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Article Abstract

Like many viruses, rotavirus (RV) dysregulates calcium homeostasis by elevating cytosolic calcium ([Ca]cyt) and decreasing endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stores. While an overall, monophasic increase in [Ca]cyt during RV infection has been shown, the nature of the RV-induced aberrant calcium signals and how they manifest over time at the single-cell level have not been characterized. Thus, we generated cell lines and human intestinal enteroids (HIEs) stably expressing cytosolic and/or ER-targeted genetically-encoded calcium indicators to characterize calcium signaling throughout RV infection by time-lapse imaging. We found that RV induces highly dynamic [Ca]cyt signaling that manifest as hundreds of discrete [Ca]cyt spikes, which increase during peak infection. Knockdown of nonstructural protein 4 (NSP4) attenuates the [Ca]cyt spikes, consistent with its role in dysregulating calcium homeostasis. RV-induced [Ca]cyt spikes were primarily from ER calcium release and were attenuated by inhibiting the store-operated calcium entry (SOCE) channel Orai1. RV-infected HIEs also exhibited prominent [Ca]cyt spikes that were attenuated by inhibiting SOCE, underlining the relevance of these [Ca]cyt spikes to gastrointestinal physiology and role of SOCE in RV pathophysiology. Thus, our discovery that RV increases [Ca]cyt by dynamic calcium signaling, establishes a new, paradigm-shifting understanding of the spatial and temporal complexity of virus-induced calcium signaling.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6658527PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-46856-8DOI Listing

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