Interferon-induced Ifit2/ISG54 protects mice from lethal VSV neuropathogenesis. Fensterl, V; Wetzel, JL; Ramachandran, S; Ogino, T; Stohlman, SA; Bergmann, CC; Diamond, MS; Virgin, HW; Sen, GC PLoS pathogens
8
e1002712
2012
Show Abstract
Interferon protects mice from vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) infection and pathogenesis; however, it is not known which of the numerous interferon-stimulated genes (ISG) mediate the antiviral effect. A prominent family of ISGs is the interferon-induced with tetratricopeptide repeats (Ifit) genes comprising three members in mice, Ifit1/ISG56, Ifit2/ISG54 and Ifit3/ISG49. Intranasal infection with a low dose of VSV is not lethal to wild-type mice and all three Ifit genes are induced in the central nervous system of the infected mice. We tested their potential contributions to the observed protection of wild-type mice from VSV pathogenesis, by taking advantage of the newly generated knockout mice lacking either Ifit2 or Ifit1. We observed that in Ifit2 knockout (Ifit2(-/-)) mice, intranasal VSV infection was uniformly lethal and death was preceded by neurological signs, such as ataxia and hind limb paralysis. In contrast, wild-type and Ifit1(-/-) mice were highly protected and survived without developing such disease. However, when VSV was injected intracranially, virus replication and survival were not significantly different between wild-type and Ifit2(-/-) mice. When administered intranasally, VSV entered the central nervous system through the olfactory bulbs, where it replicated equivalently in wild-type and Ifit2(-/-) mice and induced interferon-β. However, as the infection spread to other regions of the brain, VSV titers rose several hundred folds higher in Ifit2(-/-) mice as compared to wild-type mice. This was not caused by a broadened cell tropism in the brains of Ifit2(-/-) mice, where VSV still replicated selectively in neurons. Surprisingly, this advantage for VSV replication in the brains of Ifit2(-/-) mice was not observed in other organs, such as lung and liver. Pathogenesis by another neurotropic RNA virus, encephalomyocarditis virus, was not enhanced in the brains of Ifit2(-/-) mice. Our study provides a clear demonstration of tissue-, virus- and ISG-specific antiviral action of interferon. | 22615570
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Novel characteristics of the function and induction of murine p56 family proteins. Fensterl, V; White, CL; Yamashita, M; Sen, GC Journal of virology
82
11045-53
2008
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The interferon-stimulated gene 56 (ISG56) family is induced strongly in response to virus infection, interferons (IFNs) and double-stranded RNA (dsRNA). In the mouse, this family comprises three members, ISG56, ISG54, and ISG49, which are clustered on chromosome 19 and encode the corresponding proteins p56, p54, and p49. Here, we report differential properties of these proteins and their distinct induction patterns in different cell types. All three murine proteins bound to the c-subunit of the translation initiation factor eIF3, but unlike the other members, p49 did not inhibit protein synthesis. Using a newly raised antibody, we demonstrated that both in vitro and in vivo, p49 expression was strongly induced by IFN, dsRNA, and Sendai virus. However, in kidney mesangial cells, as opposed to podocytes, encephalomyocarditis virus, vesicular stomatitis virus, or extracellular dsRNA did not induce any of the p56 family proteins, although they were robustly expressed after Sendai virus infection or dsRNA transfection. Furthermore, protein-specific differences in the regulation of p56 family members became evident in various leukocyte types: all three proteins were induced by IFN in T cells, but in B cells p56 and ISG56 mRNA could not be detected. Similarly, p56 was selectively uninducible in plasmacytoid dendritic cells, whereas in myeloid dendritic cells, all three family members were expressed. These results revealed novel cell type-, inducer-, and gene-specific regulation of the ISG56 family of genes. | 18768971
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Tissue-specific and inducer-specific differential induction of ISG56 and ISG54 in mice. Terenzi, Fulvia, et al. J. Virol., 81: 8656-65 (2007)
2007
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The interferon-stimulated genes (ISGs) ISG56 and ISG54 are strongly induced in cultured cells by type I interferons (IFNs), viruses, and double-stranded RNA (dsRNA), which activate their transcription by various signaling pathways. Here we studied the stimulus-dependent induction of both genes in vivo. dsRNA, which is generated during virus infection, induced the expression of both genes in all organs examined. Induction was not seen in STAT1-deficient mice, indicating that dsRNA-induced gene expression requires endogenous IFN. We further examined the regulation of these ISGs in several organs from mice injected with dsRNA or IFN-beta. Both ISG56 and ISG54 were widely expressed and at comparable levels. However, in organs isolated from mice injected with IFN-alpha the expression of ISG54 was reduced and more restricted in distribution compared with the expression level and distribution of ISG56. When we began to study specific cell types, splenic B cells showed ISG54 but not ISG56 expression in response to all agonists. Finally, in livers isolated from mice infected with vesicular stomatitis virus, the expression of ISG56, but not ISG54, was induced; this difference was observed at both protein and mRNA levels. These studies have revealed unexpected complexity in IFN-stimulated gene induction in vivo. For the first time we showed that the two closely related genes are expressed in a tissue-specific and inducer-specific manner. Furthermore, our findings provide the first evidence of a differential pattern of expression of ISG54 and ISG56 genes by IFN-alpha and IFN-beta. | 17553874
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