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Requirement of NOX2 and Reactive Oxygen Species for Efficient RIG-I-Mediated Antiviral Response through Regulation of MAVS Expression
Authors:Anton Soucy-Faulkner  Espérance Mukawera  Karin Fink  Alexis Martel  Loubna Jouan  Yves Nzengue  Daniel Lamarre  Christine Vande Velde  Nathalie Grandvaux
Affiliation:1. CRCHUM - Centre Hospitalier de l''Université de Montréal, Montréal, Québec, Canada.; 2. Department of Biochemistry, Faculty of Medicine, Université de Montréal, Montréal, Québec, Canada.; 3. Department of Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Université de Montréal, Montréal, Québec, Canada.;North Carolina State University, United States of America
Abstract:The innate immune response is essential to the host defense against viruses, through restriction of virus replication and coordination of the adaptive immune response. Induction of antiviral genes is a tightly regulated process initiated mainly through sensing of invading virus nucleic acids in the cytoplasm by RIG-I like helicases, RIG-I or Mda5, which transmit the signal through a common mitochondria-associated adaptor, MAVS. Although major breakthroughs have recently been made, much remains unknown about the mechanisms that translate virus recognition into antiviral genes expression. Beside the reputed detrimental role, reactive oxygen species (ROS) act as modulators of cellular signaling and gene regulation. NADPH oxidase (NOX) enzymes are a main source of deliberate cellular ROS production. Here, we found that NOX2 and ROS are required for the host cell to trigger an efficient RIG-I-mediated IRF-3 activation and downstream antiviral IFNβ and IFIT1 gene expression. Additionally, we provide evidence that NOX2 is critical for the expression of the central mitochondria-associated adaptor MAVS. Taken together these data reveal a new facet to the regulation of the innate host defense against viruses through the identification of an unrecognized role of NOX2 and ROS.
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