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Dive into the research topics where Zongdi Feng is active.

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Featured researches published by Zongdi Feng.


Nature | 2013

A pathogenic picornavirus acquires an envelope by hijacking cellular membranes

Zongdi Feng; Lucinda L. Hensley; Kevin L. McKnight; Fengyu Hu; Victoria J. Madden; Lifang Ping; Sook Hyang Jeong; Christopher J. Walker; Robert E. Lanford; Stanley M. Lemon

Animal viruses are broadly categorized structurally by the presence or absence of an envelope composed of a lipid-bilayer membrane, attributes that profoundly affect stability, transmission and immune recognition. Among those lacking an envelope, the Picornaviridae are a large and diverse family of positive-strand RNA viruses that includes hepatitis A virus (HAV), an ancient human pathogen that remains a common cause of enterically transmitted hepatitis. HAV infects in a stealth-like manner and replicates efficiently in the liver. Virus-specific antibodies appear only after 3–4 weeks of infection, and typically herald its resolution. Although unexplained mechanistically, both anti-HAV antibody and inactivated whole-virus vaccines prevent disease when administered as late as 2 weeks after exposure, when virus replication is well established in the liver. Here we show that HAV released from cells is cloaked in host-derived membranes, thereby protecting the virion from antibody-mediated neutralization. These enveloped viruses (‘eHAV’) resemble exosomes, small vesicles that are increasingly recognized to be important in intercellular communications. They are fully infectious, sensitive to extraction with chloroform, and circulate in the blood of infected humans. Their biogenesis is dependent on host proteins associated with endosomal-sorting complexes required for transport (ESCRT), namely VPS4B and ALIX. Whereas the hijacking of membranes by HAV facilitates escape from neutralizing antibodies and probably promotes virus spread within the liver, anti-capsid antibodies restrict replication after infection with eHAV, suggesting a possible explanation for prophylaxis after exposure. Membrane hijacking by HAV blurs the classic distinction between ‘enveloped’ and ‘non-enveloped’ viruses and has broad implications for mechanisms of viral egress from infected cells as well as host immune responses.


Journal of Virology | 2007

The VP35 Protein of Ebola Virus Inhibits the Antiviral Effect Mediated by Double-Stranded RNA-Dependent Protein Kinase PKR

Zongdi Feng; Melissa Cerveny; Zhipeng Yan; Bin He

ABSTRACT The VP35 protein of Ebola virus is a viral antagonist of interferon. It acts to block virus or double-stranded RNA-mediated activation of interferon regulatory factor 3, a transcription factor that facilitates the expression of interferon and interferon-stimulated genes. In this report, we show that the VP35 protein is also able to inhibit the antiviral response induced by alpha interferon. This depends on the VP35 function that interferes with the pathway regulated by double-stranded RNA-dependent protein kinase PKR. When expressed in a heterologous system, the VP35 protein enhanced viral polypeptide synthesis and growth in Vero cells pretreated with alpha/beta interferon, displaying an interferon-resistant phenotype. In correlation, phosphorylation of PKR and eIF-2α was suppressed in cells expressing the VP35 protein. This activity of the VP35 protein was required for efficient viral replication in PKR+/+ but not PKR−/− mouse embryo fibroblasts. Furthermore, VP35 appears to be a RNA binding protein. Notably, a deletion of amino acids 1 to 200, but not R312A substitution in the RNA binding motif, abolished the ability of the VP35 protein to confer viral resistance to interferon. However, the R312A substitution rendered the VP35 protein unable to inhibit the induction of the beta interferon promoter mediated by virus infection. Together, these results show that the VP35 protein targets multiple pathways of the interferon system.


Journal of Virology | 2005

Herpes Simplex Virus 1 Infection Activates the Endoplasmic Reticulum Resident Kinase PERK and Mediates eIF-2α Dephosphorylation by the γ134.5 Protein

