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Study of Human RIG-I Polymorphisms Identifies Two Variants with an Opposite Impact on the Antiviral Immune Response
Authors:Julien Pothlichet  Anne Burtey  Andriy V Kubarenko  Gregory Caignard  Brigitte Solhonne  Frédéric Tangy  Meriem Ben-Ali  Lluis Quintana-Murci  Andrea Heinzmann  Jean-Daniel Chiche  Pierre-Olivier Vidalain  Alexander N R Weber  Michel Chignard  Mustapha Si-Tahar
Abstract:

Background

RIG-I is a pivotal receptor that detects numerous RNA and DNA viruses. Thus, its defectiveness may strongly impair the host antiviral immunity. Remarkably, very little information is available on RIG-I single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) presenting a functional impact on the host response.

Methodology/Principal Findings

Here, we studied all non-synonymous SNPs of RIG-I using biochemical and structural modeling approaches. We identified two important variants: (i) a frameshift mutation (P229fs) that generates a truncated, constitutively active receptor and (ii) a serine to isoleucine mutation (S183I), which drastically inhibits antiviral signaling and exerts a down-regulatory effect, due to unintended stable complexes of RIG-I with itself and with MAVS, a key downstream adapter protein.

Conclusions/Significance

Hence, this study characterized P229fs and S183I SNPs as major functional RIG-I variants and potential genetic determinants of viral susceptibility. This work also demonstrated that serine 183 is a residue that critically regulates RIG-I-induced antiviral signaling.
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