| Literature DB >> 35059779 |
Abstract
Birds are important hosts for many RNA viruses, including influenza A virus, Newcastle disease virus, West Nile virus and coronaviruses. Innate defense against RNA viruses in birds involves detection of viral RNA by pattern recognition receptors. Several receptors of different classes are involved, such as endosomal toll-like receptors and cytoplasmic retinoic acid-inducible gene I-like receptors, and their downstream adaptor proteins. The function of these receptors and their antagonism by viruses is well established in mammals; however, this has received less attention in birds. These receptors have been characterized in a few bird species, and the completion of avian genomes will permit study of their evolution. For each receptor, functional work has established ligand specificity and activation by viral infection. Engagement of adaptors, regulation by modulators and the supramolecular organization of proteins required for activation are incompletely understood in both mammals and birds. These receptors bind conserved nucleic acid agonists such as single- or double-stranded RNA and generally show purifying selection, particularly the ligand binding regions. However, in birds, these receptors and adaptors differ between species, and between individuals, suggesting that they are under selection for diversification over time. Avian receptors and signalling pathways, like their mammalian counterparts, are targets for antagonism by a variety of viruses, intent on escape from innate immune responses.Entities:
Keywords: Birds; Evolution; MAVS; RIG-I-like receptors; STING; Toll-like receptors
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35059779 PMCID: PMC8776391 DOI: 10.1007/s00251-021-01238-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Immunogenetics ISSN: 0093-7711 Impact factor: 2.846
Fig. 1RNA viruses are primarily detected in avian cells by binding of RNA by endosomal TLRs and cytoplasmic nucleic acid sensors. Single-stranded RNA is detected by TLR7 (primarily in B cells and possibly pDCs). Double-stranded RNA is detected by TLR3 and MDA5. RIG-I detects 5′-triphosphate RNA panhandle structures. E3 ubiquitin ligases are involved in activation of mammalian RIG-I, and MDA5; however, this is still unclear in birds. Both RIG-I and RIPLET are missing in chickens. STING potentiates the signal from MDA5 and also detects viral fusion. Oligomerization of components (MAVS) or formation of a supramolecular complex (myddosome or triffosome) initiates the signalling. Phosphorylation of adaptor proteins TRIF, MAVS, and STING by TBK1 (or IKK) recruits IRF7 (phosphorylation in red), whereby it becomes phosphorylated by TBK1 (blue) and dimerizes to enter the nucleus and drive transcription of type I interferons. Signalling from MyD88 recruits IRAK and TRAF6 to activate IRF7 and degrade the inhibitor of NF-κB to drive transcription of proinflammatory cytokines. Intracellular signalling is inferred from interpretation of functional data and conserved signalling mechanisms, many of which still need to be experimentally tested in birds.
Functional analyses of avian pattern recognition receptors and signalling components involved in detection of RNA viruses
| PRR pathway | Signalling component | Description of function | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| chTLR3 | Response to dsRNA | Karpala et al. ( | |
| duTLR3 | Response to dsRNA | Yilmaz et al. ( | |
| chTRIF | Identified in genome | Gillespie et al. ( | |
| TLR3 | duTRIF | Activates IFN-β signalling | Wei et al. ( |
| chIRF7 | Knockout impairs IFN-β signalling | Kim et al. ( | |
| duIRF7 | Overexpression reduces viral titre | Chen et al. ( | |
| chIFNα | Antiviral activity | Sick et al. ( | |
| chIFN2 (chIFN-β) | Antiviral activity | Sick et al. ( | |
| chTLR7 | Detection of small ligands and ssRNA | Philbin et al. ( | |
| duTLR7 | Detection of small ligands | MacDonald et al. ( | |
| chMyD88 | Tissue distribution | Wheaton et al. ( | |
| duMyD88 | Induced NF-κB and IL-6 | Cheng et al. ( | |
| chTRAF6 | Upregulated by viral infection | Jin et al. ( | |
| TLR7 | duTRAF6 | Activated NF-κB | Zhai et al. ( |
| chTBK1 | siRNA knockdown reduced IFN-β signalling | Wang et al. ( | |
| duTBK1 | siRNA knockdown reduced IFN-β signalling | Hua et al. ( | |
| duIKKβ | Knockdown decreased NF-κB signaling | Li et al. ( | |
| duIKKα | Knockdown decreased NF-κB signalling | Zhou et al. ( | |
| chNF-kB | Binds consensus κB motifs in DNA | Ikeda et al. ( | |
| duRIG-I | Recognizes RIG-I ligand | Barber et al. ( | |
| RIG-I | duMAVS | siRNA knockdown decreases IFN-β expression; Induces IFN-β signalling by oligomeric helical assembly | Li et al. ( |
| duTRIM25 | Ubiquitinates RIG-I | Miranzo-Navarro and Magor ( | |
| duRIPLET | Undetermined | Magor et al. ( | |
| chMDA5 | activates IFN-β reporter; siRNA knockdown decreased IFN-β signalling to AIV and poly (I:C) | Childs et al. ( | |
| MDA5 | duMDA5 | Overexpression of CARD domains decreased viral titre | Wei et al. ( |
| chTRIM65 | Uncharacterized | ||
| STING | chSTING | siRNA knockdown increased viral titres for AIV, NDV and FPV | Cheng et al. ( |
| duSTING | Overexpression inhibited AIV replication | Cheng et al. ( |