| Literature DB >> 29270173 |
Emily A Hemann1, Michael Gale1, Ram Savan1.
Abstract
Type III interferons, also known as interferon lambdas (IFNλs), are the most recent addition to the IFN family following their discovery in 2003. Initially, IFNλ was demonstrated to induce expression of interferon-stimulated genes and exert antiviral properties in a similar manner to type I IFNs. However, while IFNλ has been described to have largely overlapping expression and function with type I IFNs, it has become increasingly clear that type III IFNs also have distinct functions from type I IFNs. In contrast to type I IFNs, whose receptor is ubiquitously expressed, type III IFNs signal and function largely at barrier epithelial surfaces, such as the respiratory and gastrointestinal tracts, as well as the blood-brain barrier. In further support of unique functions for type III IFNs, single nucleotide polymorphisms in IFNL genes in humans are strongly associated with outcomes to viral infection. These biological linkages have also been more directly supported by studies in mice highlighting roles of IFNλ in promoting antiviral immune responses. In this review, we discuss the current understanding of type III IFNs, and how their functions are similar to, and different from, type I IFN in various immune cell subtypes and viral infections.Entities:
Keywords: immune cells; immunity; infectious disease; interferon; interferon lambda; virus
Year: 2017 PMID: 29270173 PMCID: PMC5723907 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2017.01707
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1General induction and receptor signaling pathways of type I and type III IFNs. Recognition of virus by multiple pattern recognition receptor pathways leads to the activation of the transcription factors IRF1, IRF3, IRF7, and NF-κB to induce transcription, translation, and secretion of type I IFN (IFNα and IFNβ) and type III IFN [interferon lambda (IFNλ)]. Type I and type III IFNs signal to surrounding cells via distinct receptors to induce activation of the JAK–STAT pathway leading to the production of IFN-stimulated genes (ISGs) that can amplify the IFN signal and induce an antiviral state in infected cells/tissues.
Interferon lambda (IFNλ) and IFNα/β functions in viral infection.
| Virus infection | Role of IFNλ | Role of IFNα/β |
|---|---|---|
| Human metapneumovirus (−ssRNA Pneumoviridae) | IFNλ treatment reduces titer in murine model ( Increased titers in mice lacking IFNλR and IFNAR ( | Increased titers in mice lacking IFNλR and IFNAR ( Increased titers and reduced CD8 T cell response in mice lacking IFNAR ( |
| Influenza virus (−ssRNA Orthomyxoviridae) | Increased virus titers in human cells and murine models in the absence of IFNλR ( IFNλ reduced influenza A virus (IAV) titers with minimal-associated pulmonary damage in murine Increased IFNλ [human single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) rs8099917] correlates with increased Th1 skewing of CD4 T cell response and reduced sero-conversion following vaccination ( | Mice lacking IFNAR1 and IFNλR in the stromal compartment are more susceptible to IAV infection ( Therapeutic treatment of IAV-infected mice with IFNα leads to reduced IAV titers, but pulmonary damage ( |
| Lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (−ssRNA Arenaviridae) | IFNλ2 and IFNλ3 inhibit infection of human lung epithelial cells ( IFNλR−/− mice have no change in virus titer, but increased CD8 T cell response to acute infection and reduced CD8 T cell response to chronic infection ( | Blockade of type I IFN controls persistent infection ( |
| Respiratory syncytial virus (−ssRNA Paramyxoviridae) | Increased titers in mice lacking IFNλR and IFNAR ( | Increased titers in mice lacking IFNλR and IFNAR ( |
| Dengue (+ssRNA Flaviviridae) | IFNλ1 induces expression of CCR7 and IFNλ1 and IFNλ2 inhibit virus in a human epithelial cell line ( | Mice lacking IFNAR are more susceptible to infection ( Mice lacking IFNAR on CD11c+ or LysM+ cells have increased disease during infection, but still mount protective CD8 T cell responses against the virus ( |
