Back to Search Start Over

The RNA Sensor RIG-I Dually Functions as an Innate Sensor and Direct Antiviral Factor for Hepatitis B Virus

Authors :
Sato, Seiichi
Li, Kai
Kameyama, Takeshi
Hayashi, Takaya
Ishida, Yuji
Murakami, Shuko
Watanabe, Tsunamasa
Iijima, Sayuki
Sakurai, Yu
Watashi, Koichi
Tsutsumi, Susumu
Sato, Yusuke
Akita, Hidetaka
Wakita, Takaji
Rice, Charles M.
Harashima, Hideyoshi
Kohara, Michinori
Tanaka, Yasuhito
Takaoka, Akinori
Sato, Seiichi
Li, Kai
Kameyama, Takeshi
Hayashi, Takaya
Ishida, Yuji
Murakami, Shuko
Watanabe, Tsunamasa
Iijima, Sayuki
Sakurai, Yu
Watashi, Koichi
Tsutsumi, Susumu
Sato, Yusuke
Akita, Hidetaka
Wakita, Takaji
Rice, Charles M.
Harashima, Hideyoshi
Kohara, Michinori
Tanaka, Yasuhito
Takaoka, Akinori
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Host innate recognition triggers key immune responses for viral elimination. The sensing mechanism of hepatitis B virus (HBV), a DNA virus, and the subsequent downstream signaling events remain to be fully clarified. Here we found that type III but not type I interferons are predominantly induced in human primary hepatocytes in response to HBV infection, through retinoic acid-inducible gene-I (RIG-I)-mediated sensing of the 5'-ε region of HBV pregenomic RNA. In addition, RIG-I could also counteract the interaction of HBV polymerase (P protein) with the 5'-ε region in an RNA-binding dependent manner, which consistently suppressed viral replication. Liposome-mediated delivery and vector-based expression of this ε region-derived RNA in liver abolished the HBV replication in human hepatocyte-chimeric mice. These findings identify an innate recognition mechanism by which RIG-I dually functions as an HBV sensor activating innate signaling and to counteract viral polymerase in human hepatocytes.<br />Supplemental materials are available on the publisher's website.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1202678924
Document Type :
Electronic Resource