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Journal of Virology, March 2006, p. 2913-2923, Vol. 80, No. 6
0022-538X/06/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JVI.80.6.2913-2923.2006
Copyright © 2006, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Department of Microbiology, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, Texas
Received 7 November 2005/ Accepted 1 January 2006
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The first line of defense against an invading viral pathogen is the innate intracellular antiviral response, which is triggered when cellular pathogen recognition receptors (PRRs) detect the presence of pathogen-associated molecular patterns within products of viral replication (17, 42). Upon sensing the invading viral pathogen, the cell activates multiple distinct signaling pathways by inducing a number of latent transcription factors (36). One such transcription factor that is central to establishment of the host antiviral response is interferon regulatory factor 3 (IRF-3) (4). Two classes of PRRs have been determined to stimulate IRF-3 transcriptional activity in response to double-stranded RNA (dsRNA), a well-defined viral pathogen-associated molecular pattern. The first PRR recognized to stimulate IRF-3 in response to dsRNA was Toll-like receptor 3 (TLR3) (5). TLR3 is expressed on the cell surface or within endocytic vesicles in a cell-type-dependent manner (26, 29). Leucine-rich repeats located within the ectodomain of TLR3 are presumably responsible for detecting dsRNA, thus restricting TLR3 to the detection of either extracellular dsRNA or dsRNA within vesicles, including exogenous dsRNA that might enter the cell through endocytosis. Activation of TLR3 by dsRNA leads to the recruitment of the adaptor molecule TRIF (14, 30, 50). TRIF subsequently recruits two kinases, TBK1 and IKK
, that have been shown to phosphorylate IRF-3 (9, 38). Phosphorylated IRF-3 forms homodimers that are retained in the nucleus and interact with the CBP/p300 coactivator to induce the expression of multiple target genes, including beta interferon (IFN-ß) (23, 34, 48, 53, 54).
Cells lacking TLR3 have been shown to induce interferon expression in response to viral infections or upon the introduction of dsRNA directly into the cytoplasm, which indicated the existence of TLR3-independent intracellular response (15, 49). A second dsRNA-responsive PRR, retinoic acid-inducible gene I (RIG-I), has recently been shown to mediate this intracellular response to dsRNA (41, 52). RIG-I consists of a C-terminal DExD/H box RNA helicase domain and two N-terminal caspase recruitment domains (CARD). Binding of dsRNA to the helicase domain of RIG-I is postulated to induce conformational changes that allow it to interact with downstream effector molecules via CARD. These interactions initiate a signaling cascade that results in the activation of IRF-3. TBK1 is also involved in RIG-I-dependent activation of IRF-3, suggesting that the TLR3 and RIG-I pathways converge at this point. Thus, stimulation of either TLR3 by extracellular dsRNA or RIG-I by intracellular dsRNA results in the activation of IRF-3 and the subsequent expression of IRF-3 target genes, such as IFN-stimulated gene 15 (ISG15), ISG54, ISG56, and IFN-ß (12). It is the expression of these direct IRF-3 target genes that initiates the establishment of an antiviral state to block viral replication. Binding of secreted IFN-ß to the type I IFN receptor amplifies the host antiviral response by triggering the activation of the Janus kinase and signal transducers and activators of transcription, JAK/STAT, signal transduction pathway. Activation of the JAK/STAT pathway leads to the induction of expression of a wide variety of ISGs, which are responsible for conferring the antiproliferative, antiviral, and proapoptotic actions of IFNs that serve to limit virus infection.
As eukaryotic antiviral programs evolved to combat invading pathogens, viruses evolved processes to escape the antiviral effects of these programs. The molecular mechanisms by which WNV overcomes the host cell antiviral response to establish a productive infection are beginning to be elucidated. Using microarray analysis we have recently demonstrated that the induction of ISGs in response to infection with WNV-NY is attenuated, which suggested that WNV-NY modulates the host antiviral response (11). Recently, several groups have shown that WNV is capable of attenuating signaling through the JAK/STAT pathway (13, 25). In addition, we found that WNV-NY delays activation of IRF-3 until approximately 12 to 16 h postinfection, with maximal activation occurring much later (11). This is in sharp contrast to a variety of other viruses that have been shown to induce IRF-3 activation within 3 to 10 h postinfection (8, 28, 32, 37, 40, 44, 54). The delayed activation of IRF-3 means that WNV-NY replicates virtually unchallenged by the host cell at early times postinfection. In this report we examine the importance of delaying activation of the host antiviral response to WNV-NY replication and the mechanism by which WNV-NY evades stimulation of IRF-3.
