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Dive into the research topics where Michelle M. Becker is active.

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Featured researches published by Michelle M. Becker.


PLOS Pathogens | 2011

Distinct Patterns of IFITM-Mediated Restriction of Filoviruses, SARS Coronavirus, and Influenza A Virus

I-Chueh Huang; Charles C. Bailey; Jessica L. Weyer; Sheli R. Radoshitzky; Michelle M. Becker; Jessica J. Chiang; Abraham L. Brass; Asim A. Ahmed; Xiaoli Chi; Lian Dong; Lindsay E. Longobardi; Dutch Boltz; Jens H. Kuhn; Stephen J. Elledge; Sina Bavari; Mark R. Denison; Hyeryun Choe; Michael Farzan

Interferon-inducible transmembrane proteins 1, 2, and 3 (IFITM1, 2, and 3) are recently identified viral restriction factors that inhibit infection mediated by the influenza A virus (IAV) hemagglutinin (HA) protein. Here we show that IFITM proteins restricted infection mediated by the entry glycoproteins (GP1,2) of Marburg and Ebola filoviruses (MARV, EBOV). Consistent with these observations, interferon-β specifically restricted filovirus and IAV entry processes. IFITM proteins also inhibited replication of infectious MARV and EBOV. We observed distinct patterns of IFITM-mediated restriction: compared with IAV, the entry processes of MARV and EBOV were less restricted by IFITM3, but more restricted by IFITM1. Moreover, murine Ifitm5 and 6 did not restrict IAV, but efficiently inhibited filovirus entry. We further demonstrate that replication of infectious SARS coronavirus (SARS-CoV) and entry mediated by the SARS-CoV spike (S) protein are restricted by IFITM proteins. The profile of IFITM-mediated restriction of SARS-CoV was more similar to that of filoviruses than to IAV. Trypsin treatment of receptor-associated SARS-CoV pseudovirions, which bypasses their dependence on lysosomal cathepsin L, also bypassed IFITM-mediated restriction. However, IFITM proteins did not reduce cellular cathepsin activity or limit access of virions to acidic intracellular compartments. Our data indicate that IFITM-mediated restriction is localized to a late stage in the endocytic pathway. They further show that IFITM proteins differentially restrict the entry of a broad range of enveloped viruses, and modulate cellular tropism independently of viral receptor expression.


PLOS Pathogens | 2010

Infidelity of SARS-CoV Nsp14-exonuclease mutant virus replication is revealed by complete genome sequencing.

Lance D. Eckerle; Michelle M. Becker; Rebecca A. Halpin; Kelvin Li; Eli Venter; Xiaotao Lu; Sana Scherbakova; Rachel L. Graham; Ralph S. Baric; Timothy B. Stockwell; David J. Spiro; Mark R. Denison

Most RNA viruses lack the mechanisms to recognize and correct mutations that arise during genome replication, resulting in quasispecies diversity that is required for pathogenesis and adaptation. However, it is not known how viruses encoding large viral RNA genomes such as the Coronaviridae (26 to 32 kb) balance the requirements for genome stability and quasispecies diversity. Further, the limits of replication infidelity during replication of large RNA genomes and how decreased fidelity impacts virus fitness over time are not known. Our previous work demonstrated that genetic inactivation of the coronavirus exoribonuclease (ExoN) in nonstructural protein 14 (nsp14) of murine hepatitis virus results in a 15-fold decrease in replication fidelity. However, it is not known whether nsp14-ExoN is required for replication fidelity of all coronaviruses, nor the impact of decreased fidelity on genome diversity and fitness during replication and passage. We report here the engineering and recovery of nsp14-ExoN mutant viruses of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus (SARS-CoV) that have stable growth defects and demonstrate a 21-fold increase in mutation frequency during replication in culture. Analysis of complete genome sequences from SARS-ExoN mutant viral clones revealed unique mutation sets in every genome examined from the same round of replication and a total of 100 unique mutations across the genome. Using novel bioinformatic tools and deep sequencing across the full-length genome following 10 population passages in vitro, we demonstrate retention of ExoN mutations and continued increased diversity and mutational load compared to wild-type SARS-CoV. The results define a novel genetic and bioinformatics model for introduction and identification of multi-allelic mutations in replication competent viruses that will be powerful tools for testing the effects of decreased fidelity and increased quasispecies diversity on viral replication, pathogenesis, and evolution.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

Synthetic recombinant bat SARS-like coronavirus is infectious in cultured cells and in mice

