Tesfay Mulu Z, Yin Jun, Gardner Christina L, Khoretonenko Mikhail V, Korneeva Nadejda L, Rhoads Robert E, Ryman Kate D, Klimstra William B
Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center, 1501 Kings Highway, Shreveport, LA 71130, USA.
J Virol. 2008 Mar;82(6):2620-30. doi: 10.1128/JVI.01784-07. Epub 2007 Dec 26.
The alpha/beta interferon (IFN-alpha/beta) response is critical for host protection against disseminated replication of many viruses, primarily due to the transcriptional upregulation of genes encoding antiviral proteins. Previously, we determined that infection of mice with Sindbis virus (SB) could be converted from asymptomatic to rapidly fatal by elimination of this response (K. D. Ryman et al., J. Virol. 74:3366-3378, 2000). Probing of the specific antiviral proteins important for IFN-mediated control of virus replication indicated that the double-stranded RNA-dependent protein kinase, PKR, exerted some early antiviral effects prior to IFN-alpha/beta signaling; however, the ability of IFN-alpha/beta to inhibit SB and protect mice from clinical disease was essentially undiminished in the absence of PKR, RNase L, and Mx proteins (K. D. Ryman et al., Viral Immunol. 15:53-76, 2002). One characteristic of the PKR/RNase L/Mx-independent antiviral effect was a blockage of viral protein accumulation early after infection (K. D. Ryman et al., J. Virol. 79:1487-1499, 2005). We show here that IFN-alpha/beta priming induces a PKR-independent activity that inhibits m(7)G cap-dependent translation at a step after association of cap-binding factors and the small ribosome subunit but before formation of the 80S ribosome. Furthermore, the activity targets mRNAs that enter across the cytoplasmic membrane, but nucleus-transcribed RNAs are relatively unaffected. Therefore, this IFN-alpha/beta-induced antiviral activity represents a mechanism through which IFN-alpha/beta-exposed cells are defended against viruses that enter the cytoplasm, while preserving essential host activities, including the expression of antiviral and stress-responsive genes.
α/β干扰素(IFN-α/β)反应对于宿主抵御多种病毒的播散性复制至关重要,这主要是由于编码抗病毒蛋白的基因转录上调所致。此前,我们确定通过消除这种反应,用辛德毕斯病毒(SB)感染小鼠可从无症状转变为迅速致死(K.D.赖曼等人,《病毒学杂志》74:3366 - 3378,2000年)。对IFN介导的病毒复制控制中重要的特定抗病毒蛋白进行探究表明,双链RNA依赖性蛋白激酶PKR在IFN-α/β信号传导之前发挥了一些早期抗病毒作用;然而,在缺乏PKR、核糖核酸酶L和Mx蛋白的情况下,IFN-α/β抑制SB并保护小鼠免受临床疾病影响的能力基本未减弱(K.D.赖曼等人,《病毒免疫学》15:53 - 76,2002年)。PKR/核糖核酸酶L/Mx非依赖性抗病毒作用的一个特征是在感染后早期阻断病毒蛋白积累(K.D.赖曼等人,《病毒学杂志》79:1487 - 1