| Hepatitis C virus (HCV) (+ssRNA Flaviviridae) | SNPs rs4803217, rs8099917, rs12979860, and rs368234815 correlate with response to IFN therapeutic and spontaneous virus clearance ( | IFNα therapeutic effective in control of HCV, but highly inflammatory (source) |
| Human immunodeficiency virus (+ssRNA Retroviridae) | IFNλ1, 2, 3 treatment of human monocyte-derived macrophages inhibits infection Pretreatment of human primary CD4 T cells with IFNλ1 or IFNλ2 reduced HIV integration and posttranscriptional events, but IFNλ1 was not negatively correlated with HIV levels | Type I IFN can inhibit HIV High, sustained type I IFN associated with pathogenicity during SIV infection of rhesus macaques ( Serum IFNα inversely correlates with CD4 T cell counts in human patients with HIV-1 ( |
| Norovirus (+ssRNA Caliciviridae) | Recombinant IFNλ clears persistent norovirus infection in a murine model, dependent upon IFNλR signaling in intestinal epithelial cells (IECs) ( Mice lacking IFNλR have increased titers and virus shedding ( | Persistence of norovirus in mice lacking IFNAR specifically on CD11c+ cells ( |
| Rhinovirus (+ssRNA Picornaviridae) | IFNλ levels inversely correlate with rhinovirus replication in a human bronchial epithelial cell line ( | Type I IFN response contributes to control of rhinovirus in murine airway cells at 37° ( |
| SARS coronavirus (+ssRNA Coronaviridae) | IFNλR−/− mice have increased viral titers and shedding ( | Type I IFN signaling in hematopoietic cells drives SARS-CoV pathogenesis in a murine model ( |
| West Nile virus (+ssRNA Flavi) | Treatment with IFNλ protects mice from lethal infection IFNλR−/− mice have increased permeability of the blood–brain barrier and neuroinvastion of virus ( | Mice lacking IFNAR have enhanced viral loads, increased tropism, and complete mortality ( |
| Zika virus (+ssRNA Flaviviridae) | Knock down of IFNλR in HBMECs leads to increase in ZIKV dsRNA ( | Mice lacking IFNAR susceptible to Zika virus infection ( Zika virus antagonizes type I IFN response in human DCs ( |
| Reovirus (dsRNA Reoviridae) | Fatal disease in neonatal mice lacking IFNλR Mice lacking IFNλR fully or specifically in IECs have increased virus shedding and growth in IECs ( | No enhanced disease or systemic spread in IFNAR−/− mice infected intracranially ( |
| Rotavirus (dsRNA Reoviridae) | IFNλ treatment (synergistically with IL-22) reduces rotavirus titer ( Mice lacking IFNλR have increased virus titer ( | Minimal role for IFNAR signaling in control of viral disease in mice ( |
| Cytomegalovirus (dsDNA Herpesviridae) | IFNλ reduces replication and CD4 T cell proliferation in human PBMCs ( | Type I IFN released by DCs inhibits replication ( CMV directly inhibits type I IFN ( |
| Hepatitis B virus (dsDNA Hepadnaviridae) | Restricts virus in murine cell line ( Pegylated IFNλ augmented antiviral reduction in hepatitis B virus (HBV) levels of infected patients ( | Type I IFN restricts HBV in hepatocytes ( HBV inhibits type I IFN induction ( |
| Herpes simplex virus (HSV) (dsDNA Herpesviridae) | IFNλ inhibits HSV-1 and HSV-2 in human epithelial cells ( SNP rs12979860 correlates with HSV-1 severity upon reactivation ( | INFAR−/− adult mice are susceptible to infection of the choroid plexus and HSV encephalitis, similar to newborn WT ( |
Figure 2Interferon lambda (IFNλ) and IFNα/β differentially modulate immune responses during acute viral infection and tissue inflammation. (A) Following viral infection/tissue inflammation, IFNλ modulates functions of dendritic cells (DCs) neutrophils, CD4 T cells, and the B-cell antibody response. IFNλ signaling may also regulate macrophage, NK cell, and CD8 T cell function during infection/tissue inflammation (B) type I IFN (IFNα and IFNβ) have been the subject of a greater number of studies and have more defined roles during virus infection and tissue inflammation. Type I IFN enhances functions of DCs, macrophages, NK cells, B cells, CD4 T cells, and CD8 T cells toward an inflammatory/antiviral state.