Michelle M. Becker; Rachel L. Graham; Eric F. Donaldson; Barry Rockx; Amy C. Sims; Timothy Sheahan; Raymond J. Pickles; Davide Corti; Robert E. Johnston; Ralph S. Baric; Mark R. Denison

Defining prospective pathways by which zoonoses evolve and emerge as human pathogens is critical for anticipating and controlling both natural and deliberate pandemics. However, predicting tenable pathways of animal-to-human movement has been hindered by challenges in identifying reservoir species, cultivating zoonotic organisms in culture, and isolating full-length genomes for cloning and genetic studies. The ability to design and recover pathogens reconstituted from synthesized cDNAs has the potential to overcome these obstacles by allowing studies of replication and pathogenesis without identification of reservoir species or cultivation of primary isolates. Here, we report the design, synthesis, and recovery of the largest synthetic replicating life form, a 29.7-kb bat severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS)-like coronavirus (Bat-SCoV), a likely progenitor to the SARS-CoV epidemic. To test a possible route of emergence from the noncultivable Bat-SCoV to human SARS-CoV, we designed a consensus Bat-SCoV genome and replaced the Bat-SCoV Spike receptor-binding domain (RBD) with the SARS-CoV RBD (Bat-SRBD). Bat-SRBD was infectious in cell culture and in mice and was efficiently neutralized by antibodies specific for both bat and human CoV Spike proteins. Rational design, synthesis, and recovery of hypothetical recombinant viruses can be used to investigate mechanisms of transspecies movement of zoonoses and has great potential to aid in rapid public health responses to known or predicted emerging microbial threats.


Autophagy | 2007

Coronavirus Replication Does Not Require the Autophagy Gene ATG5

Zijiang Zhao; Larissa B. Thackray; Brian C. Miller; Teresa M Lynn; Michelle M. Becker; Eric Ward; Noboru Mizushima; Mark R. Denison; Herbert W. Virgin

Macroautophagy (herein autophagy) is a cellular process, requiring ATG5, by which cells deliver double membrane-bound packets containing cytoplasm or cytoplasmic organelles to the lysosome. This process has been reported in some cases to be antiviral, while in other cases it has been reported to be required for efficient viral replication or release. A role for autophagy in RNA virus replication has been an attractive hypothesis because of the association of RNA virus replication with complex membrane rearrangements in the cytoplasm that can generate opposed double membranes. In this study we demonstrate that ATG5 is not required for murine hepatitis virus (MHV) replication in either bone marrow derived macrophages (BMMφ) lacking ATG5 by virtue of Cre-recombinase mediated gene deletion or primary low passage murine ATG5-/- embryonic fibroblasts (pMEFs). We conclude that neither ATG5 nor an intact autophagic pathway are required for MHV replication or release.


Nature Medicine | 2012

A live, impaired-fidelity coronavirus vaccine protects in an aged, immunocompromised mouse model of lethal disease

Rachel L. Graham; Michelle M. Becker; Lance D. Eckerle; M. Marjorie Bolles; Mark R. Denison; Ralph S. Baric

Live, attenuated RNA virus vaccines are efficacious but subject to reversion to virulence. Among RNA viruses, replication fidelity is recognized as a key determinant of virulence and escape from antiviral therapy; increased fidelity is attenuating for some viruses. Coronavirus (CoV) replication fidelity is approximately 20-fold greater than that of other RNA viruses and is mediated by a 3′→5′ exonuclease (ExoN) activity that probably functions in RNA proofreading. In this study we demonstrate that engineered inactivation of severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS)-CoV ExoN activity results in a stable mutator phenotype with profoundly decreased fidelity in vivo and attenuation of pathogenesis in young, aged and immunocompromised mice. The ExoN inactivation genotype and mutator phenotype are stable and do not revert to virulence, even after serial passage or long-term persistent infection in vivo. ExoN inactivation has potential for broad applications in the stable attenuation of CoVs and, perhaps, other RNA viruses.


