| Literature DB >> 34929018 |
Miaoge Xue1, Yuexiu Zhang1, Haitao Wang2,3, Elizabeth L Kairis1, Mijia Lu1, Sadeem Ahmad2,3, Zayed Attia1, Olivia Harder1, Zijie Zhang4, Jiangbo Wei4, Phylip Chen5, Youling Gao1, Mark E Peeples5,6, Amit Sharma1, Prosper Boyaka1, Chuan He3,7, Sun Hur2,8, Stefan Niewiesk1, Jianrong Li1.
Abstract
Human respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is the leading cause of respiratory tract infections in humans. A well-known challenge in the development of a live attenuated RSV vaccine is that interferon (IFN)-mediated antiviral responses are strongly suppressed by RSV nonstructural proteins which, in turn, dampens the subsequent adaptive immune responses. Here, we discovered a novel strategy to enhance innate and adaptive immunity to RSV infection. Specifically, we found that recombinant RSVs deficient in viral RNA N6-methyladenosine (m6A) and RSV grown in m6A methyltransferase (METTL3)-knockdown cells induce higher expression of RIG-I, bind more efficiently to RIG-I, and enhance RIG-I ubiquitination and IRF3 phosphorylation compared to wild-type virion RNA, leading to enhanced type I IFN production. Importantly, these m6A-deficient RSV mutants also induce a stronger IFN response in vivo, are significantly attenuated, induce higher neutralizing antibody and T cell immune responses in mice and provide complete protection against RSV challenge in cotton rats. Collectively, our results demonstrate that inhibition of RSV RNA m6A methylation enhances innate immune responses which in turn promote adaptive immunity.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34929018 PMCID: PMC8759664 DOI: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1010142
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Pathog ISSN: 1553-7366 Impact factor: 6.823
Fig 9Viral m6A methylation modulates RSV-specific T cell response.
Five-week-old BALB/c mice were immunized with each rgRSV mutant (5 mice per group). Mice were euthanized at 4 weeks post-immunization, the spleen was isolated from each mouse, homogenized, a cell suspension prepared, split into three wells (triplicate per mouse) and cultured in 96-well microtiter plates in the presence of 20 μg/ml of RSV pre-fusion protein for 5 days. The frequencies of RSV-specific Th1 (IFN-γ+CD4+ and TNF-α+CD4+) (A-B), Th2 cells (IL-4+CD4+, IL-5+CD4+, IL-10+CD4+) (C-E), Tfh (IL-21+ CD4+) (F) and Th17 (IL-17A+ CD4+) (G) cells were determined by flow cytometry after intracellular staining with the corresponding anti-cytokine. Error bars represent SD from n = 5 mice. *P<0.5, **P < 0.01, ***P < 0.001, ****P < 0.0001. Data were analyzed using Student’s t-test.