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Huh7-WNV-2. The generation of the Huh7-WNV-2 replicon cell line was previously described (46). Briefly, Huh7 cells were transfected with 10 µg of total RNA recovered from BHK cells harboring the WNV-Rluc/Neo subgenomic replicon (kindly provided by Pei-Yong Shi) (25a). Following transfection, cultures were incubated in the presence of 400 µg/ml Geneticin (G418) to select for cells harboring the neomycin-expressing replicon. Individual colonies of G418-resistant cells were isolated and expanded, and the levels of expression of Renilla luciferase and WNV proteins were examined. The established cell line used in this study, designated Huh7-WNV-2, was maintained in complete DMEM containing 200 µg/ml G418. G418 was removed from the culture medium prior to infection with SenV.
Plaque assays. Monolayers of Vero cells in six-well plates were washed two times in serum-free DMEM followed by the addition of serial dilutions of viral samples. The cells were incubated in a 5% CO2 incubator for 1 h at 37°C with rocking, the inocula were removed, and a 0.9% agarose-complete DMEM overlay was added. Cell monolayers were incubated for 48 h, and a second overlay of agarose-complete DMEM containing 0.003% neutral red (MP Biomedicals) was added. The plates were incubated for an additional 48 h prior to counting plaques.
Virus growth curves. Cultures of the indicated cell lines were infected with WNV-NY for 1 h at 37°C. The amount of virus added to cultures to achieve the indicated MOI was calculated using the titer of the viral stock on the respective cell line. The inoculum was removed, and complete DMEM was added. Culture supernatants were collected at the indicated time points. Cell debris was removed by low-speed centrifugation at 1,500 rpm for 5 min, and supernatants were transferred to new tubes and stored at 80°C until titers were determined by plaque assay on Vero cells.
UV inactivation of WNV. Cell debris was removed from WNV-NY-infected 293 cell supernatants by low-speed centrifugation, and virions were recovered by ultracentrifugation (100,000 x g; 1.5 h) through a 20% sucrose cushion. The viral pellet was resuspended in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS), divided into aliquots, and stored at 80°C. UV inactivation of WNV-NY was carried out by exposing an aliquot of concentrated virus to UV (254 nm) for 25 min at room temperature in a Stratalinker model XL-1000 apparatus (Spectronics Corp.). Titers of UV-treated WNV-NY were below detectible levels on Vero cells, confirming complete inactivation of the virus stock. Titers of control untreated virus stocks were 2.8 x 1010 PFU/ml on Vero cells.
Northern blot analysis.
RNA was extracted from mock- or WNV-NY-infected A549 cells using TRIzol reagent as recommended by the manufacturer (Invitrogen Life Technologies, Inc.). Purified RNA was resuspended in water, quantified by spectrometry, and mixed with RNA loading buffer. After heating at 50°C for 10 min, 6 µg of RNA was separated through a 1% agarose gel containing 2.2 M formaldehyde, 20 mM morpholinepropanesulfonic acid (pH 7.0), 8 mM NaOAc, and 1 mM EDTA (pH 8.0). To process the gel for transfer of RNA, the gel was soaked in water for 1 h with gentle agitation followed by incubation in 20x SSC (1x SSC is 0.15 M NaCl plus 0.015 M sodium citrate) for 15 min. RNA transfer onto a Nytran membrane was carried out using the Schleicher & Schuell Turboblotter downward transfer system as recommended by the manufacturer. DNA probes specific for ISG15, ISG56, and glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) were generated using Klenow DNA polymerase and mixed nonomer random primers in a reaction mixture that contained [
-32P]dCTP. Hybridization reactions were carried out using the ULTRAhybe reagent (Ambion) and 106 cpm/ml of radiolabeled probe at 48°C for 16 h. Blots were rinsed twice for 5 min each with preheated 2x SSC-0.1% sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) wash buffer, followed by two 15-min washes with 0.1x SSC-0.1% SDS wash buffer. Blots were imaged using a Storm 820 PhosphorImager (Amersham).
