| Literature DB >> 21994800 |
Parameshwaran Ramanan1, Reed S Shabman, Craig S Brown, Gaya K Amarasinghe, Christopher F Basler, Daisy W Leung.
Abstract
The Filoviridae family of viruses, which includes the genera Ebolavirus (EBOV) and Marburgvirus (MARV), causes severe and often times lethal hemorrhagic fever in humans. Filoviral infections are associated with ineffective innate antiviral responses as a result of virally encoded immune antagonists, which render the host incapable of mounting effective innate or adaptive immune responses. The Type I interferon (IFN) response is critical for establishing an antiviral state in the host cell and subsequent activation of the adaptive immune responses. Several filoviral encoded components target Type I IFN responses, and this innate immune suppression is important for viral replication and pathogenesis. For example, EBOV VP35 inhibits the phosphorylation of IRF-3/7 by the TBK-1/IKKε kinases in addition to sequestering viral RNA from detection by RIG-I like receptors. MARV VP40 inhibits STAT1/2 phosphorylation by inhibiting the JAK family kinases. EBOV VP24 inhibits nuclear translocation of activated STAT1 by karyopherin-α. The examples also represent distinct mechanisms utilized by filoviral proteins in order to counter immune responses, which results in limited IFN-α/β production and downstream signaling.Entities:
Keywords: Ebolavirus; IFN antagonist; Marburgvirus; innate immune evasion
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21994800 PMCID: PMC3187693 DOI: 10.3390/v3091634
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Viruses ISSN: 1999-4915 Impact factor: 5.048
Figure 1.Filoviral proteins counter the host IFN response through multiple mechanisms in order to limit host antiviral responses.
Figure 2.VP35 IID is involved in both protein-protein and protein-RNA interactions. (A) Residues within the CBP (dark blue) of VP35 IID (green) are important for dsRNA-dependent and -independent activities. (B) Residues that are involved in hydrophobic “end-cap” interactions with the dsRNA blunt ends are shown in yellow. CBP residues involved in recognition of the phosphate backbone of dsRNA (orange) are highlighted in dark blue. (C) Conserved CBP residues of one VP35 IID molecule (light blue) are also involved in protein-protein interactions with acidic residues of the neighboring molecule of VP35 IID (green) in the crystal structure.
Figure 3.VP35 inhibits IFN production by sequestering viral RNA. (A) RIG-I is activated by RNA, including dsRNA, and triggers a signal transduction cascade leading to Type I IFN production. (B) VP35 IID mimics dsRNA recognition by the RNA-binding domain of RIG-I.
Figure 4.VP35 inhibits IFN kinase phosphorylation of IRF3/7. (A) Phosphorylation of IRF3/7 by TBK-1/IKKε leads to the dimerization and translocation of IRF3/7 into the nucleus where it activates the IFN-β promoter. (B) EBOV VP35 inhibits IRF-3/7 phosphorylation by interacting with TBK-1 and IKKε kinase domain.
Figure 5.EBOV VP24 inhibits nuclear transport of phosphorylated STAT by KPN-α.
Figure 6.MARV VP40 inhibits JAK-STAT signaling. MARV VP40 inhibits the autophosphorylation of the JAK-1 kinase and subsequent phosphorylation of the STAT proteins.