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Dive into the research topics where Ilya Frolov is active.

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Featured researches published by Ilya Frolov.


Journal of Virology | 2006

Sindbis Virus Nonstructural Protein nsP2 Is Cytotoxic and Inhibits Cellular Transcription

Natalia Garmashova; Rodion Gorchakov; Elena I. Frolova; Ilya Frolov

ABSTRACT Replication of alphaviruses in vertebrate cells strongly affects cell physiology and ultimately leads to development of a cytopathic effect (CPE) and cell death. Sindbis virus (SIN) replication causes major changes in cellular macromolecular synthesis, in which the strong downregulation of transcription of cellular mRNAs and rRNAs plays a critical role. SIN nonstructural protein nsP2 was previously proposed as one of the main regulators of virus-host cell interactions, because point mutations in the carboxy-terminal part of nsP2 could make SIN and other alphaviruses and replicons less cytopathic and capable of persisting in some vertebrate cell lines. These mutants were incapable of inhibiting transcription and downregulating a viral stress-induced cell response. In the present work, we demonstrate that (i) SIN nsP2 is critically involved in CPE development, not only during the replication of SIN-specific RNAs, but also when this protein is expressed alone from different expression cassettes; (ii) the cytotoxic effect of SIN nsP2 appears to be at least partially determined by its ability to cause transcriptional shutoff; (iii) these functions of SIN nsP2 are determined by the integrity of the carboxy-terminal peptide of this protein located outside its helicase and protease domains, rather than by its protease activity; and (iv) the cytotoxic activity of SIN nsP2 depends on the presence of this protein in a free form, and alterations in P123 processing abolish the ability of nsP2 to cause CPE.


Journal of Virology | 2000

Infection of Human Dendritic Cells by a Sindbis Virus Replicon Vector Is Determined by a Single Amino Acid Substitution in the E2 Glycoprotein

Jason P. Gardner; Ilya Frolov; Silvia Perri; Yaying Ji; Mary Lee MacKichan; Jan zur Megede; Minchao Chen; Barbara A. Belli; David A. Driver; Scott Sherrill; Catherine Greer; Gillis Otten; Susan W. Barnett; Margaret A. Liu; Thomas W. Dubensky; John M. Polo

ABSTRACT The ability to target antigen-presenting cells with vectors encoding desired antigens holds the promise of potent prophylactic and therapeutic vaccines for infectious diseases and cancer. Toward this goal, we derived variants of the prototype alphavirus, Sindbis virus (SIN), with differential abilities to infect human dendritic cells. Cloning and sequencing of the SIN variant genomes revealed that the genetic determinant for human dendritic cell (DC) tropism mapped to a single amino acid substitution at residue 160 of the envelope glycoprotein E2. Packaging of SIN replicon vectors with the E2 glycoprotein from a DC-tropic variant conferred a similar ability to efficiently infect immature human DC, whereupon those DC were observed to undergo rapid activation and maturation. The SIN replicon particles infected skin-resident mouse DC in vivo, which subsequently migrated to the draining lymph nodes and upregulated cell surface expression of major histocompatibility complex and costimulatory molecules. Furthermore, SIN replicon particles encoding human immunodeficiency virus type 1 p55Gag elicited robust Gag-specific T-cell responses in vitro and in vivo, demonstrating that infected DC maintained their ability to process and present replicon-encoded antigen. Interestingly, human and mouse DC were differentially infected by selected SIN variants, suggesting differences in receptor expression between human and murine DC. Taken together, these data illustrate the tremendous potential of using a directed approach in generating alphavirus vaccine vectors that target and activate antigen-presenting cells, resulting in robust antigen-specific immune responses.


