MRC-University of Glasgow Centre for Virus Research, Glasgow, United Kingdom.
Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Department of Molecular and Cellular Physiology and Department of Structural Biology, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, CA, United States of America.
PLoS Pathog. 2018 Oct 11;14(10):e1007307. doi: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1007307. eCollection 2018 Oct.
As antimicrobial signalling molecules, type III or lambda interferons (IFNλs) are critical for defence against infection by diverse pathogens, including bacteria, fungi and viruses. Counter-intuitively, expression of one member of the family, IFNλ4, is associated with decreased clearance of hepatitis C virus (HCV) in the human population; by contrast, a natural frameshift mutation that abrogates IFNλ4 production improves HCV clearance. To further understand how genetic variation between and within species affects IFNλ4 function, we screened a panel of all known extant coding variants of human IFNλ4 for their antiviral potential and identify three that substantially affect activity: P70S, L79F and K154E. The most notable variant was K154E, which was found in African Congo rainforest 'Pygmy' hunter-gatherers. K154E greatly enhanced in vitro activity in a range of antiviral (HCV, Zika virus, influenza virus and encephalomyocarditis virus) and gene expression assays. Remarkably, E154 is the ancestral residue in mammalian IFNλ4s and is extremely well conserved, yet K154 has been fixed throughout evolution of the hominid genus Homo, including Neanderthals. Compared to chimpanzee IFNλ4, the human orthologue had reduced activity due to amino acid K154. Comparison of published gene expression data from humans and chimpanzees showed that this difference in activity between K154 and E154 in IFNλ4 correlates with differences in antiviral gene expression in vivo during HCV infection. Mechanistically, our data show that the human-specific K154 negatively affects IFNλ4 activity through a novel means by reducing its secretion and potency. We thus demonstrate that attenuated activity of IFNλ4 is conserved among humans and postulate that differences in IFNλ4 activity between species contribute to distinct host-specific responses to-and outcomes of-infection, such as HCV infection. The driver of reduced IFNλ4 antiviral activity in humans remains unknown but likely arose between 6 million and 360,000 years ago in Africa.
作为抗菌信号分子,III 型或 lambda 干扰素(IFNλ)对于抵抗包括细菌、真菌和病毒在内的多种病原体的感染至关重要。反直觉的是,该家族的一个成员 IFNλ4 的表达与人类中丙型肝炎病毒(HCV)清除率降低有关;相比之下,一种自然的移码突变会消除 IFNλ4 的产生,从而改善 HCV 的清除率。为了进一步了解物种间和种内的遗传变异如何影响 IFNλ4 的功能,我们筛选了一组人类 IFNλ4 的所有已知现存编码变体,以确定它们的抗病毒潜力,并发现三个变体对活性有显著影响:P70S、L79F 和 K154E。最显著的变体是 K154E,它存在于非洲刚果雨林中的“俾格米”狩猎采集者中。K154E 在一系列抗病毒(HCV、寨卡病毒、流感病毒和脑心肌炎病毒)和基因表达测定中大大增强了体外活性。值得注意的是,E154 是哺乳动物 IFNλ4 中的原始残基,并且非常保守,但 K154 在人类属 Homo 的进化过程中一直固定不变,包括尼安德特人。与黑猩猩 IFNλ4 相比,人类同源物由于氨基酸 K154 而活性降低。比较人类和黑猩猩发表的基因表达数据表明,IFNλ4 中 K154 和 E154 之间活性的这种差异与 HCV 感染期间体内抗病毒基因表达的差异相关。从机制上讲,我们的数据表明,人类特异性的 K154 通过一种新的方式降低 IFNλ4 的分泌和效力,从而对 IFNλ4 的活性产生负面影响。因此,我们证明 IFNλ4 活性的减弱在人类中是保守的,并假设物种间 IFNλ4 活性的差异导致对感染的独特的宿主特异性反应和结果,例如 HCV 感染。人类中 IFNλ4 抗病毒活性降低的驱动因素尚不清楚,但很可能在 600 万至 36 万年前在非洲出现。