๐ Mouse hepatitis coronavirus A59 nucleocapsid protein is a type I interferon antagonist
The recent emergence of several new coronaviruses, including the etiological cause of severe acute respiratory syndrome, has significantly increased the importance of understanding virus-host cell interactions of this virus family. We used mouse hepatitis virus (MHV) A59 as a model to gain insight into how coronaviruses affect the type I alpha/beta interferon (IFN) system. We demonstrate that MHV is resistant to type I IFN. Protein kinase R (PKR) and the alpha subunit of eukaryotic translation initiation factor are not phosphorylated in infected cells. The RNase L activity associated with 2โฒ,5โฒ-oligoadenylate synthetase is not activated or is blocked, since cellular RNA is not degraded. These results are consistent with lack of protein translation shutoff early following infection. We used a well-established recombinant vaccinia virus (VV)-based expression system that lacks the viral IFN antagonist E3L to screen viral genes for their ability to rescue the IFN sensitivity of the mutant. The nucleocapsid (N) gene rescued VVฮE3L from IFN sensitivity. N gene expression prevents cellular RNA degradation and partially rescues the dramatic translation shutoff characteristic of the VVฮE3L virus. However, it does not prevent PKR phosphorylation. The results indicate that the MHV N protein is a type I IFN antagonist that likely plays a role in circumventing the innate immune response. Copyright ยฉ 2007, American Society for Microbiology.
keywords
๐ severe acute (1373)
๐ hepatitis virus (437)
๐ host cell (262)
๐ mouse hepatitis (371)
๐ innate immune (105)
๐ immune response (314)
๐ infected cells (307)
๐ respiratory syndrome (2004)
๐ acute respiratory (1734)
๐ results indicate (178)
author
๐ค Ye, Ye
๐ค Hauns, Kevin
๐ค Langland, Jeffrey O.
๐ค Jacobs, Bertram L.
๐ค Hogue, Brenda G.
year
โฐ 2007
journal
๐ Journal of Virology
issn
๐ 0022538X
volume
81
number
6
page
2554-2563
citedbycount
77
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