Immunoblot analysis. Cells were lysed in RIPA buffer (10 mM Tris, 150 mM NaCl, 0.02% Na-deoxycholate, 1% Triton X-100, 0.1% SDS) containing protease inhibitors (Sigma) and okadaic acid (1 mM; Sigma). Proteins (20 µg) were resolved on 10% polyacrylamide gels containing SDS. After electrophoresis, proteins were transferred to a NitroPure nitrocellulose transfer membrane (Micron Separations Inc.), and blots were blocked overnight at 4°C. The following monoclonal or polyclonal antibodies were used to probe the blots: rabbit anti-human IRF-3 serum (kindly provided by Michael David), rabbit anti-phospho serine 396 IRF-3 (kindly provided by John Hiscott), rabbit anti-human ISG56 (kindly provided by Ganes Sen), rabbit anti-mouse ISG54 (kindly provided by Ganes Sen), rabbit anti-RIG-I (kindly provided by Takashi Fujita), mouse anti-WNV (obtained from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), goat anti-actin (Santa Cruz), goat anti-GAPDH (Santa Cruz), mouse anti-GAPDH (Abcam), and peroxidase-conjugated secondary donkey anti-rabbit, donkey anti-mouse, or donkey anti-goat antibody (Jackson ImmunoResearch). Protein bands were visualized using the ECL Plus Western blotting detection reagents (Amersham Biosciences) followed by exposure of the blot to film. In some experiments bands were quantified using the Kodak 1D image analysis software.
Indirect immunofluorescence analysis (IFA). The indicated cell lines were grown on tissue culture chamber slides and infected with either WNV-NY or Sendai virus (50 HA units). At the indicated times postinfection, slides were washed with PBS and fixed with 3% paraformaldehyde for 30 min at room temperature. Cell monolayers were permeabilized with a solution of PBS-0.2% Triton X-100 for 15 min, followed by 1 h of incubation in PBS containing 10% normal goat serum. After rinsing with PBS, cells were incubated for 1 h in the presence of a rabbit polyclonal anti-human IRF-3 antibody (1:500) and a mouse polyclonal anti-WNV antibody (1:750) in PBS-0.05% Tween 20-3% bovine serum albumin. Cells were washed three times with PBS-0.5% Tween-20 and incubated with goat anti-rabbit immunoglobulin G-Alexa 488 antibody conjugate (1:4,000; Molecular Probes), goat anti-mouse immunoglobulin G-rhodamine antibody conjugate (1:4,000; Jackson ImmunoResearch), and 4',6'-diamidino-2-phenylindole stain for 1 h at room temperature. Cells were washed three times and allowed to dry, and the slides were overlaid with Vectashield solution (Vector Labs), after which coverslips were mounted and visualized with a Zeiss Axiovert fluorescence microscope equipped with a digital camera.
Treatment with pIC. Stocks of poly(I):poly(C) (pIC; 1 mg/ml) were boiled for 10 min and allowed to cool to room temperature prior to being added to culture medium at a final concentration of 100 µg/ml.
Luciferase reporter assays. Subconfluent cultures of Huh7 cells in a 48-well plate were mock infected or infected with WNV-NY (MOI, 5) and incubated for 3 h at 37°C. Cultures were subsequently transfected with 100 ng of pISG56-luc, 25 ng of pCMV-Renilla, and either 1 µg pIC or increasing concentrations of pEF-flagN-RIG (50 to 500 ng/well) using Lipofectamine 2000 (Invitrogen). The pISG56-luc plasmid (a kind gift from Ganes Sen) encodes the firefly luciferase gene under transcriptional control of the ISG56 promoter, the pCMV-Renilla (Promega) encodes the Renilla luciferase gene under the control of the constitutively active cytomegalovirus (CMV) early promoter, and pEF-flagN-RIG (a kind gift from Takashi Fujita) encodes the constitutively active N terminus of RIG-I (52). Cells were harvested at the indicated times, and the extracts were subjected to the dual luciferase assay as described by the reagent manufacturer (dual-luciferase reporter assay system; Promega). Luciferase activity was quantified with a Bio-Rad luminometer. Normalized luciferase levels were determined by dividing firefly luciferase levels by control Renilla luciferase levels. Determinations at all time points were performed in triplicate.
