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  • Budding of filamentous and non-filamentous influenza A virus occurs via a VPS4 and VPS28-independent pathway.

Budding of filamentous and non-filamentous influenza A virus occurs via a VPS4 and VPS28-independent pathway.

Virology (2009-06-16)
Emily A Bruce, Liz Medcalf, Colin M Crump, Sarah L Noton, Amanda D Stuart, Helen M Wise, Debra Elton, Katherine Bowers, Paul Digard
ANOTACE

The mechanism of membrane scission during influenza A virus budding has been the subject of controversy. We confirm that influenza M1 binds VPS28, a subunit of the ESCRT-1 complex. However, confocal microscopy of infected cells showed no marked colocalisation between M1 and VPS28 or VPS4 ESCRT proteins, or relocalisation of the cellular proteins. Trafficking of HA and M1 appeared normal when endosomal sorting was impaired by expression of inactive VPS4. Overexpression of either isoform of VPS28 or wildtype or dominant negative VPS4 proteins did not alter production of filamentous virions. SiRNA depletion of endogenous VPS28 had no significant effect on influenza virus replication. Furthermore, cells expressing wildtype or dominant-negative VPS4 replicated filamentous and non-filamentous strains of influenza to similar titres, indicating that influenza release is VPS4-independent. Overall, we see no role for the ESCRT pathway in influenza virus budding and the significance of the M1-VPS28 interaction remains to be determined.