Journal of Virology | 2003

Reovirus σNS and μNS Proteins Form Cytoplasmic Inclusion Structures in the Absence of Viral Infection

Michelle M. Becker; Timothy R. Peters; Terence S. Dermody

ABSTRACT Reovirus replication occurs in the cytoplasm of infected cells and culminates in the formation of crystalline arrays of progeny virions within viral inclusions. Two viral nonstructural proteins, σNS and μNS, and structural protein σ3 form protein-RNA complexes early in reovirus infection. To better understand the minimal requirements of viral inclusion formation, we expressed σNS, μNS, and σ3 alone and in combination in the absence of viral infection. In contrast to its concentration in inclusion structures during reovirus replication, σNS expressed in cells in the absence of infection is distributed diffusely throughout the cytoplasm and does not form structures that resemble viral inclusions. Expressed σNS is functional as it complements the defect in temperature-sensitive, σNS-mutant virus tsE320. In both transfected and infected cells, μNS is found in punctate cytoplasmic structures and σ3 is distributed diffusely in the cytoplasm and the nucleus. The subcellular localization of μNS and σ3 is not altered when the proteins are expressed together or with σNS. However, when expressed with μNS, σNS colocalizes with μNS to punctate structures similar in morphology to inclusion structures observed early in viral replication. During reovirus infection, both σNS and μNS are detectable 4 h after adsorption and colocalize to punctate structures throughout the viral life cycle. In concordance with these results, σNS interacts with μNS in a yeast two-hybrid assay and by coimmunoprecipitation analysis. These data suggest that σNS and μNS are the minimal viral components required to form inclusions, which then recruit other reovirus proteins and RNA to initiate viral genome replication.


Nature Communications | 2015

Evaluation of candidate vaccine approaches for MERS-CoV

Lingshu Wang; Wei Shi; M. Gordon Joyce; Kayvon Modjarrad; Yi Zhang; Kwanyee Leung; Christopher R. Lees; Tongqing Zhou; Hadi M. Yassine; Masaru Kanekiyo; Zhi Yong Yang; Xuejun Chen; Michelle M. Becker; Megan Culler Freeman; Leatrice Vogel; Joshua C. Johnson; Gene G. Olinger; John Paul Todd; Ulas Bagci; Jeffrey Solomon; Daniel J. Mollura; Lisa E. Hensley; Peter B. Jahrling; Mark R. Denison; Srinivas S. Rao; Kanta Subbarao; Peter D. Kwong; John R. Mascola; Wing Pui Kong; Barney S. Graham

The emergence of Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV) as a cause of severe respiratory disease highlights the need for effective approaches to CoV vaccine development. Efforts focused solely on the receptor-binding domain (RBD) of the viral Spike (S) glycoprotein may not optimize neutralizing antibody (NAb) responses. Here we show that immunogens based on full-length S DNA and S1 subunit protein elicit robust serum-neutralizing activity against several MERS-CoV strains in mice and non-human primates. Serological analysis and isolation of murine monoclonal antibodies revealed that immunization elicits NAbs to RBD and, non-RBD portions of S1 and S2 subunit. Multiple neutralization mechanisms were demonstrated by solving the atomic structure of a NAb-RBD complex, through sequencing of neutralization escape viruses and by constructing MERS-CoV S variants for serological assays. Immunization of rhesus macaques confers protection against MERS-CoV-induced radiographic pneumonia, as assessed using computerized tomography, supporting this strategy as a promising approach for MERS-CoV vaccine development. Supplementary information The online version of this article (doi:10.1038/ncomms8712) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.


Journal of Virology | 2008

Nuclear Localization of Cytoplasmic Poly(A)-Binding Protein upon Rotavirus Infection Involves the Interaction of NSP3 with eIF4G and RoXaN

Maya Harb; Michelle M. Becker; Damien Vitour; Carolina H. Baron; Patrice Vende; Spencer C. Brown; Susanne Bolte; Stefan T. Arold; Didier Poncet

ABSTRACT Rotavirus nonstructural protein NSP3 interacts specifically with the 3′ end of viral mRNAs, with the eukaryotic translation initiation factor eIF4G, and with RoXaN, a cellular protein of yet-unknown function. By evicting cytoplasmic poly(A) binding protein (PABP-C1) from translation initiation complexes, NSP3 shuts off the translation of cellular polyadenylated mRNAs. We show here that PABP-C1 evicted from eIF4G by NSP3 accumulates in the nucleus of rotavirus-infected cells. Through modeling of the NSP3-RoXaN complex, we have identified mutations in NSP3 predicted to interrupt its interaction with RoXaN without disturbing the NSP3 interaction with eIF4G. Using these NSP3 mutants and a deletion mutant unable to associate with eIF4G, we show that the nuclear localization of PABP-C1 not only is dependent on the capacity of NSP3 to interact with eIF4G but also requires the interaction of NSP3 with a specific region in RoXaN, the leucine- and aspartic acid-rich (LD) domain. Furthermore, we show that the RoXaN LD domain functions as a nuclear export signal and that RoXaN tethers PABP-C1 with RNA. This work identifies RoXaN as a cellular partner of NSP3 involved in the nucleocytoplasmic localization of PABP-C1.