Quantitative real-time PCR. RNA was extracted from mock- or WNV-infected WT and RIG-I null MEFs using TRIzol reagent as recommended by the manufacturer (Invitrogen Life Technologies, Inc.). Purified RNA was resuspended in water, quantified by spectrometry, and diluted to 5 ng/µl. Quantitative real-time PCR analyses were performed on an ABI 7500 real-time PCR system using SYBR Green RT-PCR reagents (ABI) with 25 ng of RNA per reaction mixture. All reactions were conducted in triplicate. The following primers were used to amplify murine ISG56 and GAPDH: mISG56 forward primer, 5'-TGGCCGTTTCCTACAGTTT-3'; mISG56 reverse primer, 5' mGAPDH forward primer, 5'-CAACTACATGGTCTACATGTTC-3'; mGAPDH reverse primer, 5'-CTCGCTCCTGGAAGATG-3'.
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FIG. 1. Effect of IRF-3 activation on WNV-NY replication. (A) 293 cells transfected with either IRF-3-5D, N-RIG, or EGFP were incubated for 24 h and infected with WNV-NY (MOI, 0.5). (B) pIC (100 µg/ml) was added to supernatants of PH5CH8 cells, and cultures were incubated for 8 h at 37°C prior to infection with WNV-NY (MOI, 0.05). (A and B) Culture supernatants were recovered at the time points indicated, and infectious particle production was assessed by plaque assay on Vero cells.
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FIG. 2. WNV-NY replication is required for activation of IRF-3. (A and B) Examination of IRF-3 activation in response to UV-inactivated WNV-NY. A549 cells were mock infected, infected with WNV-NY (MOI, 5), or exposed to UV-inactivated virus at a concentration equivalent to an MOI of 5. (A) Cell lysates were recovered at the indicated times and subjected to immunoblot analysis. Phosphorylation of IRF-3 was detected using an antibody specific for the phosphoserine 396 isoform of IRF-3 (IRF-3-P). Steady-state protein levels of total IRF-3, ISG56, WNV, and actin were also examined. (B) IRF-3 localization in mock-infected (a and d), WNV-NY-infected (b and e), or UV-inactivated WNV-NY- (c and f) treated A549 cells was detected by IFA. IRF-3 was detected using an IRF-3 polyclonal antiserum and an Alexa 488-conjugated secondary antibody (a, b, and c). WNV protein expression (d, e, and f) was detected using a mouse polyclonal anti-WNV antibody and rhodamine-conjugated secondary antibody. (C) Effect of cycloheximide on WNV-NY-induced expression of IRF-3 target genes. A549 cells were infected with WNV-NY (MOI, 1) in the presence or absence of cycloheximide (50 µg/ml). Induction of ISG15 and ISG56 was assessed by Northern blot analysis of total RNA harvested at the indicated times postinfection. Levels of GAPDH expression were also assessed to control for loading. (D) Activation of IRF-3 in cells harboring the WNV replicon. Cellular localization of IRF-3 (a and b) and WNV protein expression (c and d) were examined in parental Huh7 (a and c) and Huh7-WNV-2 replicon (b and d) cell lines by IFA.
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The requirements for WNV-NY-induced activation of IRF-3 were further characterized using the WNV subgenomic replicon Huh7-WNV-2 (46). This replicon genome encodes the nonstructural genes of WNV-NY, which are sufficient for autonomous replication of the replicon within the host cell. Thus, cells harboring the WNV replicon are exposed to an actively replicating viral genome and the nonstructural proteins of WNV. Cellular localization of IRF-3 was examined by IFA in order to assess the activation of IRF-3 within the replicon-bearing cells (Fig. 2D). IRF-3 remained localized to the cytoplasm of cells harboring the WNV replicon (Fig. 2D, panel b), indicating that IRF-3 is inactive in these cultures. Therefore, either the presence of the actively replicating WNV replicon was not sufficient to induce activation of IRF-3 or Huh7-WNV-2 encodes a mechanism to block activation.
