Chromatin assembly by the histone chaperone HIRA facilitates Human Papillomavirus replication

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Abstract

The circular, double-stranded DNA genomes of Human papillomaviruses (HPV) exist in a nucleosomal state throughout the infectious cycle and rely on host histone epigenetic modifications and chromatin assembly processes to promote various phases of the viral life cycle. Here, we show that the histone H3.3 chaperone HIRA and its associated complex members are recruited to HPV replication factories during the late phase of the HPV life cycle. HIRA is also recruited to HPV replication factories generated by amplification of a replicon with a minimal origin and expression of the viral replication proteins E1 and E2, demonstrating that the E1 and E2 proteins are sufficient for HIRA recruitment. Downregulation of HIRA expression reduces HPV31 DNA amplification and viral transcription in differentiated keratinocytes. Histone H3.3 that is highly phosphorylated on serine residue 31 is also enriched at sites of HPV replication and this modification links the DNA damage response to chromatin that supports rapid gene activation. We propose that deposition of histone H3.3 generates viral minichromosomes that are highly primed to support the late stages of the HPV life cycle.

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