4.6 Article

Hantavirus GnT Elements Mediate TRAF3 Binding and Inhibit RIG-I/TBK1-Directed Beta Interferon Transcription by Blocking IRF3 Phosphorylation

Journal

JOURNAL OF VIROLOGY
Volume 88, Issue 4, Pages 2246-2259

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/JVI.02647-13

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [AI75022, AI055621, AI1092191, AI097951]

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Hantaviruses successfully replicate in primary human endothelial cells by restricting the early induction of beta interferon (IFN-beta) and interferon-stimulated genes (ISGs). Gn proteins from NY-1V, ANDV, and TULV, but not PHV, harbor elements in their 142-residue cytoplasmic tails (GnTs) that inhibit RIG-I/MAVS/TBK1-TRAF3-directed IFN-beta induction. Here, we define GnT interactions and residues required to inhibit TRAF3-TBK1-directed IFN-beta induction and IRF3 phosphorylation. We observed that GnTs bind TRAF3 via residues within the TRAF-N domain (residues 392 to 415) and that binding is independent of the MAVS-interactive TRAF-C domain (residues 415 to 568). We determined that GnT binding to TRAF3 is mediated by C-terminal degrons within NY-1V or ANDV GnTs and that mutations that add degrons to TULV or PHV GnTs confer TRAF3 binding. Further analysis of GnT domains revealed that TRAF3 binding is a discrete GnT function, independent of IFN regulation, and that residues 15 to 42 from the NY-1V GnT C terminus are required for inhibiting TBK1-directed IFN-beta transcription. Mutagenesis of the NY-1V GnT revealed that altering tyrosine 627 (Y627A/S/F) abolished GnT regulation of RIG-I/TBK1-directed IRF3 phosphorylation and transcriptional responses of ISRE, kappa B, and IFN-beta promoters. Moreover, GnTs from NY-1V, ANDV, and TULV, but not PHV, inhibited RIG-I-directed IRF3 phosphorylation. Collectively, these findings suggest a novel role for GnTs in regulating RIG-I/TBK1 pathway-directed IRF3 phosphorylation and IFN-beta induction and define virulence determinants within GnTs that may permit the attenuation of pathogenic hantaviruses.

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