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Disparate macrophage responses are linked to infection outcome of Hantan virus in humans or rodents.

Authors :
Ma, Hongwei
Yang, Yongheng
Nie, Tiejian
Yan, Rong
Si, Yue
Wei, Jing
Li, Mengyun
Liu, He
Ye, Wei
Zhang, Hui
Cheng, Linfeng
Zhang, Liang
Lv, Xin
Luo, Limin
Xu, Zhikai
Zhang, Xijing
Lei, Yingfeng
Zhang, Fanglin
Source :
Nature Communications; 1/10/2024, Vol. 15 Issue 1, p1-25, 25p
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Hantaan virus (HTNV) is asymptomatically carried by rodents, yet causes lethal hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome in humans, the underlying mechanisms of which remain to be elucidated. Here, we show that differential macrophage responses may determine disparate infection outcomes. In mice, late-phase inactivation of inflammatory macrophage prevents cytokine storm syndrome that usually occurs in HTNV-infected patients. This is attained by elaborate crosstalk between Notch and NF-κB pathways. Mechanistically, Notch receptors activated by HTNV enhance NF-κB signaling by recruiting IKKβ and p65, promoting inflammatory macrophage polarization in both species. However, in mice rather than humans, Notch-mediated inflammation is timely restrained by a series of murine-specific long noncoding RNAs transcribed by the Notch pathway in a negative feedback manner. Among them, the lnc-ip65 detaches p65 from the Notch receptor and inhibits p65 phosphorylation, rewiring macrophages from the pro-inflammation to the pro-resolution phenotype. Genetic ablation of lnc-ip65 leads to destructive HTNV infection in mice. Thus, our findings reveal an immune-braking function of murine noncoding RNAs, offering a special therapeutic strategy for HTNV infection. Hantaan virus is carried and transmitted by rodents and results in asymptomatic infection, yet transmission to humans' results in symptomatic disease and development of hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome. Here the authors explore the disparate effects in myeloid cells from mice and humans. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20411723
Volume :
15
Issue :
1
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Nature Communications
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
174711291
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-44687-4