Department of Pathology and Immunology, Washington University School of Medicine, Saint Louis, Missouri, USA.
Department of Medicine, Washington University School of Medicine, Saint Louis, Missouri, USA.
J Virol. 2019 Feb 5;93(4). doi: 10.1128/JVI.01806-18. Print 2019 Feb 15.
We previously generated STING N153S knock-in mice that have a human disease-associated gain-of-function mutation in STING. Patients with this mutation (STING N154S in humans) develop STING-associated vasculopathy with onset in infancy (SAVI), a severe pediatric autoinflammatory disease characterized by pulmonary fibrosis. Since this mutation promotes the upregulation of antiviral type I interferon-stimulated genes (ISGs), we hypothesized that STING N153S knock-in mice may develop more severe autoinflammatory disease in response to a virus challenge. To test this hypothesis, we infected heterozygous STING N153S mice with murine gammaherpesvirus 68 (γHV68). STING N153S mice were highly vulnerable to infection and developed pulmonary fibrosis after infection. In addition to impairing CD8 T cell responses and humoral immunity, STING N153S also promoted the replication of γHV68 in cultured macrophages. In further support of a combined innate and adaptive immunodeficiency, γHV68 infection was more severe in STING N153S mice than in littermate mice, which completely lack adaptive immunity. Thus, a gain-of-function STING mutation creates a combined innate and adaptive immunodeficiency that leads to virus-induced pulmonary fibrosis. A variety of human rheumatologic disease-causing mutations have recently been identified. Some of these mutations are found in viral nucleic acid-sensing proteins, but whether viruses can influence the onset or progression of these human diseases is less well understood. One such autoinflammatory disease, called STING-associated vasculopathy with onset in infancy (SAVI), affects children and leads to severe lung disease. We generated mice with a SAVI-associated STING mutation and infected them with γHV68, a common DNA virus that is related to human Epstein-Barr virus. Mice with the human disease-causing STING mutation were more vulnerable to infection than wild-type littermate control animals. Furthermore, the STING mutant mice developed lung fibrosis similar to that of patients with SAVI. These findings reveal that a human STING mutation creates severe immunodeficiency, leading to virus-induced lung disease in mice.
我们之前生成了 STING N153S 敲入小鼠,其在 STING 中具有与人类疾病相关的功能获得性突变。具有该突变(人类中的 STING N154S)的患者会出现 STING 相关性血管病(SAVI),这是一种以肺纤维化为特征的严重儿科自身炎症性疾病。由于该突变促进抗病毒 I 型干扰素刺激基因(ISGs)的上调,我们假设 STING N153S 敲入小鼠在病毒挑战下可能会发展出更严重的自身炎症性疾病。为了验证这一假设,我们用小鼠γ疱疹病毒 68(γHV68)感染杂合子 STING N153S 小鼠。STING N153S 小鼠对感染高度易感性,并在感染后发展为肺纤维化。除了损害 CD8 T 细胞反应和体液免疫外,STING N153S 还促进了γHV68 在培养的巨噬细胞中的复制。进一步支持先天和适应性免疫缺陷的是,与完全缺乏适应性免疫的同窝小鼠相比,γHV68 感染在 STING N153S 小鼠中更为严重。因此,功能获得性 STING 突变导致先天和适应性免疫缺陷的联合,导致病毒诱导的肺纤维化。最近已经发现了多种人类风湿性疾病致病突变。其中一些突变存在于病毒核酸感应蛋白中,但病毒是否会影响这些人类疾病的发病或进展尚不清楚。有一种自身炎症性疾病,称为 STING 相关性血管病(SAVI),发病于婴儿期,会影响儿童并导致严重的肺部疾病。我们生成了带有 SAVI 相关 STING 突变的小鼠,并感染了γHV68,γHV68 是一种常见的与人类 EBV 相关的 DNA 病毒。与野生型同窝对照动物相比,带有人类疾病致病 STING 突变的小鼠对感染更为敏感。此外,STING 突变小鼠发展出类似于 SAVI 患者的肺纤维化。这些发现表明,人类 STING 突变导致严重的免疫缺陷,导致小鼠病毒诱导的肺部疾病。