4.5 Article

How do viruses control mitochondria-mediated apoptosis?

Journal

VIRUS RESEARCH
Volume 209, Issue -, Pages 45-55

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.virusres.2015.02.026

Keywords

RNA viruses; Apoptosis; Bcl-2 family; Death receptor signaling; Intrinsic mitochondrial signaling; Innate immune signaling

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Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (Spemann Graduate School of Biology and Medicine) [GSC-4, FOR2036]
  2. International Master programm in Biomedical Sciences (IMBS)
  3. Virtual Liver Network (VLN) programm of the BMBF
  4. Excellence Cluster BIOSS (Centre for Biological Signaling Studies) [EXC-294]

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There is no doubt that viruses require cells to successfully reproduce and effectively infect the next host. The question is what is the fate of the infected cells? All eukaryotic cells can sense viral infections and exhibit defence strategies to oppose viral replication and spread. This often leads to the elimination of the infected cells by programmed cell death or apoptosis. This sacrifice of infected cells represents the most primordial response of multicellular organisms to viruses. Subverting host cell apoptosis, at least for some time, is therefore a crucial strategy of viruses to ensure their replication, the production of essential viral proteins, virus assembly and the spreading to new hosts. For that reason many viruses harbor apoptosis inhibitory genes, which once inside infected cells are expressed to circumvent apoptosis induction during the virus reproduction phase. On the other hand, viruses can take advantage of stimulating apoptosis to (i) facilitate shedding and hence dissemination, (ii) to prevent infected cells from presenting viral antigens to the immune system or (iii) to kill non-infected bystander and immune cells which would limit viral propagation. Hence the decision whether an infected host cell undergoes apoptosis or not depends on virus type and pathogenicity, its capacity to oppose antiviral responses of the infected cells and/or to evade any attack from immune cells. Viral genomes have therefore been adapted throughout evolution to satisfy the need of a particular virus to induce or inhibit apoptosis during its life cycle. Here we review the different strategies used by viruses to interfere with the two major apoptosis as well as with the innate immune signaling pathways in mammalian cells. We will focus on the intrinsic mitochondrial pathway and discuss new ideas about how particular viruses could activately engage mitochondria to induce apoptosis of their host. (C) 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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