Journal of Virology | 2005

Inhibition of Transcription and Translation in Sindbis Virus-Infected Cells

Rodion Gorchakov; Elena I. Frolova; Ilya Frolov

ABSTRACT Alphaviruses are arthropod-borne viruses (arboviruses) that include a number of important human and animal pathogens. The natural transmission cycle of alphaviruses requires their presence at high concentrations in the blood of amplification hosts for efficient infection of mosquito vectors. The high-titer viremia development implies multiple rounds of infection that proceed in the background of the developing antiviral cell response aimed at blocking virus spread on an organismal level. Therefore, as for many viruses, if not most of them, alphaviruses have evolved mechanisms directed toward downregulating different components of the antiviral cell reaction and increasing viremia to a level sufficient for the next round of transmission. Using Sindbis virus (SIN) as a model, we demonstrated that (i) the replication of wild-type SIN strongly affects major cellular processes, e.g., transcription and translation of mRNAs; (ii) transcriptional and translational shutoffs are distinctly independent events, and their development can be differentially manipulated by creating different mutations in SIN nonstructural protein nsP2; and (iii) inhibition of transcription, but not translation, is a critical mechanism that SIN employs to suppress the expression of cellular viral stress-inducible genes in cells of vertebrate origin. Downregulation of transcription of all of the cellular mRNAs appears to be a very efficient means of reducing the development of an antiviral response. The ability to cause transcriptional shutoff may partially determine SIN host range and replication in particular tissues.


Journal of Virology | 2010

Functional Sindbis Virus Replicative Complexes Are Formed at the Plasma Membrane

Elena I. Frolova; Rodion Gorchakov; Larisa Pereboeva; Svetlana Atasheva; Ilya Frolov

ABSTRACT Formation of virus-specific replicative complexes (RCs) in infected cells is one of the most intriguing and important processes that determine virus replication and ultimately their pathogenesis on the molecular and cellular levels. Alphavirus replication was known to lead to formation of so-called type 1 cytopathic vacuoles (CPV1s), whose distinguishing feature is the presence of numerous membrane invaginations (spherules) and accumulation of viral nonstructural proteins (nsPs) at the cytoplasmic necks of these spherules. These CPV1s, modified endosomes and lysosomes, were proposed as the sites of viral RNA synthesis. However, our recent studies have demonstrated that Sindbis virus (SINV)-specific, double-stranded RNA (dsRNA)- and nonstructural protein (nsP)-containing RCs are initially formed at the plasma membrane. In this new study, we present extensive evidence that (i) in cells of vertebrate origin, at early times postinfection, viral nsPs colocalize with spherules at the plasma membrane; (ii) viral dsRNA intermediates are packed into membrane spherules and are located in their cavities on the external surface of the plasma membrane; (iii) formation of the membrane spherules is induced by the partially processed nonstructural polyprotein P123 and nsP4, but synthesis of dsRNA is an essential prerequisite of their formation; (iv) plasma membrane-associated dsRNA and protein structures are the active sites of single-stranded RNA (ssRNA) synthesis; (v) at late times postinfection, only a small fraction of SINV nsP-containing complexes are relocalized into the cytoplasm on the endosome membrane. (vi) pharmacological drugs inhibiting different endocytotic pathways have either only minor or no negative effects on SINV RNA replication; and (vii) in mosquito cells, at any times postinfection, dsRNA/nsP complexes and spherules are associated with both endosomal/lysosomal and plasma membranes, suggesting that mechanisms of RC formation may differ in cells of insect and vertebrate origins.


Journal of Virology | 2008

Different Types of nsP3-Containing Protein Complexes in Sindbis Virus-Infected Cells

Rodion Gorchakov; Natalia Garmashova; Elena I. Frolova; Ilya Frolov

ABSTRACT Alphaviruses represent a serious public health threat and cause a wide variety of diseases, ranging from severe encephalitis, which can result in death or neurological sequelae, to mild infection, characterized by fever, skin rashes, and arthritis. In the infected cells, alphaviruses express only four nonstructural proteins, which function in the synthesis of virus-specific RNAs and in modification of the intracellular environment. The results of our study suggest that Sindbis virus (SINV) infection in BHK-21 cells leads to the formation of at least two types of nsP3-containing complexes, one of which was found in association with the plasma membrane and endosome-like vesicles, while the second was coisolated with cell nuclei. The latter complexes could be solubilized only with the cytoskeleton-destabilizing detergent. Besides viral nsPs, in the mammalian cells, both complexes contained G3BP1 and G3BP2 (which were found in different ratios), YBX1, and HSC70. Rasputin, an insect cell-specific homolog of G3BP1, was found in the nsP3-containing complexes isolated from mosquito cells, which was suggestive of a high conservation of the complexes in the cells of both vertebrate and invertebrate origin. The endosome- and plasma membrane-associated complexes contained a high concentration of double-stranded RNAs (dsRNAs), which is indicative of their function in viral-RNA synthesis. The dsRNA synthesis is likely to efficiently proceed on the plasma membrane, and at least some of the protein-RNA complexes would then be transported into the cytosol in association with the endosome-like vesicular organelles. These findings provide new insight into the mechanism of SINV replication and virus-host cell interactions.


