| Literature DB >> 24710494 |
Mi Young Kim1, Michael Oglesbee2.
Abstract
Virus infections induce heat shock proteins that in turn enhance virus gene expression, a phenomenon that is particularly well characterized for the major inducible 70 kDa heat shock protein (hsp70). However, hsp70 is also readily induced by fever, a phylogenetically conserved response to microbial infections, and when released from cells, hsp70 can stimulate innate immune responses through toll like receptors 2 and 4 (TLR2 and 4). This review examines how the virus-hsp70 relationship can lead to host protective innate antiviral immunity, and the importance of hsp70 dependent stimulation of virus gene expression in this host response. Beginning with the well-characterized measles virus-hsp70 relationship and the mouse model of neuronal infection in brain, we examine data indicating that the innate immune response is not driven by intracellular sensors of pathogen associated molecular patterns, but rather by extracellular ligands signaling through TLR2 and 4. Specifically, we address the relationship between virus gene expression, extracellular release of hsp70 (as a damage associated molecular pattern), and hsp70-mediated induction of antigen presentation and type 1 interferons in uninfected macrophages as a novel axis of antiviral immunity. New data are discussed that examines the more broad relevance of this protective mechanism using vesicular stomatitis virus, and a review of the literature is presented that supports the probable relevance to both RNA and DNA viruses and for infections both within and outside of the central nervous system.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 24710494 PMCID: PMC3901102 DOI: 10.3390/cells1030646
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cells ISSN: 2073-4409 Impact factor: 6.600
Virus-hsp70 interaction in support of viral replication.
| Virus | Viral Target of Hsp70 Interaction | Effect of Virus-Hsp70 Interaction | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| human papillomavirus | E1, E2 | increased genome replication | [ |
| herpes simplex virus type 1 | UL9 | increased genome replication | [ |
| canine distemper virus, measles virus | nucleocapsid | increased nucleocapsid transcriptional activity and genome replication | [ |
| respiratory syncytial virus | nucleocapsid | increased nucleocapsid transcriptional activity | [ |
| rabies virus | nucleocapsid | support formation of replication factories (Negri bodies) | [ |
| tomato bush stunt virus | P33 | support replicase function | [ |
| simian virus 40 | Tag | Genome replication | [ |
| human cytomegalovirus | Hap46 | stimulate viral transcriptional activity | [ |
Figure 1A novel axis of innate antiviral immunity, in which hsp70 is released from virus infected cells (neuron, left) to stimulate innate immune responses of macrophages (microglia, right). Virus core particles (purple nucleocapsids) in the neuron mediate gene expression that is stimulated by hsp70 and results in further hsp70 induction, setting into motion a positive feedback loop. The extracellular hsp70 is ligand for TLR2 and TLR4, activating signal transduction pathways that drive type 1 IFN expression (IFN-β in brain) and expression of antigen presenting complexes (MHC). IFN-β expression by brain macrophages is key to immunity against virus infected neurons.