Samuel C E
Department of Biological Sciences, University of California, Santa Barbara 93106.
Virology. 1991 Jul;183(1):1-11. doi: 10.1016/0042-6822(91)90112-o.
Considerable progress has been made in the understanding of the molecular biology of the human interferon system. The genes encoding the interferons, their receptors, and the proteins that mediate many of their biological effects have been molecularly cloned and characterized. The availability of complete cDNA clones of components of the interferon systems has contributed significantly to our understanding of both the biology and the biochemistry of the antiviral actions of interferons. At the biological level, the antiviral effects of interferon may be viewed to be virus-type nonspecific. That is, treatment of cells with one type or even subspecies of interferon often leads to the generation of an antiviral state effective against a wide array of different RNA and DNA animal viruses. However, at the biochemical level, the antiviral action of interferon is often virus-type selective. That is, the apparent molecular mechanism which is primarily responsible for the inhibition of virus replication may differ considerably between virus types, and even host cells. For example, the IFN-regulated Mx protein selectively inhibits influenza virus but not other viruses when constitutively expressed in mouse cells. The IFN-regulated 2',5'-oligoadenylate synthetase selectively inhibits EMC and mengo viruses, two picornaviruses, but not viruses of other families when constitutively expressed in transfected cells. Some viruses are typically insensitive to the antiviral effects of interferon, both in cell culture and in intact animals. This lack of sensitivity to IFN may result from a virus-mediated direct antagonism of the interferon system. For example, in the case of adenovirus, the activation of the IFN-regulated RNA-dependent P1/elF-2 protein kinase is blocked by the virus-associated VA RNA. The relative sensitivity to interferon of different animal viruses varies appreciably. All three of the basic components required to measure an antiviral response may play a role in determining the relative effectiveness of the antiviral response: the species of interferon administered; the kind of cell treated; and, the type of virus used to challenge the interferon-treated host cell. Thus, the relative sensitivity to interferon observed for a particular interferon-cell-virus combination is likely the result of the equilibrium between the many agonists and antagonists which contribute to the overall response. That is, the relative sensitivity of a virus to the inhibitory action of IFN is governed by the qualitative nature and quantitative amount of the individual IFN-regulated cell proteins that may collectively contribute to the inhibition of virus replication.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
在对人类干扰素系统分子生物学的理解方面已经取得了相当大的进展。编码干扰素、其受体以及介导其许多生物学效应的蛋白质的基因已被分子克隆和表征。干扰素系统各组分完整cDNA克隆的可得性,对我们理解干扰素抗病毒作用的生物学和生物化学有显著贡献。在生物学层面,干扰素的抗病毒作用可被视为病毒类型非特异性的。也就是说,用一种类型甚至亚种的干扰素处理细胞,常常会导致产生一种对多种不同的RNA和DNA动物病毒有效的抗病毒状态。然而,在生物化学层面,干扰素的抗病毒作用通常是病毒类型选择性的。也就是说,主要负责抑制病毒复制的明显分子机制在不同病毒类型之间,甚至在宿主细胞之间可能有很大差异。例如,IFN调节的Mx蛋白在小鼠细胞中组成性表达时,选择性抑制流感病毒但不抑制其他病毒。IFN调节的2',5'-寡腺苷酸合成酶在转染细胞中组成性表达时,选择性抑制脑心肌炎病毒和门戈病毒这两种微小核糖核酸病毒,但不抑制其他科的病毒。一些病毒在细胞培养和完整动物中通常对干扰素的抗病毒作用不敏感。这种对IFN缺乏敏感性可能是由于病毒介导的对干扰素系统的直接拮抗作用。例如,就腺病毒而言,病毒相关的VA RNA会阻断IFN调节的依赖RNA的P1/elF-2蛋白激酶的激活。不同动物病毒对干扰素的相对敏感性有明显差异。测量抗病毒反应所需的所有三个基本组分可能在确定抗病毒反应的相对有效性中起作用:所施用的干扰素种类;所处理的细胞种类;以及,用于挑战经干扰素处理的宿主细胞的病毒类型。因此,观察到的特定干扰素-细胞-病毒组合对干扰素的相对敏感性可能是许多促成总体反应的激动剂和拮抗剂之间平衡的结果。也就是说,病毒对IFN抑制作用的相对敏感性由可能共同促成抑制病毒复制的单个IFN调节的细胞蛋白的性质和数量决定。(摘要截短至400字)