PLOS Pathogens | 2011

Novel Chikungunya Vaccine Candidate with an IRES-Based Attenuation and Host Range Alteration Mechanism

Kenneth Plante; Eryu Wang; Charalambos D. Partidos; James Weger; Rodion Gorchakov; Konstantin A. Tsetsarkin; Erin M. Borland; Ann M. Powers; Robert L. Seymour; Dan T. Stinchcomb; Jorge E. Osorio; Ilya Frolov; Scott C. Weaver

Chikungunya virus (CHIKV) is a reemerging mosquito-borne pathogen that has recently caused devastating urban epidemics of severe and sometimes chronic arthralgia. As with most other mosquito-borne viral diseases, control relies on reducing mosquito populations and their contact with people, which has been ineffective in most locations. Therefore, vaccines remain the best strategy to prevent most vector-borne diseases. Ideally, vaccines for diseases of resource-limited countries should combine low cost and single dose efficacy, yet induce rapid and long-lived immunity with negligible risk of serious adverse reactions. To develop such a vaccine to protect against chikungunya fever, we employed a rational attenuation mechanism that also prevents the infection of mosquito vectors. The internal ribosome entry site (IRES) from encephalomyocarditis virus replaced the subgenomic promoter in a cDNA CHIKV clone, thus altering the levels and host-specific mechanism of structural protein gene expression. Testing in both normal outbred and interferon response-defective mice indicated that the new vaccine candidate is highly attenuated, immunogenic and efficacious after a single dose. Furthermore, it is incapable of replicating in mosquito cells or infecting mosquitoes in vivo. This IRES-based attenuation platform technology may be useful for the predictable attenuation of any alphavirus.


Journal of Virology | 2004

PKR-dependent and -independent mechanisms are involved in translational shutoff during Sindbis virus infection.

Rodion Gorchakov; Elena I. Frolova; Bryan R. G. Williams; Charles M. Rice; Ilya Frolov

ABSTRACT The replication of Sindbis virus (SIN) profoundly affects the metabolism of infected vertebrate cells. One of the main events during SIN infection is the strong inhibition of translation of cellular mRNAs. In this study, we used a combination of approaches, including the study of SIN replication in PKR−/− mouse embryo fibroblasts or in the presence of an excess of catalytically inactive PKR. We show that the PKR-dependent inhibition of translation is not the only and most likely not the major pathway mediating translational shutoff during SIN infection. The PKR-independent mechanism strongly affects the translation of cellular templates, whereas translation of SIN subgenomic RNA is resistant to inhibition, and this leads to a benefit for viral replication. Our findings suggest that both PKR-dependent and non-PKR-dependent mechanisms of SIN-induced translational shutoff can be manipulated by using SIN replicons expressing mutated SIN nsP2 or kinase-defective PKR. Specifically, we show that expression of heterologous genes from SIN-based and most likely other alphavirus-based replicons can be increased by downregulating both the PKR-dependent and PKR-independent translational shutoffs.


Journal of Virology | 2005

Dual Mechanisms of Pestiviral Superinfection Exclusion at Entry and RNA Replication

Young-Min Lee; Donna M. Tscherne; Sang-Im Yun; Ilya Frolov; Charles M. Rice

ABSTRACT For many viruses, primary infection has been shown to prevent superinfection by a homologous second virus. In this study, we investigated superinfection exclusion of bovine viral diarrhea virus (BVDV), a positive-sense RNA pestivirus. Cells acutely infected with BVDV were protected from superinfection by homologous BVDV but not with heterologous vesicular stomatitis virus. Superinfection exclusion was established within 30 to 60 min but was lost upon passaging of persistently infected cells. Superinfecting BVDV failed to deliver a translatable genome into acutely infected cells, indicating a block in viral entry. Deletion of structural protein E2 from primary infecting BVDV abolished this exclusion. Bypassing the entry block by RNA transfection revealed a second block at the level of replication but not translation. This exclusion did not require structural protein expression and was inversely correlated with the level of primary BVDV RNA replication. These findings suggest dual mechanisms of pestivirus superinfection exclusion, one at the level of viral entry that requires viral glycoprotein E2 and a second at the level of viral RNA replication.