WNV-NY does not antagonize the activation of IRF-3. In order to determine whether WNV is capable of abrogating IRF-3 activation during viral replication, we assessed the ability of Huh7-WNV-2 replicon to respond to SenV, a potent activator of IRF-3. SenV infection triggered nuclear translocation of IRF-3 in both parental and Huh7-WNV-2 replicon cells (Fig. 3A, panels b and d), demonstrating that IRF-3 can be activated in these cell lines. These results indicate that the nonstructural proteins of WNV-NY do not impose a signaling blockade to the IRF-3 pathway. To confirm and extend these results, the ability of WNV-NY to impede IRF-3 activation in the context of a native infection was also assessed. WNV-NY-infected cultures were superinfected with VSV, a virus capable of inducing the activation of IRF-3 within the lag period prior to WNV-mediated activation (Fig. 3B). VSV infection rapidly induced the phosphorylation of IRF-3 in both the absence (Fig. 3B, lanes 7 to 11) and presence (Fig. 3B, lanes 18 to 22) of WNV infection. Therefore, WNV-NY infection does not prevent activation of IRF-3 by VSV. These results indicate that WNV-NY does not impose a blockade upon the virus-mediated activation of the IRF-3 pathway.
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FIG. 3. Effects of WNV-NY infection on IRF-3 induction by SenV and VSV. (A) Parental Huh7 cells (a and b) and Huh-WNV-2 replicon cells (c and d) were mock infected (a and c) or infected with SenV (b and d). IRF-3 localization was assessed by IFA. (B) Phosphorylation state of IRF-3 in mock- (lanes 1 to 6), VSV-GFP- (lanes 7 to 11), WNV-NY- (lanes 12 to 17), or VSV-GFP- and WNV-NY- (lanes 18 to 22) infected A549 cells. WNV-NY-infected cultures were incubated for 6 h prior to superinfection with VSV-GFP. Whole-cell lysates were recovered at the indicated times postinfection with WNV-NY, and Western blot analysis was performed with an antibody specific for the phosphoserine 396 isoform of IRF-3 (IRF-3-P). Blots were stripped and reprobed with antisera against total IRF-3, WNV, VSV, or GAPDH.
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FIG. 4. Effect of WNV-NY infection on RIG-I-dependent induction of IRF-3. (A) Huh7 cells were infected in triplicate with WNV-NY (MOI, 5) for 3 h prior to transfection with pISG56-luc, pCMV-Renilla, and increasing concentrations of N-RIG (50, 250, and 500 ng). Cell extracts were recovered at 8 h posttransfection, and the level of luciferase expression was assessed using the Promega dual luciferase kit. A representative example from two independent experiments is shown. (B) Huh7 cells were infected with WNV-NY cells (MOI, 5) for 3 h and subsequently transfected with pISG56-luc, pCMV-Renilla, and pIC (1 µg). Cells were lysed at 4, 8, and 24 h posttransfection, and the level of luciferase expression was determined. A representative example from two independent experiments is shown.
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FIG. 5. TLR3-mediated activation of IRF-3. (A) 293T-pCDNA-TL3-YFP cells were treated with pIC or infected with WNV-NY at an MOI of 5. Whole-cell lysates were recovered at the indicated times, and steady-state levels of ISG56 expression were examined by Western blotting. Blots were stripped and reprobed for actin to control for loading. (B) pIC was added to the culture supernatants of WNV-NY-infected (MOI, 3.6) 293T-pCDNA-TL3-YFP cells at 6 h postinfection. (C) U-2 OS/NS3/4A cells were infected with WNV-NY (MOI, 3) for 4 h prior to the addition of pIC to the culture medium. (D) PH5CH8 cells infected with WNV-NY (MOI, 1) were treated with pIC at 3 h postinfection. In panels B, C, and D, whole-cell lysates collected at the indicated times postinfection were analyzed for steady-state levels of ISG56 by immunoblotting. Blots were stripped and reprobed for WNV protein to assess viral replication and GAPDH or actin to control for loading.
