| Literature DB >> 26512676 |
Masato Nakai1,2, Hiroyuki Oshiumi3, Kenji Funami4, Masaaki Okamoto5, Misako Matsumoto6, Tsukasa Seya7, Naoya Sakamoto8.
Abstract
Hepatitis C virus (HCV) infects hepatocytes but not dendritic cells (DCs), but DCs effectively mature in response to HCV-infected hepatocytes. Using gene-disrupted mice and hydrodynamic injection strategy, we found the MAVS pathway to be crucial for induction of type III interferons (IFNs) in response to HCV in mouse. Human hepatocytes barely express TLR3 under non-infectious states, but frequently express it in HCV infection. Type I and III IFNs are induced upon stimulation with polyI:C, an analog of double-stranded (ds)RNA. Activation of TLR3 and the TICAM-1 pathway, followed by DC-mediated activation of cellular immunity, is augmented during exposure to viral RNA. Although type III IFNs are released from replication-competent human hepatocytes, DC-mediated CTL proliferation and NK cell activation hardly occur in response to the released type III IFNs. Yet, type I IFNs and HCV-infected hepatocytes can induce maturation of DCs in either human or mouse origin. In addition, mouse CD8+ DCs mature in response to HCV-infected hepatocytes unless the TLR3/TICAM-1 pathway is blocked. We found the exosomes containing HCV RNA in the supernatant of the HCV-infected hepatocytes act as a source of TLR3-mediated DC maturation. Here we summarize our view on the mechanism by which DCs mature to induce NK and CTL in a status of HCV infection.Entities:
Keywords: Hepatitis C virus (HCV); Toll-like receptor 3 (TLR3); cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL); dendritic cells (DCs); interferon (IFN)-lambda; natural killer (NK) cell
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26512676 PMCID: PMC4634469 DOI: 10.3390/s151027160
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
Nucleic acid sensors involved in IFN-inducing innate immune response.
| Pattern-Recognition Receptor | Adaptor | Natural Agonist | Synthtic Agonist | Pathogen |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| TLR3 | TICAM-1 | Endosomal dsRNA | poly(I:C) | DNA/RNA virus |
| TLR7/8 | MyD88 | Endosomal ssRNA | Imidazoquinoline | RNA virus, bacteria, fungi |
| TLR9 | MyD88 | Non-methylated CpG DNA | CpG ODNs | DNA virus, bacteria |
| RIG-I | MAVS | Cytosolic 5'-ppp-dsRNA | short poly(I:C) | RNA virus, DNA virus |
| MDA5 | MAVS | Cytosolic long dsRNA | long poly(I:C) | RNA virus, bacteria |
| NOD2 | MAVS | Cytosolic ssRNA | muramyl dipeptide | RNA virus, bacteria |
| DDX3 | MAVS | Cytosolic ssRNA, dsRNA | poly(I:C) | RNA virus |
| DDX1/21, DHX36 | TICAM-1 | Cytosolic dsRNA | poly(I:C) | RNA virus |
| DDX41 | STING | Cytosolic dsDNA | - | DNA virus, bacteria |
| DDX60 | MAVS | Cytosolic RNA, dsDNA, | poly(I:C) | DNA/RNA virus |
| DHX9/DHX36 | MyD88 (MAVS) | Cytosolic dsDNA (dsRNA) | CpG ODNs (poly(I:C) | DNA virus |
| DAI (ZBP1) | STING? | Cytosolic dsDNA | - | Dna virus, bacteria |
| NLRP3 | ASC | Cytosolic RNA | sillica, asbestos, alum | DNA/RNA virus, bacteria |
| IFI16 | STING | Cytosolic dsDNA | - | DNA virus |
| LRRFIP1 | β-Catenin | Cytosolic dsDNA | - | DNA virus, bacteria |
Figure 1Nucleic acid sensors in HCV infection. Possible innate RNA-sensors participating in the recognition of HCV RNA are illustrated in this figure. In hepatocyte cytoplasm, major RNA sensors are RLR family proteins although many sentinels help RLRs to recognize viral RNA. On the other hand, in stromal cells TLR3 can work as a main sensor for HCV RNA released from the foci of HCV infection. Type III IFNs are the main product of the TLR3 signal in response to exogenous dsRNA. CD8+ DC rapidly secrete IFN-lambda in acute phase HCV infection.
Figure 2Type I IFN but not type III IFN mature DC to proliferate CTL and NK cells. If type III IFNs mainly act on DCs, CTL and NK cells cannot be activated as effectors for the elimination of HCV-infected hepatocytes. Instead, ISG20 and RNase L induced in hepatocytes by IFN-lambda participate in elimination viral RNA of HCV-infected cells. IFNLR is a receptor for IFN-lambda, but unlike IFNAR, this receptor cannot activate CTL and NK cells. Thus, ISG20 and RNaseL act as major effectors in hepatocytes to suppress viral infection via IFN-lambda. Once type I IFN is induced, TLR3 is up-regulated in DC and DC-mediated cellular immunity is evoked to kill virus-infected cells.