Journal of Virology | 2001

Reovirus ςNS Protein Is Required for Nucleation of Viral Assembly Complexes and Formation of Viral Inclusions

Michelle M. Becker; Mehmet I. Goral; Paul R. Hazelton; Geoffrey S. Baer; Steven E. Rodgers; Earl G. Brown; Kevin M. Coombs; Terence S. Dermody

ABSTRACT Progeny virions of mammalian reoviruses are assembled in the cytoplasm of infected cells at discrete sites termed viral inclusions. Studies of temperature-sensitive (ts) mutant viruses indicate that nonstructural protein ςNS and core protein μ2 are required for synthesis of double-stranded (ds) RNA, a process that occurs at sites of viral assembly. We used confocal immunofluorescence microscopy and ts mutant reoviruses to define the roles of ςNS and μ2 in viral inclusion formation. In cells infected with wild-type (wt) reovirus, ςNS and μ2 colocalize to large, perinuclear structures that correspond to viral inclusions. In cells infected at a nonpermissive temperature with ςNS-mutant virustsE320, ςNS is distributed diffusely in the cytoplasm and μ2 is contained in small, punctate foci that do not resemble viral inclusions. In cells infected at a nonpermissive temperature with μ2-mutant virus tsH11.2, μ2 is distributed diffusely in the cytoplasm and the nucleus. However, ςNS localizes to discrete structures in the cytoplasm that contain other viral proteins and are morphologically indistinguishable from viral inclusions seen in cells infected with wt reovirus. Examination of cells infected with wt reovirus over a time course demonstrates that ςNS precedes μ2 in localization to viral inclusions. These findings suggest that viral RNA-protein complexes containing ςNS nucleate sites of viral replication to which other viral proteins, including μ2, are recruited to commence dsRNA synthesis.


Journal of Virology | 2004

RoXaN, a Novel Cellular Protein Containing TPR, LD, and Zinc Finger Motifs, Forms a Ternary Complex with Eukaryotic Initiation Factor 4G and Rotavirus NSP3

Damien Vitour; Pierre Lindenbaum; Patrice Vende; Michelle M. Becker; Didier Poncet

ABSTRACT Rotavirus mRNAs are capped but not polyadenylated, and viral proteins are translated by the cellular translation machinery. This is accomplished through the action of the viral nonstructural protein NSP3, which specifically binds the 3′ consensus sequence of viral mRNAs and interacts with the eukaryotic translation initiation factor eIF4G I. To further our understanding of the role of NSP3 in rotavirus replication, we looked for other cellular proteins capable of interacting with this viral protein. Using the yeast two-hybrid assay, we identified a novel cellular protein-binding partner for rotavirus NSP3. This 110-kDa cellular protein, named RoXaN (rotavirus X protein associated with NSP3), contains a minimum of three regions predicted to be involved in protein-protein or nucleic acid-protein interactions. A tetratricopeptide repeat region, a protein-protein interaction domain most often found in multiprotein complexes, is present in the amino-terminal region. In the carboxy terminus, at least five zinc finger motifs are observed, further suggesting the capacity of RoXaN to bind other proteins or nucleic acids. Between these two regions exists a paxillin leucine-aspartate repeat (LD) motif which is involved in protein-protein interactions. RoXaN is capable of interacting with NSP3 in vivo and during rotavirus infection. Domains of interaction were mapped and correspond to the dimerization domain of NSP3 (amino acids 163 to 237) and the LD domain of RoXaN (amino acids 244 to 341). The interaction between NSP3 and RoXaN does not impair the interaction between NSP3 and eIF4G I, and a ternary complex made of NSP3, RoXaN, and eIF4G I can be detected in rotavirus-infected cells, implicating RoXaN in translation regulation.

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Mark R. Denison

Vanderbilt University Medical Center

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Barney S. Graham

National Institutes of Health

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Lingshu Wang

National Institutes of Health

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Rachel L. Graham

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Ralph S. Baric

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Wei Shi

QIMR Berghofer Medical Research Institute

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John R. Mascola

National Institutes of Health

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Kayvon Modjarrad

National Institutes of Health

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