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Influenza Virus Z-RNAs Induce ZBP1-Mediated Necroptosis.

Cell (2020-03-24)
Ting Zhang, Chaoran Yin, David F Boyd, Giovanni Quarato, Justin P Ingram, Maria Shubina, Katherine B Ragan, Takumi Ishizuka, Jeremy Chase Crawford, Bart Tummers, Diego A Rodriguez, Jia Xue, Suraj Peri, William J Kaiser, Carolina B López, Yan Xu, Jason W Upton, Paul G Thomas, Douglas R Green, Siddharth Balachandran
ABSTRACT

Influenza A virus (IAV) is a lytic RNA virus that triggers receptor-interacting serine/threonine-protein kinase 3 (RIPK3)-mediated pathways of apoptosis and mixed lineage kinase domain-like pseudokinase (MLKL)-dependent necroptosis in infected cells. ZBP1 initiates RIPK3-driven cell death by sensing IAV RNA and activating RIPK3. Here, we show that replicating IAV generates Z-RNAs, which activate ZBP1 in the nucleus of infected cells. ZBP1 then initiates RIPK3-mediated MLKL activation in the nucleus, resulting in nuclear envelope disruption, leakage of DNA into the cytosol, and eventual necroptosis. Cell death induced by nuclear MLKL was a potent activator of neutrophils, a cell type known to drive inflammatory pathology in virulent IAV disease. Consequently, MLKL-deficient mice manifest reduced nuclear disruption of lung epithelia, decreased neutrophil recruitment into infected lungs, and increased survival following a lethal dose of IAV. These results implicate Z-RNA as a new pathogen-associated molecular pattern and describe a ZBP1-initiated nucleus-to-plasma membrane "inside-out" death pathway with potentially pathogenic consequences in severe cases of influenza.

MATERIALS
Product Number
Brand
Product Description

Sigma-Aldrich
Cycloheximide, ≥95% (HPLC)
Sigma-Aldrich
Anti-KiSS-1 Antibody, clone 8H4.1, clone 8H4.1, from mouse
Millipore
FLAG® Immunoprecipitation Kit