Guofeng Cheng; Zongdi Feng; Bin He

ABSTRACT The γ134.5 protein of herpes simplex virus (HSV) plays a crucial role in virus infection. Although the double-stranded RNA-dependent protein kinase (PKR) is activated during HSV infection, the γ134.5 protein inhibits the activity of PKR by mediating dephosphorylation of the translation initiation factor eIF-2α. Here we show that HSV infection also induces phosphorylation of an endoplasmic reticulum (ER) resident kinase PERK, a hallmark of ER stress response. The virus-induced phosphorylation of PERK is blocked by cycloheximide but not by phosphonoacetic acid, suggesting that the accumulation of viral proteins in the ER is essential. Notably, the maximal phosphorylation of PERK is delayed in PKR+/+ cells compared to that seen in PKR−/− cells. Further analysis indicates that hyperphosphorylation of eIF-2α caused by HSV is greater in PKR+/+ cells than in PKR−/− cells. However, expression of the γ134.5 protein suppresses the ER stress response caused by virus, dithiothreitol, and thapsigargin as measured by global protein synthesis. Interestingly, the expression of GADD34 stimulated by HSV infection parallels the status of eIF-2α phosphorylation. Together, these observations suggest that regulation of eIF-2α phosphorylation by the γ134.5 protein is an efficient way to antagonize the inhibitory activity of PKR as well as PERK during productive infection.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011

Acute hepatitis A virus infection is associated with a limited type I interferon response and persistence of intrahepatic viral RNA

Robert E. Lanford; Zongdi Feng; Deborah Chavez; Bernadette Guerra; Kathleen M. Brasky; Yan Zhou; Daisuke Yamane; Alan S. Perelson; Christopher M. Walker; Stanley M. Lemon

Hepatitis A virus (HAV) is an hepatotropic human picornavirus that is associated only with acute infection. Its pathogenesis is not well understood because there are few studies in animal models using modern methodologies. We characterized HAV infections in three chimpanzees, quantifying viral RNA by quantitative RT-PCR and examining critical aspects of the innate immune response including intrahepatic IFN-stimulated gene expression. We compared these infection profiles with similar studies of chimpanzees infected with hepatitis C virus (HCV), an hepatotropic flavivirus that frequently causes persistent infection. Surprisingly, HAV-infected animals exhibited very limited induction of type I IFN-stimulated genes in the liver compared with chimpanzees with acute resolving HCV infection, despite similar levels of viremia and 100-fold greater quantities of viral RNA in the liver. Minimal IFN-stimulated gene 15 and IFIT1 responses peaked 1–2 wk after HAV challenge and then subsided despite continuing high hepatic viral RNA. An acute inflammatory response at 3–4 wk correlated with the appearance of virus-specific antibodies and apoptosis and proliferation of hepatocytes. Despite this, HAV RNA persisted in the liver for months, remaining present long after clearance from serum and feces and revealing dramatic differences in the kinetics of clearance in the three compartments. Viral RNA was detected in the liver for significantly longer (35 to >48 wk) than HCV RNA in animals with acute resolving HCV infection (10–20 wk). Collectively, these findings indicate that HAV is far stealthier than HCV early in the course of acute resolving infection. HAV infections represent a distinctly different paradigm in virus–host interactions within the liver.


PLOS Pathogens | 2011

Disruption of TLR3 signaling due to cleavage of TRIF by the hepatitis A virus protease-polymerase processing intermediate, 3CD.

Lin Qu; Zongdi Feng; Daisuke Yamane; Yuqiong Liang; Robert E. Lanford; Kui Li; Stanley M. Lemon

Toll-like receptor 3 (TLR3) and cytosolic RIG-I-like helicases (RIG-I and MDA5) sense viral RNAs and activate innate immune signaling pathways that induce expression of interferon (IFN) through specific adaptor proteins, TIR domain-containing adaptor inducing interferon-β (TRIF), and mitochondrial antiviral signaling protein (MAVS), respectively. Previously, we demonstrated that hepatitis A virus (HAV), a unique hepatotropic human picornavirus, disrupts RIG-I/MDA5 signaling by targeting MAVS for cleavage by 3ABC, a precursor of the sole HAV protease, 3Cpro, that is derived by auto-processing of the P3 (3ABCD) segment of the viral polyprotein. Here, we show that HAV also disrupts TLR3 signaling, inhibiting poly(I:C)-stimulated dimerization of IFN regulatory factor 3 (IRF-3), IRF-3 translocation to the nucleus, and IFN-β promoter activation, by targeting TRIF for degradation by a distinct 3ABCD processing intermediate, the 3CD protease-polymerase precursor. TRIF is proteolytically cleaved by 3CD, but not by the mature 3Cpro protease or the 3ABC precursor that degrades MAVS. 3CD-mediated degradation of TRIF depends on both the cysteine protease activity of 3Cpro and downstream 3Dpol sequence, but not 3Dpol polymerase activity. Cleavage occurs at two non-canonical 3Cpro recognition sequences in TRIF, and involves a hierarchical process in which primary cleavage at Gln-554 is a prerequisite for scission at Gln-190. The results of mutational studies indicate that 3Dpol sequence modulates the substrate specificity of the upstream 3Cpro protease when fused to it in cis in 3CD, allowing 3CD to target cleavage sites not normally recognized by 3Cpro. HAV thus disrupts both RIG-I/MDA5 and TLR3 signaling pathways through cleavage of essential adaptor proteins by two distinct protease precursors derived from the common 3ABCD polyprotein processing intermediate.


