Literature DB >> 16306043

Negative regulation of the retinoic acid-inducible gene I-induced antiviral state by the ubiquitin-editing protein A20.

Rongtuan Lin1, Long Yang, Peyman Nakhaei, Qiang Sun, Ehssan Sharif-Askari, Ilkka Julkunen, John Hiscott.   

Abstract

Activation of the interferon regulatory factors (IRFs) 3 and 7 transcription factors is essential for the induction of type I interferon (IFN) and development of the innate antiviral response. Retinoic acid-inducible gene I has been shown to contribute to virus-induced IFN production independent of the Toll-like receptor pathways in response to a variety of RNA viruses and double-stranded RNA. In the present study, we demonstrate that the NF-kappaB-inducible, anti-apoptotic protein A20 efficiently blocks RIG-I-mediated activation of NF-kappaB-, IRF-3-, and IRF-7-dependent promoters but only weakly interferes with TRIF-TLR-3-mediated IFN activation. Expression of A20 completely blocked CARD domain containing DeltaRIG-I-induced IRF-3 Ser-396 phosphorylation, homodimerization, and DNA binding. The level of A20 inhibition was upstream of the TBK1/IKKepsilon kinases that phosphorylate IRF3 and IRF7 and paradoxically, A20 selectively degraded the TRIF protein but not RIG-I. A20 possesses two ubiquitin-editing domains, an N-terminal deubiquitination domain and a C-terminal ubiquitin ligase domain consisting of seven zinc finger domains. Deletion of the N-terminal de-ubiquitination domain had no significant effect on the inhibitory effect of A20, whereas deletion or mutation of zinc finger motif 7 ablated the inhibitory function of A20 on IRF- or NF-kappaB-mediated gene expression. Furthermore, cells stably expressing the active form of RIG-I induced an antiviral state that interfered with replication of vesicular stomatitis virus, an effect that was reversed by stable co-expression of A20. These results suggest that the virus-inducible, NF-kappaB-dependent activation of A20 functions as a negative regulator of RIG-I-mediated induction of the antiviral state.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 16306043     DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M510326200

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Biol Chem        ISSN: 0021-9258            Impact factor:   5.157


  111 in total

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10.  Aryl Hydrocarbon Receptor Interacting Protein Targets IRF7 to Suppress Antiviral Signaling and the Induction of Type I Interferon.

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