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Avian influenza viruses suppress innate immunity by inducing trans-transcriptional readthrough via SSU72

Authors :
Yan Zhao
Fengming Huang
Zhen Zou
Yuhai Bi
Yang Yang
Cong Zhang
Qiang Liu
Daozhen Shang
Yiwu Yan
Xiangwu Ju
Song Mei
Peng Xie
Xiao Li
Mingyao Tian
Shuguang Tan
Huijun Lu
Zongsheng Han
Kangtai Liu
Yuqing Zhang
Junbo Liang
Zhu Liang
Qingchao Zhang
Jiahui Chang
William J. Liu
Cong Feng
Tanshi Li
Michael Q. Zhang
Xiaoyue Wang
George F. Gao
Yingxia Liu
Ningyi Jin
Chengyu Jiang
Source :
Cellular & Molecular Immunology. 19:702-714
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2022.

Abstract

Innate immunity plays critical antiviral roles. The highly virulent avian influenza viruses (AIVs) H5N1, H7N9, and H5N6 can better escape host innate immune responses than the less virulent seasonal H1N1 virus. Here, we report a mechanism by which transcriptional readthrough (TRT)-mediated suppression of innate immunity occurs post AIV infection. By using cell lines, mouse lungs, and patient PBMCs, we showed that genes on the complementary strand (“trans” genes) influenced by TRT were involved in the disruption of host antiviral responses during AIV infection. The trans-TRT enhanced viral lethality, and TRT abolishment increased cell viability and STAT1/2 expression. The viral NS1 protein directly bound to SSU72, and degradation of SSU72 induced TRT. SSU72 overexpression reduced TRT and alleviated mouse lung injury. Our results suggest that AIVs infection induce TRT by reducing SSU72 expression, thereby impairing host immune responses, a molecular mechanism acting through the NS1-SSU72-trans-TRT-STAT1/2 axis. Thus, restoration of SSU72 expression might be a potential strategy for preventing AIV pandemics.

Details

ISSN :
20420226
Volume :
19
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cellular & Molecular Immunology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f6e6a39e4aafae4ed6604d751c8e06e6
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41423-022-00843-8