Gastroenterology | 2014

Kinetic Analyses Reveal Potent and Early Blockade of Hepatitis C Virus Assembly by NS5A Inhibitors

David R. McGivern; Takahiro Masaki; Sara E. Williford; Paul Ingravallo; Zongdi Feng; Frederick Lahser; Ernest Asante-Appiah; Petra Neddermann; Raffaele De Francesco; Anita Y. M. Howe; Stanley M. Lemon

BACKGROUND & AIMS All-oral regimens combining different classes of direct-acting antivirals (DAA) are highly effective for treatment of patients with chronic hepatitis C. NS5A inhibitors will likely form a component of future interferon-sparing treatment regimens. However, despite their potential, the detailed mechanism of action of NS5A inhibitors is unclear. To study their mechanisms, we compared their kinetics of antiviral suppression with those of other classes of DAA, using the hepatitis C virus genotype 1a cell culture-infectious virus H77S.3. METHODS We performed detailed kinetic analyses of specific steps in the hepatitis C virus life cycle using cell cultures incubated with protease inhibitors, polymerase inhibitors, or NS5A inhibitors. Assays were designed to measure active viral RNA synthesis and steady-state RNA abundance, polyprotein synthesis, virion assembly, and infectious virus production. RESULTS Despite their high potency, NS5A inhibitors were slow to inhibit viral RNA synthesis compared with protease or polymerase inhibitors. By 24 hours after addition of an NS5A inhibitor, polyprotein synthesis was reduced <50%, even at micromolar concentrations. In contrast, inhibition of virus release by NS5A inhibitors was potent and rapid, with onset of inhibition as early as 2 hours. Cells incubated with NS5A inhibitors were rapidly depleted of intracellular infectious virus and RNA-containing hepatitis C virus particles, indicating a block in virus assembly. CONCLUSIONS DAAs that target NS5A rapidly inhibit intracellular assembly of genotype 1a virions. They also inhibit formation of functional replicase complexes, but have no activity against preformed replicase, thereby resulting in slow shut-off of viral RNA synthesis.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2012

Dominance of the CD4+ T helper cell response during acute resolving hepatitis A virus infection

Yan Zhou; Benoit Callendret; Dan Xu; Kathleen M. Brasky; Zongdi Feng; Lucinda L. Hensley; Jeremie Guedj; Alan S. Perelson; Stanley M. Lemon; Robert E. Lanford; Christopher M. Walker

CD4+ T cells play a dominant role in control of acute HAV infection in chimpanzees.


Journal of General Virology | 2010

The VP35 protein of Ebola virus impairs dendritic cell maturation induced by virus and lipopolysaccharide

Huali Jin; Zhipeng Yan; Bellur S. Prabhakar; Zongdi Feng; Yijie Ma; Dustin Verpooten; Balaji B. Ganesh; Bin He

Ebola virus causes rapidly progressive haemorrhagic fever, which is associated with severe immuosuppression. In infected dendritic cells (DCs), Ebola virus replicates efficiently and inhibits DC maturation without inducing cytokine expression, leading to impaired T-cell proliferation. However, the underlying mechanism remains unclear. In this study, we report that Ebola virus VP35 impairs the maturation of mouse DCs. When expressed in mouse immature DCs, Ebola virus VP35 prevents virus-stimulated expression of CD40, CD80, CD86 and major histocompatibility complex class II. Further, it suppresses the induction of cytokines such as interleukin (IL)-6, IL-12, tumour necrosis factor alpha and alpha/beta interferon (IFN-alpha/beta). Notably, Ebola VP35 attenuates the ability of DCs to stimulate the activation of CD4(+) T cells. Addition of type I IFN to mouse DCs only partially reverses the inhibitory effects of VP35. Moreover, VP35 perturbs mouse DC functions induced by lipopolysaccharide, an agonist of Toll-like receptor 4. Deletion of the amino terminus abolishes its activity, whereas a mutation in the RNA binding motif has no effect. Our work highlights a critical role of VP35 in viral interference in DC function with resultant deficiency in T-cell function, which may contribute to the profound virulence of Ebola virus infection.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2015

