Yue Yang, Li Qingyu, Chen Changguo, Yang Juntao, Song Weian, Zhou Changdong, Cui Yuke, Wei Zhenqiao, He Qi, Wang Chenhui, Lin Hongjun, Li Jiangbo, Li Jian, Xi Ji, Song Xiang, Yang Wen, Zhang Ze, Shu Wenjie, Guo Liang, Wang Shengqi
Bioinformatics Center of AMMS, Beijing, China.
The Sixth Medical Center of Chinese, PLA General Hospital, Beijing, China.
Signal Transduct Target Ther. 2025 Jun 15;10(1):191. doi: 10.1038/s41392-025-02272-1.
Influenza A virus (IAV) poses a significant threat to human health. The outcome of IAV results from the viral-host interaction, with the underlying molecular mechanisms largely unknown. By integrating the plasma proteomics data of the IAV-infected patients into the viral-inflammation protein-protein interaction (VI-PPI) network created in this study, purine nucleoside phosphorylase (PNP), the critical enzyme in purine salvage, was identified as a potential hub gene that connected the different stages of IAV infection. Extended survival rates and reduced pulmonary inflammatory lesions were observed in alveolar epithelial cell (AEC)-specific PNP conditional knockout mice upon H1N1 infection. Mechanistically, PB1-F2 of IAV was revealed as a novel viral transcriptional factor to bind to the TATA box of PNP promoter, leading to enhanced purine salvage in H1N1-challenged AECs. The activation of PNP-mediated purine salvage was verified in IAV-infected patients and A549 cells. PNP knockdown elicited a purine metabolic shift from augmented salvage pathway to de novo synthesis, constraining both viral infection and pro-inflammatory signaling through APRT-AICAR-AMPK activation. Moreover, durdihydroartemisinin (DHA), predicted by VI-PPI as a novel PNP inhibitor, exerted beneficial effects on the survival and weight gain of H1N1-challenged mice via its direct binding to PNP. To reveal for the first time, we found that PNP, activated by IAV, plays a hub role within H1N1-host interaction, simultaneously modulating viral replication and hyperinflammation through purine salvage. Our study sheds new light on a "two-for-one" strategy by targeting purine salvage in combating IAV-related pathology, suggesting PNP as a potential novel anti-influenza host target.
甲型流感病毒(IAV)对人类健康构成重大威胁。IAV感染的结果源于病毒与宿主的相互作用,其潜在的分子机制在很大程度上尚不清楚。通过将IAV感染患者的血浆蛋白质组学数据整合到本研究创建的病毒-炎症蛋白质-蛋白质相互作用(VI-PPI)网络中,嘌呤核苷磷酸化酶(PNP),即嘌呤补救途径中的关键酶,被确定为连接IAV感染不同阶段的潜在枢纽基因。在H1N1感染后,肺泡上皮细胞(AEC)特异性PNP条件性敲除小鼠的生存率延长,肺部炎症病变减少。从机制上讲,IAV的PB1-F2被揭示为一种新型病毒转录因子,可与PNP启动子的TATA框结合,导致H1N1攻击的AEC中嘌呤补救增强。在IAV感染的患者和A549细胞中验证了PNP介导的嘌呤补救的激活。PNP基因敲低引发嘌呤代谢从增强的补救途径向从头合成转变,通过APRT-AICAR-AMPK激活抑制病毒感染和促炎信号传导。此外,VI-PPI预测双氢青蒿素(DHA)是一种新型PNP抑制剂,通过直接与PNP结合,对H1N1攻击的小鼠的生存和体重增加产生有益影响。首次揭示,我们发现IAV激活的PNP在H1N1与宿主的相互作用中起枢纽作用,通过嘌呤补救同时调节病毒复制和过度炎症。我们的研究通过针对嘌呤补救来对抗IAV相关病理,为一种“一石二鸟”的策略提供了新的思路,表明PNP是一种潜在的新型抗流感宿主靶点。