4.6 Article

Alpha/Beta Interferon (IFN-α/β)-Independent Induction of IFN-λ1 (Interleukin-29) in Response to Hantaan Virus Infection

Journal

JOURNAL OF VIROLOGY
Volume 84, Issue 18, Pages 9140-9148

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/JVI.00717-10

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Funding

  1. Ake Wibergs Stiftelse
  2. Jeanssons Stiftelse
  3. Stiftelsen Clas Groschinskys Minnesfond
  4. Swedish Society of Medicine
  5. Swedish Society for Medical Research
  6. Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences
  7. Swedish Medical Research Council

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Type III interferons ([IFNs]IFN-lambda and interleukin-28 and -29 [IL-28/29]) are recently recognized cytokines with innate antiviral effects similar to those of type I IFNs (IFN-alpha/beta). Like IFN-alpha/beta, IFN-lambda-expression can be induced by viruses, and it is believed that type I and III IFNs are regulated in the same manner. Hantaviruses are weak IFN-alpha/beta inducers and have surprisingly been shown to activate IFN-alpha/beta-independent IFN-stimulated gene (ISG) expression. Here, we show that in Hantaan virus (HTNV)-infected human epithelial A549 cells, induction of IFN-lambda 1 preceded induction of MxA and IFN-beta by 12 and 24 h, respectively, and IFN-alpha was not induced at all. Furthermore, induction of IFN-lambda 1 and MxA was observed in HTNV-infected African green monkey epithelial Vero E6 cells, a cell line that cannot produce type I IFNs, clearly showing that HTNV can induce IFN-lambda 1 and ISGs in the complete absence of IFN-alpha/beta. In HTNV-infected human fibroblast MRC-5 cells, which lack the IFN-lambda receptor, induction of MxA coincided in time with IFN-beta-induction. UV-inactivated HTNV did not induce any IFNs or MxA in any cell line, showing that activation of IFN-lambda 1 is dependent on replicating virus. Induction of both IFN-beta and IFN-lambda 1 in A549 cells after poly(I:C)-stimulation was strongly inhibited in HTNV-infected cells, suggesting that HTNV can inhibit signaling pathways used to simultaneously activate types I and III IFNs. In conclusion, we show that HTNV can cause type I IFN-independent IFN-lambda 1 induction and IFN-lambda 1-specific ISG induction. Importantly, the results suggest the existence of specific signaling pathways that induce IFN-lambda 1 without simultaneous type I IFN induction during virus infection.

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