Affiliation:
1. Department of Virology, University of Bremen, D-28359 Bremen, Germany
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Hepatitis A virus (HAV) antagonizes the innate immune response by inhibition of double-stranded RNA (dsRNA)-induced beta interferon (IFN-β) gene expression. In this report, we show that this is due to an interaction of HAV with the intracellular dsRNA-induced retinoic acid-inducible gene I (RIG-I)-mediated signaling pathway upstream of the kinases responsible for interferon regulatory factor 3 (IRF-3) phosphorylation (TBK1 and IKKε). In consequence, IRF-3 is not activated for nuclear translocation and gene induction. In addition, we found that HAV reduces TRIF (TIR domain-containing adaptor inducing IFN-β)-mediated IRF-3 activation, which is part of the Toll-like receptor 3 signaling pathway. As IRF-3 is necessary for IFN-β transcription, inhibition of this factor results in efficient suppression of IFN-β synthesis. This ability of HAV seems to be of considerable importance for HAV replication, as HAV is not resistant to IFN-β, and it may allow the virus to establish infection and preserve the sites of virus production in later stages of the infection.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Virology,Insect Science,Immunology,Microbiology
Cited by
81 articles.
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