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FIG. 6. IRF-3 localization in WNV-NY-infected WT and RIG-I null MEFs. (A) The RIG-I null genotype was confirmed by immunoblot analysis of lysates prepared from WT and IRF-3 null MEFs incubated in the presence or absence of 200 U/ml mouse IFN- . Steady-state levels of RIG-I were assessed using a rabbit polyclonal antiserum to RIG-I. (B) Cellular localization of IRF-3 in WT (a to c) and RIG-I null (e to g) MEFs was examined. Mock- (a and e), SenV- (b and f), and WNV-NY- (c and g) infected cells were probed for IRF-3 using an IRF-3 polyclonal antiserum and an Alexa 488-conjugated secondary antibody (a through c and e through g). WNV protein expression (d and h) was detected using a mouse polyclonal anti-WNV antibody and rhodamine-conjugated secondary antibody. (C) Percent IRF-3 nuclear localization in WNV-NY-infected WT and RIG-I null MEFs. The number of cells with nuclear IRF-3 was divided by the total number of cells present in nine individual fields of WT and RIG-I null MEFs.
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FIG. 7. Kinetics of activation of the host antiviral response in WNV-NY-infected WT and RIG-I null MEFs. (A) Comparison of the kinetics of expression of ISG56 mRNA levels in WNV-NY-infected WT and RIG-I null MEFs. Total RNA was recovered from WNV-NY-infected WT and RIG-I MEFs at the indicated times postinfection. Quantitative real-time PCR was used to determine the levels of ISG56 and GAPDH mRNA present at each time point. Bars show the level of ISG56 mRNA relative to GAPDH in each sample. (B) Western blot analysis of ISG54 expression. Whole-cell lysates were collected at the indicated times postinfection, and steady-state levels of ISG54, WNV, and GAPDH were examined. (C) Quantitation of ISG54 expression in WNV-NY-infected WT and RIG-I null MEFs.
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FIG. 8. Replication of WNV-NY in WT, RIG-I null, and TRIF null MEFs. (A) Virus-induced CPE in WT and RIG-I null MEFs. Mock-infected (a and c) and WNV-NY-infected (b and d) cultures of WT (a and b) and RIG-I null (c and d) MEFs were visualized at 56 h postinfection using a Zeiss light microscope, and images were captured with a digital camera. (B) Infectious particle production by WNV-NY-infected WT and RIG-I null MEFs. Culture medium was removed from infected MEFs and cleared of cell debris by low-spin centrifugation. The presence of infectious virus particles was determined as PFU per milliliter by titrating supernatants on Vero cells in duplicate. The average of three independent experiments is shown. Solid line, RIG-I null; broken line, WT MEFs. (C) Infectious particle production by WNV-NY-infected TRIF null MEFs. Titers for supernatants removed from WNV-NY-infected WT and TRIF null MEFS were determined on Vero cells in duplicate. The average of three independent experiments is shown. Solid line, TRIF null; broken line, WT MEFs.
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The ability of WNV-NY to block IRF-3 activation in the context of a native viral infection was also evaluated. Cultures infected with WNV-NY remained responsive to dsRNA added directly to the culture medium or transfected into the cells. These results contradict recently published data that suggest that WNV is capable of blocking TLR3-mediated activation of IRF-3 in HeLa cells (35). Nonetheless, our data demonstrate that WNV-NY infection did not prevent stimulation of IRF-3 by dsRNA in a variety of responsive cell lines, including human embryonic kidney, osteosarcoma, and hepatocyte cell lines. This discrepancy is likely due to a cell line-specific effect in the ability of WNV to block stimulation of IRF-3 through the TLR3 pathway and suggests the possibility that IRF-3 activation is differentially regulated in distinct tissues in vivo. The ability of WNV-NY to modulate IRF-3 activation through the RIG-I pathway was also examined. Cultures infected with WNV-NY retained the ability to activate the IRF-3 pathway in response to both superinfection with VSV and introduction of dsRNA directly in the cytoplasm. Therefore, WNV-NY does not directly antagonize IRF-3 activation through either the TLR3 or RIG-I pathways. Our results demonstrated that the delayed activation of the IRF-3 pathway by WNV-NY is not due to a virus-directed block imposed on either the activation or the transcriptional activity of IRF-3. Instead WNV-NY appears to prevent the host cells from sensing viral replication at early times postinfection. The mechanism by which WNV-NY avoids detection by the host antiviral response early in infection remains to be determined. One possible explanation is that high levels of the WNV-NY agonist(s) are required for efficient activation of IRF-3, such that activation does not occur until sufficient levels of the viral agonist(s) have accumulated. The observation that WNV-NY infection enhanced the IRF-3 response at 4 h posttransfection with pIC (Fig. 4B) might indicate that replication is just below the threshold of activation of IRF-3. Alternatively, WNV-NY may have evolved to specifically mask the IRF-3 agonist(s) produced early in infection, thus blocking the accessibility of the viral agonist(s) to PRRs until the virus has established a productive infection.
