| Literature DB >> 30842274 |
Hongxiao Song1, Guangyun Tan1, Yang Yang1, An Cui1, Haijun Li1, Tianyang Li1, Zhihui Wu1, Miaomiao Yang1, Guoyue Lv2, Xiumei Chi3, Junqi Niu3, Kangshun Zhu4, Ian Nicholas Crispe1,5, Lishan Su1,6, Zhengkun Tu7,3.
Abstract
It is not clear how hepatitis B virus (HBV) modulates host immunity during chronic infection. In addition to the key mediators of inflammatory response in viral infection, monocytes also express a high-level IFN-stimulated gene, CH25H, upon response to IFN-α exerting an antiviral effect. In this study, the mechanism by which HBV manipulates IFN signaling in human monocytes was investigated. We observed that monocytes from chronic hepatitis B patients express lower levels of IFN signaling/stimulated genes and higher levels of inflammatory cytokines compared with healthy donors. HBV induces monocyte production of inflammatory cytokines via TLR2/MyD88/NF-κB signaling and STAT1-Ser727 phosphorylation and inhibits IFN-α-induced stat1, stat2, and ch25h expression through the inhibition of STAT1-Tyr701 phosphorylation and in an IL-10-dependent, partially autocrine manner. Further, we found that enhancement of STAT1 activity with a small molecule (2-NP) rescued HBV-mediated inhibition of IFN signaling and counteracted the induction of inflammatory cytokines. In conclusion, HBV contributes to the monocyte inflammatory response but inhibits their IFN-α/β responsiveness to impair antiviral innate immunity. These effects are mediated via differential phosphorylation of Tyr701 and Ser727 of STAT1.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30842274 DOI: 10.4049/jimmunol.1800848
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunol ISSN: 0022-1767 Impact factor: 5.422