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Interference with the production of infectious viral particles and bimodal inhibition of replication are broadly conserved antiviral properties of IFITMs.

Authors :
Kevin Tartour
Xuan-Nhi Nguyen
Romain Appourchaux
Sonia Assil
Véronique Barateau
Louis-Marie Bloyet
Julien Burlaud Gaillard
Marie-Pierre Confort
Beatriz Escudero-Perez
Henri Gruffat
Saw See Hong
Marie Moroso
Olivier Reynard
Stéphanie Reynard
Elodie Decembre
Najate Ftaich
Axel Rossi
Nannan Wu
Frédérick Arnaud
Sylvain Baize
Marlène Dreux
Denis Gerlier
Glaucia Paranhos-Baccala
Viktor Volchkov
Philippe Roingeard
Andrea Cimarelli
Source :
PLoS Pathogens, Vol 13, Iss 9, p e1006610 (2017)
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Public Library of Science (PLoS), 2017.

Abstract

IFITMs are broad antiviral factors that block incoming virions in endosomal vesicles, protecting target cells from infection. In the case of HIV-1, we and others reported the existence of an additional antiviral mechanism through which IFITMs lead to the production of virions of reduced infectivity. However, whether this second mechanism of inhibition is unique to HIV or extends to other viruses is currently unknown. To address this question, we have analyzed the susceptibility of a broad spectrum of viruses to the negative imprinting of the virion particles infectivity by IFITMs. The results we have gathered indicate that this second antiviral property of IFITMs extends well beyond HIV and we were able to identify viruses susceptible to the three IFITMs altogether (HIV-1, SIV, MLV, MPMV, VSV, MeV, EBOV, WNV), as well as viruses that displayed a member-specific susceptibility (EBV, DUGV), or were resistant to all IFITMs (HCV, RVFV, MOPV, AAV). The swapping of genetic elements between resistant and susceptible viruses allowed us to point to specificities in the viral mode of assembly, rather than glycoproteins as dominant factors of susceptibility. However, we also show that, contrarily to X4-, R5-tropic HIV-1 envelopes confer resistance against IFITM3, suggesting that viral receptors add an additional layer of complexity in the IFITMs-HIV interplay. Lastly, we show that the overall antiviral effects ascribed to IFITMs during spreading infections, are the result of a bimodal inhibition in which IFITMs act both by protecting target cells from incoming viruses and in driving the production of virions of reduced infectivity. Overall, our study reports for the first time that the negative imprinting of the virion particles infectivity is a conserved antiviral property of IFITMs and establishes IFITMs as a paradigm of restriction factor capable of interfering with two distinct phases of a virus life cycle.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15537366 and 15537374
Volume :
13
Issue :
9
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
PLoS Pathogens
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.1ae7ec7be9d4b84a06a17adedcfc46d
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1006610