Another important step towards elucidating the process by which WNV-NY evades the host response at early times postinfection is the identification of the host cell components involved in sensing WNV-NY infection. It has recently been demonstrated that in some cells the TLR system is dispensable for activation of IRF-3 in response to viral infection (19). In fibroblasts and conventional dendritic cells, activation of the host antiviral response by negative-strand RNA viruses was specifically mediated though RIG-I. Moreover, our observation that WNV-NY-mediated activation of IRF-3 occurs in 293 cells (11), a cell line that lacks TLR3 expression, suggests that WNV-NY can stimulate the host antiviral response in a TLR-3-independent manner. Characterization of the role of RIG-I in WNV-NY-induced activation of IRF-3 demonstrated that abrogation of the RIG-I pathway did not prevent WNV-NY-mediated activation of IRF-3 but resulted in a delayed induction of the host response. Thus, RIG-I is involved in triggering the initial antiviral response to WNV-NY; however, an additional PPR(s) functions to amplify and/or sustain the host response later in infection. One candidate PRR molecule for sensing WNV-NY infection is the RIG-I homologue MDA5, which has also been shown to be involved in activation of the host antiviral response (2, 51). Preliminary experiments indicate that disruption of signaling through both MDA5 and RIG-I completely abrogates the host response to WNV-NY, suggesting that MDA5 is responsible for the residual activation of the host response observed in RIG null cells (unpublished data). However, we cannot rule out the possibility that an as-yet-unidentified PPR is also involved in inducing the host response to WNV-NY.
We also examined the contribution of both the RIG-I and TLR3 pathways to controlling WNV-NY replication. Ablation of the RIG-I pathway resulted in an increase in WNV-NY titers and CPE in MEFs, demonstrating enhanced viral replication. Therefore, stimulation of the RIG-I pathway contributes to the establishment of an initial innate antiviral immune response that is capable of constraining WNV-NY replication. In contrast, disruption of the TLR3 pathway had no effect on WNV-NY replication in MEFs, suggesting that the TLR3 pathway does not function to control WNV-NY replication in vitro. However, the TLR3 pathway does appear to play a significant role in WNV-NY replication and pathogenesis in vivo. Wang et al. have previously demonstrated that viral loads are higher in the blood of WNV-infected TLR3 null mice compared to WT (47). Taken together with our data, this suggests that TLR3's inhibitory effect in vivo may be due to its involvement in the stimulation of professional immune cells, which act to constrain WNV-NY replication through an adaptive immune response, rather than triggering the host defense within the infected cell. Despite increased viral loads, WNV virulence was attenuated in TLR3 null mice. The enhanced virulence in WT mice appeared to be due to the increased permeability of the blood-brain barrier caused by induction of an inflammatory response by TLR3. This suggests that highly virulent strains of WNV-NY may have evolved to more efficiently stimulate the TLR3-mediated inflammatory response rather than to disrupt TLR3 signaling.
Our results demonstrate that, unlike many viruses, WNV-NY does not encode a general mechanism to shut down the IRF-3 pathway. Instead, WNV-NY specifically prevents activation of IRF-3 by its own replication at early times postinfection, which allows the virus to replicate to high titers before the host cells can mount an effective antiviral response. This idea is further supported by the observation that a prolonged lag period prior to induction of the host response, which resulted from abrogation of the RIG-I pathway, corresponded with increased viral titers. Our results suggest that rather than directly antagonizing the IRF-3 pathway, WNV-NY eludes detection by the host cell until a productive infection is established.
This work was supported by NIH grant AI057568 (M.G.). M.G. is the Nancy C. and Jeffery A. Marcus Scholar in Medical Research, in honor of Bill S. Vowell.
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