction in replication, confirming data seen with U0126 and PD184352. Our data are consistent with the hypothesis that a low level of Ras-Erk signalling activity is required for RNA replication, however complete inhibition of Ras-Erk signalling is inhibitory. These results suggest that perturbation of this signalling pathway by NS5A may be a mechanism to regulate levels of genomic RNA replication.

Received 21 September 2009; accepted 30 October 2009.





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