MRC-University of Glasgow Centre for Virus Research, Glasgow, Scotland, United Kingdom.
School of Biology, Centre for Biomolecular Sciences, University of St. Andrews, St. Andrews, Fife, United Kingdom.
mBio. 2023 Jun 27;14(3):e0010123. doi: 10.1128/mbio.00101-23. Epub 2023 Apr 25.
Infected hosts possess two alternative strategies to protect themselves against the negative impact of virus infections: resistance, used to abrogate virus replication, and disease tolerance, used to avoid tissue damage without controlling viral burden. The principles governing pathogen resistance are well understood, while less is known about those involved in disease tolerance. Here, we studied bluetongue virus (BTV), the cause of bluetongue disease of ruminants, as a model system to investigate the mechanisms of virus-host interactions correlating with disease tolerance. BTV induces clinical disease mainly in sheep, while cattle are considered reservoirs of infection, rarely exhibiting clinical symptoms despite sustained viremia. Using primary cells from multiple donors, we show that BTV consistently reaches higher titers in ovine cells than cells from cattle. The variable replication kinetics of BTV in sheep and cow cells were mostly abolished by abrogating the cell type I interferon (IFN) response. We identified restriction factors blocking BTV replication, but both the sheep and cow orthologues of these antiviral genes possess anti-BTV properties. Importantly, we demonstrate that BTV induces a faster host cell protein synthesis shutoff in primary sheep cells than cow cells, which results in an earlier downregulation of antiviral proteins. Moreover, by using RNA sequencing (RNA-seq), we also show a more pronounced expression of interferon-stimulated genes (ISGs) in BTV-infected cow cells than sheep cells. Our data provide a new perspective on how the type I IFN response in reservoir species can have overall positive effects on both virus and host evolution. The host immune response usually aims to inhibit virus replication in order to avoid cell damage and disease. In some cases, however, the infected host avoids the deleterious effects of infection despite high levels of viral replication. This strategy is known as disease tolerance, and it is used by animal reservoirs of some zoonotic viruses. Here, using a virus of ruminants (bluetongue virus [BTV]) as an experimental system, we dissected virus-host interactions in cells collected from species that are susceptible (sheep) or tolerant (cow) to disease. We show that (i) virus modulation of the host antiviral type I interferon (IFN) responses, (ii) viral replication kinetics, and (iii) virus-induced cell damage differ in tolerant and susceptible BTV-infected cells. Understanding the complex virus-host interactions in disease tolerance can allow us to disentangle the critical balance between protective and damaging host immune responses.
抵抗,用于阻止病毒复制;疾病耐受,用于避免组织损伤而不控制病毒载量。控制病原体抵抗的原则已得到很好的理解,而对于疾病耐受所涉及的原则则知之甚少。在这里,我们以蓝舌病毒(BTV)为模型系统,研究了与疾病耐受相关的病毒-宿主相互作用的机制,BTV 是引起反刍动物蓝舌病的病原体。BTV 主要在绵羊中引起临床疾病,而牛被认为是感染的储主,尽管持续存在病毒血症,但很少表现出临床症状。使用来自多个供体的原代细胞,我们表明 BTV 在绵羊细胞中的滴度始终高于牛细胞。通过消除细胞 I 型干扰素(IFN)反应,BTV 在绵羊和牛细胞中的可变复制动力学大多被消除。我们鉴定了阻止 BTV 复制的限制因子,但这些抗病毒基因的绵羊和牛同源物都具有抗 BTV 的特性。重要的是,我们证明 BTV 在原代绵羊细胞中诱导更快的宿主细胞蛋白合成关闭,这导致抗病毒蛋白更早地下调。此外,通过使用 RNA 测序(RNA-seq),我们还表明 BTV 感染的牛细胞中干扰素刺激基因(ISGs)的表达更为明显。我们的数据为了解储主物种中的 I 型 IFN 反应如何对病毒和宿主进化产生总体积极影响提供了新的视角。宿主免疫反应通常旨在抑制病毒复制,以避免细胞损伤和疾病。然而,在某些情况下,尽管病毒复制水平很高,受感染的宿主仍能避免感染的有害影响。这种策略被称为疾病耐受,并且一些人畜共患病毒的动物储主就是如此。在这里,我们使用反刍动物病毒(蓝舌病毒 [BTV])作为实验系统,在对疾病易感(绵羊)或耐受(牛)的物种中分离出的细胞中,剖析了病毒-宿主相互作用。我们表明:(i)病毒对宿主抗病毒 I 型 IFN 反应的调节,(ii)病毒复制动力学,和(iii)BTV 感染细胞中的病毒诱导细胞损伤在耐受和易感细胞中不同。了解疾病耐受中的复杂病毒-宿主相互作用可以使我们能够区分保护性和破坏性宿主免疫反应之间的关键平衡。