Human pDCs preferentially sense enveloped hepatitis A virions

Zongdi Feng; You Li; Kevin L. McKnight; Lucinda L. Hensley; Robert E. Lanford; Christopher M. Walker; Stanley M. Lemon

Unlike other picornaviruses, hepatitis A virus (HAV) is cloaked in host membranes when released from cells, providing protection from neutralizing antibodies and facilitating spread in the liver. Acute HAV infection is typified by minimal type I IFN responses; therefore, we questioned whether plasmacytoid dendritic cells (pDCs), which produce IFN when activated, are capable of sensing enveloped virions (eHAV). Although concentrated nonenveloped virus failed to activate freshly isolated human pDCs, these cells produced substantial amounts of IFN-α via TLR7 signaling when cocultured with infected cells. pDCs required either close contact with infected cells or exposure to concentrated culture supernatants for IFN-α production. In isopycnic and rate-zonal gradients, pDC-activating material cosedimented with eHAV but not membrane-bound acetylcholinesterase, suggesting that eHAV, and not viral RNA exosomes, is responsible for IFN-α induction. pDC activation did not require virus replication and was associated with efficient eHAV uptake, which was facilitated by phosphatidylserine receptors on pDCs. In chimpanzees, pDCs were transiently recruited to the liver early in infection, during or shortly before maximal intrahepatic IFN-stimulated gene expression, but disappeared prior to inflammation onset. Our data reveal that, while membrane envelopment protects HAV against neutralizing antibody, it also facilitates an early but limited detection of HAV infection by pDCs.


Journal of Virology | 2016

Distinct Entry Mechanisms for Nonenveloped and Quasi-Enveloped Hepatitis E Viruses

Xin Yin; Charuta Ambardekar; Yurong Lu; Zongdi Feng

ABSTRACT The hepatitis E virus (HEV) sheds into feces as nonenveloped virions but circulates in the blood in a membrane-associated, quasi-enveloped form (eHEV). Since the eHEV virions lack viral proteins on the surface, we investigated the entry mechanism for eHEV. We found that compared to nonenveloped HEV virions, eHEV attachment to the cell was much less efficient, requiring a longer inoculation time to reach its maximal infectivity. A survey of cellular internalization pathways identified clathrin-mediated endocytosis as the main route for eHEV entry. Unlike nonenveloped HEV virions, eHEV entry requires Rab5 and Rab7, small GTPases involved in endosomal trafficking, and blocking endosomal acidification abrogated eHEV infectivity. However, low pH alone was not sufficient for eHEV uncoating, suggesting that additional steps are required for entry. Supporting this concept, eHEV infectivity was substantially reduced in cells depleted of Niemann-Pick disease type C1, a lysosomal protein required for cholesterol extraction from lipid, or in cells treated with an inhibitor of lysosomal acid lipase. These data support a model in which the quasi-envelope is degraded within the lysosome prior to virus uncoating, a potentially novel mechanism for virus entry. IMPORTANCE The recent discovery of quasi-enveloped viruses has shifted the paradigm of virus-host interactions. The impact of quasi-envelopment in the virus life cycle and pathogenesis is largely unknown. HEV is a highly relevant model to study these questions. HEV circulates as quasi-enveloped virions in the blood that are hidden from neutralizing antibodies. eHEV particles most likely are responsible for the cell-to-cell spread of the virus. Given the increasing concerns about persistent HEV infection and its potential for transmission via the blood supply, understanding how eHEV infects cells is important for understanding its pathogenesis and developing therapies. Our data provide evidence that eHEV uses a potentially novel mechanism for cellular entry. Several steps critical to eHEV entry were identified and may provide a basis for developing treatments for hepatitis E. Because quasi-enveloped viruses resemble exosomes, these data also may provide insights into the exosome-mediated intercellular communications.

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Stanley M. Lemon

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Bin He

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Robert E. Lanford

Texas Biomedical Research Institute

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Lucinda L. Hensley

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Zhipeng Yan

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Dustin Verpooten

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Huali Jin

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Kevin L. McKnight

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Xin Yin

The Research Institute at Nationwide Children's Hospital

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