Journal of Virology | 2004

Uncleaved NS2-3 Is Required for Production of Infectious Bovine Viral Diarrhea Virus

Eugene Agapov; Catherine L. Murray; Ilya Frolov; Lin Qu; Tina M. Myers; Charles M. Rice

ABSTRACT Despite increasing characterization of pestivirus-encoded proteins, functions for nonstructural (NS) proteins NS2, NS2-3, NS4B, and NS5A have not yet been reported. Here we investigated the function of bovine viral diarrhea virus (BVDV) uncleaved NS2-3. To test whether NS2-3 has a discrete function, the uncleaved protein was specifically abolished in two ways: first by inserting a ubiquitin monomer between NS2 and NS3, and second by placing an internal ribosome entry site between the two proteins (a bicistronic genome). In both cases, complete processing of NS2-3 prevented infectious virion formation without affecting RNA replication. We tested the hypothesis that uncleaved NS2-3 was involved in morphogenesis by creating a bicistronic genome in which NS2-3 was restored in the second cistron. With this genome, both uncleaved NS2-3 expression and particle production returned. We then investigated the minimal regions of the polyprotein that could rescue an NS2-3 defect by developing a trans-complementation assay. We determined that the expression of NS4A in cis with NS2-3 markedly increased its activity, while p7 could be supplied in trans. Based on these data, we propose a model for NS2-3 action in virion morphogenesis.


Journal of Virology | 2007

Development of Sindbis viruses encoding nsP2/GFP chimeric proteins and their application for studying nsP2 functioning.

Svetlana Atasheva; Rodion Gorchakov; Robert English; Ilya Frolov; Elena I. Frolova

ABSTRACT Sindbis virus (SINV) is one of almost 30 currently known alphaviruses. In infected cells, it produces only a few proteins that function in virus replication and interfere with the development of the antiviral response. One of the viral nonstructural proteins, nsP2, not only exhibits protease and RNA helicase activities that are directly involved in viral RNA replication but also plays critical roles in the development of transcriptional and translational shutoffs in the SINV-infected cells. These multiple activities of nsP2 complicate investigations of this proteins functions and further understanding of its structure. Using a transposon-based approach, we generated a cDNA library of SINV genomes with a green fluorescent protein (GFP) gene randomly inserted into nsP2 and identified a number of sites that can be used for GFP cloning without a strong effect on virus replication. Recombinant SIN viruses encoding nsP2/GFP chimeric protein were capable of growth in tissue culture and interfering with cellular functions. SINV, expressing GFP in the nsP2, was used to isolate nsP2-specific protein complexes formed in the cytoplasm of the infected cells. These complexes contained viral nsPs, all of the cellular proteins that we previously coisolated with SINV nsP3, and some additional protein factors that were not found before in detectable concentrations. The random insertion library-based approach, followed by the selection of the viable variants expressing heterologous proteins, can be applied for mapping the domain structure of the viral nonstructural and structural proteins, cloning of peptide tags for isolation of the protein-specific complexes, and studying their formation by using live-cell imaging. This approach may also be applicable to presentation of additional antigens and retargeting of viruses to new receptors.

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Elena I. Frolova

University of Alabama at Birmingham

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Svetlana Atasheva

University of Alabama at Birmingham

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Dal Young Kim

University of Alabama at Birmingham

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Rodion Gorchakov

Baylor College of Medicine

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Scott C. Weaver

University of Texas Medical Branch

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Maryna Akhrymuk

University of Alabama at Birmingham

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Ivan Akhrymuk

University of Alabama at Birmingham

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Natalia Garmashova

University of Texas Medical Branch

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Eryu Wang

University of Texas Medical Branch

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