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Reversible Inhibition of Murine Cytomegalovirus Replication by Gamma Interferon (IFN- ) in Primary Macrophages Involves a Primed Type I IFN-Signaling Subnetwork for Full Establishment of an Immediate-Early Antiviral State

Authors :
Kai A. Kropp
Sara Rodríguez-Martín
Mathieu Blanc
Garwin Sing
Kevin A. Robertson
Paul Lacaze
Paul Dickinson
Birgit Strobl
Andreas Busche
Peter Ghazal
Mathias Mueller
Thorsten Forster
Stipan Jonjić
Muhamad F. B. Noor Hassim
Mizanur Khondoker
Ana Angulo
Source :
Kropp, K A, Robertson, K A, Sing, G, Rodriguez-Martin, S, Blanc, M, Lacaze, P, Hassim, M F B N, Khondoker, M R, Busche, A, Dickinson, P, Forster, T, Strobl, B, Mueller, M, Jonjic, S, Angulo, A & Ghazal, P 2011, ' Reversible inhibition of murine cytomegalovirus replication by gamma interferon (IFN-γ) in primary macrophages involves a primed type I IFN-signaling subnetwork for full establishment of an immediate-early antiviral state ', Journal of Virology, vol. 85, no. 19, pp. 10286-10299 . https://doi.org/10.1128/JVI.00373-11, Journal of Virology, Volume 85, Issue 19
Publication Year :
2011

Abstract

Activated macrophages play a central role in controlling inflammatory responses to infection and are tightly regulated to rapidly mount responses to infectious challenge. Type I interferon (alpha/beta interferon [IFN-α/β]) and type II interferon (IFN-γ) play a crucial role in activating macrophages and subsequently restricting viral infections. Both types of IFNs signal through related but distinct signaling pathways, inducing a vast number of interferon-stimulated genes that are overlapping but distinguishable. The exact mechanism by which IFNs, particularly IFN-γ, inhibit DNA viruses such as cytomegalovirus (CMV) is still not fully understood. Here, we investigate the antiviral state developed in macrophages upon reversible inhibition of murine CMV by IFN-γ. On the basis of molecular profiling of the reversible inhibition, we identify a significant contribution of a restricted type I IFN subnetwork linked with IFN-γ activation. Genetic knockout of the type I-signaling pathway, in the context of IFN-γ stimulation, revealed an essential requirement for a primed type I-signaling process in developing a full refractory state in macrophages. A minimal transient induction of IFN-β upon macrophage activation with IFN-γ is also detectable. In dose and kinetic viral replication inhibition experiments with IFN-γ, the establishment of an antiviral effect is demonstrated to occur within the first hours of infection. We show that the inhibitory mechanisms at these very early times involve a blockade of the viral major immediate-early promoter activity. Altogether our results show that a primed type I IFN subnetwork contributes to an immediate-early antiviral state induced by type II IFN activation of macrophages, with a potential further amplification loop contributed by transient induction of IFN-β.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0022538X
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Kropp, K A, Robertson, K A, Sing, G, Rodriguez-Martin, S, Blanc, M, Lacaze, P, Hassim, M F B N, Khondoker, M R, Busche, A, Dickinson, P, Forster, T, Strobl, B, Mueller, M, Jonjic, S, Angulo, A & Ghazal, P 2011, ' Reversible inhibition of murine cytomegalovirus replication by gamma interferon (IFN-γ) in primary macrophages involves a primed type I IFN-signaling subnetwork for full establishment of an immediate-early antiviral state ', Journal of Virology, vol. 85, no. 19, pp. 10286-10299 . https://doi.org/10.1128/JVI.00373-11, Journal of Virology, Volume 85, Issue 19
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d092d7ce5c858ada6e32b019bc1cad79
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1128/jvi.00373-11