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Identification of Five Interferon-Induced Cellular Proteins That Inhibit West Nile Virus and Dengue Virus Infections
Authors:Dong Jiang  Jessica M. Weidner  Min Qing  Xiao-Ben Pan  Haitao Guo  Chunxiao Xu  Xianchao Zhang  Alex Birk  Jinhong Chang  Pei-Yong Shi  Timothy M. Block  Ju-Tao Guo
Affiliation:Drexel Institute for Biotechnology and Virology Research, Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Drexel University College of Medicine, Doylestown, Pennsylvania 18902,1. Wadsworth Center, New York State Department of Health, Albany, New York,2. Institute for Hepatitis Virus Research, Hepatitis B Foundation, Doylestown, Pennsylvania 189023.
Abstract:Interferons (IFNs) are key mediators of the host innate antiviral immune response. To identify IFN-stimulated genes (ISGs) that instigate an antiviral state against two medically important flaviviruses, West Nile virus (WNV) and dengue virus (DENV), we tested 36 ISGs that are commonly induced by IFN-α for antiviral activity against the two viruses. We discovered that five ISGs efficiently suppressed WNV and/or DENV infection when they were individually expressed in HEK293 cells. Mechanistic analyses revealed that two structurally related cell plasma membrane proteins, IFITM2 and IFITM3, disrupted early steps (entry and/or uncoating) of the viral infection. In contrast, three IFN-induced cellular enzymes, viperin, ISG20, and double-stranded-RNA-activated protein kinase, inhibited steps in viral proteins and/or RNA biosynthesis. Our results thus imply that the antiviral activity of IFN-α is collectively mediated by a panel of ISGs that disrupt multiple steps of the DENV and WNV life cycles.West Nile virus (WNV) and dengue virus (DENV) are mosquito-borne flaviviruses that cause invasive neurological diseases and lethal hemorrhagic fever in humans, respectively (6, 32). Since its first incursion into New York City in 1999, WNV has rapidly spread throughout the continental United States and has recently reached South America (29, 34). In most cases, WNV infection of people resolves as an asymptomatic or a mild febrile illness. However, approximately 1% of infections result in severe neurological disorders, such as encephalitis and meningitis (27). Unlike WNV, for which people are only accidental hosts, DENV has fully adapted to humans (32). It has apparently lost the need for an enzootic cycle and causes a range of diseases in people, from acute febrile illness to life-threatening dengue hemorrhagic fever/dengue shock syndrome (6). Four distinct serotypes of DENV have spread throughout the tropical and subtropical parts of the world, with an estimated 50 to 100 million human cases annually and about 2.5 billion people worldwide being at risk of infection (32). Effective antiviral therapies and vaccines to treat or prevent WNV and DENV infections in humans are not yet available.Type I interferons (IFNs), represented by IFN-α and IFN-β, have been demonstrated to play an essential role in defending against WNV and DENV infections. For example, mice with deficiencies in the induction of type I IFNs and the receptor or JAK-STAT signal transduction pathway of the cytokines are vulnerable to WNV and DENV infections (7, 38, 42, 49-51). In addition, a strain of WNV that fails to block the type I IFN signal transduction pathway is phenotypically attenuated in mice (23, 50). Clinically, during acute DENV infection, innate immune responses play a key role in determining disease outcome (35), and resolution of WNV infection requires effective IFN-mediated innate host responses (23, 43, 53). Therefore, understanding how the IFN-mediated innate immune response functions is one of the critical frontiers in the molecular biology of WNV and DENV pathogenesis (1, 44).IFNs inhibit virus infection by induction of IFN-stimulated genes (ISGs) that disrupt distinct steps of the viral replication cycle (47). However, although IFN treatment of cells induces the expression of hundreds of cellular genes (9), only approximately a dozen ISGs have been experimentally demonstrated to instigate an antiviral state against selected viruses (41). As mentioned above, although there is ample evidence suggesting that IFN-mediated innate immunity plays a critical role in defending against WNV and DENV infections, the underlying antiviral mechanism of the cytokines remains to be understood (6, 16, 31). With WNV, previous studies suggested that mice lacking double-stranded-RNA-activated protein kinase (PKR) and RNase L were more susceptible to the virus infection and had increased viral loads in multiple peripheral organs and neuronal tissues, in comparison with congenic wild-type mice (43). In addition, genetic studies showed that a nonsense mutation in the gene encoding the 2′,5′-oligoadenylate synthetase 1b (OAS1b) isoform was associated with WNV susceptibility in mice, and expression of wild-type OAS1b in mouse fibroblasts efficiently inhibited WNV infection (22, 33, 37, 45). For DENV, it was reported recently that viperin was among the highly induced ISGs in DENV-infected cells and overexpression of viperin in A549 cells significantly reduced DENV replication (13).In principle, to understand how IFNs inhibit DENV and WNV infections, it is essential to know the repertoire of ISGs that are directly implicated in antiviral action and understand how these antiviral ISGs work individually and coordinately to limit virus replication. To achieve this goal, we set out to systematically identify the ISGs that are able to inhibit infection with the two viruses and elucidate their antiviral mechanisms.
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