Virus Details


VHFID5242

Host Factor Information

Gene Name EIF3C
HF Protein Name Eukaryotic translation initiation factor 3 subunit C
HF Function Essential for virus replication
Uniprot ID Q99613
Protein Sequence View Fasta Sequence
NCBI Gene ID 8663
Host Factor (HF) Name in Paper EIF3C
Gene synonyms EIF3S8
Ensemble Gene ID ENSG00000184110
Ensemble Transcript ENST00000331666 [Q99613-1];ENST00000395587 [Q99613-1];ENST00000564243 [Q99613-2];ENST00000566501 [Q99613-1];ENST00000566866 [Q99613-1]
KEGG ID Go to KEGG Database
Gene Ontology ID(s) GO:0003723, GO:0003743, GO:0005829, GO:0005852, GO:0006413, GO:0031369, GO:0045727, GO:1902416,
MINT ID Q99613
STRING Click to see interaction map
GWAS Analysis Click to see gwas analysis
OMIM ID 603916
PANTHER ID N.A.
PDB ID(s) 3J8B, 3J8C,
pfam ID PF05470, PF01399,
Drug Bank ID N.A.,
ChEMBL ID N.A.
Organism Homo sapiens (Human)

Pathogen Information

Virus Name Swine flue virus
Virus Short Name H1N1
Order Unassigned
Virus Family Orthomyxoviridae
Virus Subfamily N.A.
Genus Influenzavirus A
Species Influenza A virus
Host Aquatic birds, human, pig, horse, seals
Cell Tropism Epithelial respiratory cells
Associated Disease Acute febrile respiratory tract infection
Mode of Transmission Respiratory and by animal contact (in human), fecal-oral route from contaminated water (in birds )
VIPR DB link http://www.genome.jp/virushostdb/view/?virus_lineage=Orthomyxoviridae
ICTV DB link https://talk.ictvonline.org/ictv-reports/ictv_9th_report/negative-sense-rna-viruses-2011/w/negrna_viruses/209/orthomyxoviridae
Virus Host DB link http://www.genome.jp/virushostdb/view/?virus_lineage=Orthomyxoviridae

Publication Information

Paper Title Drosophila RNAi screen identifies host genes important for influenza virus replication
Author's Name Linhui Hao, Akira Sakurai, Tokiko Watanabe, Ericka Sorensen, Chairul A. Nidom, Michael A. Newton, Paul Ahlquist and Yoshihiro Kawaoka
Journal Name Nature
Pubmed ID 18615016
Abstract All viruses rely on host cell proteins and their associated mechanisms to complete the viral life cycle. Identifying the host molecules that participate in each step of virus replication could provide valuable new targets for antiviral therapy, but this goal may take several decades to achieve with conventional forward genetic screening methods and mammalian cell cultures. Here we describe a novel genome-wide RNA interference (RNAi) screen in Drosophila that can be used to identify host genes important for influenza virus replication. After modifying influenza virus to allow infection of Drosophila cells and detection of influenza virus gene expression, we tested an RNAi library against 13,071 genes (90% of the Drosophila genome), identifying over 100 for which suppression in Drosophila cells significantly inhibited or stimulated reporter gene (Renilla luciferase) expression from an influenza-virus-derived vector. The relevance of these findings to influenza virus infection of mammalian cells is illustrated for a subset of the Drosophila genes identified that is, for three implicated Drosophila genes, the corresponding human homologues ATP6V0D1, COX6A1 and NXF1 are shown to have key functions in the replication of H5N1 and H1N1 influenza A viruses, but not vesicular stomatitis virus or vaccinia virus, in human HEK 293 cells. Thus, we have demonstrated the feasibility of using genome-wide RNAi screens in Drosophila to identify previously unrecognized host proteins that are required for influenza virus replication. This could accelerate the development of new classes of antiviral drugs for chemoprophylaxis and treatment, which are urgently needed given the obstacles to rapid development of an effective vaccine against pandemic influenza and the probable emergence of strains resistant to available drugs.
Used Model MDCK, HEK 293,BHK cells, D-Mel2 and DL1 cells
DOI 10.1038/nature07151