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The Multifaceted Roles of TAM Receptors during Viral Infection

Journal

VIROLOGICA SINICA
Volume 36, Issue 1, Pages 1-12

Publisher

KEAI PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1007/s12250-020-00264-9

Keywords

Axl; Tyro3; Mertk; Virus; Infection

Categories

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81671971, 81871641, 81972979, U1902210, U1602223]
  2. Scientific Research Plan of the Beijing Municipal Education Committee [KM201710025002]
  3. Key Project of Beijing Natural Science Foundation B [KZ201810025035]
  4. Support Project of High-level Teachers in Beijing Municipal Universities in the Period of 13th Five-year Plan [IDHT20190510]

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The TAM receptors have various roles in maintaining immune and inflammatory homeostasis, promoting virus infection, and protecting against neuroinvasive viral infections in mice. Research suggests that TAM receptors not only protect mice from the effects of neuroinvasive virus infections, but also have an impact on the outcome of virus infections through multiple mechanisms.
Tyro3,Axl, andMertk (TAM) receptors play multiple roles in a myriad of physiological and pathological processes, varying from promoting the phagocytic clearance of apoptotic cells, sustaining the immune and inflammatory homeostasis, maintaining the blood-brain barrier (BBB) integrity and central nervous system (CNS) homeostasis, to mediating cancer malignancy and chemoresistance. Growth arrest-specific protein 6 (Gas6) and protein S (Pros1) are the two ligands that activate TAM receptors. Recently, TAM receptors have been reported to mediate cell entry and infection of multitudinous enveloped viruses in a manner called apoptotic mimicry. Moreover, TAM receptors are revitalized during viral entry and infection, which sequesters innate immune and inflammatory responses, facilitating viral replication and immune evasion. However, accumulating evidence have now proposed that TAM receptors are not required for the infection of these virusesin vivo. In addition, TAM receptors protect mice against the CNS infection of neuroinvasive viruses and relieve the brain lesions during encephalitis. These protective effects are achieved through maintaining BBB integrity, attenuating proinflammatory cytokine production, and promoting neural cell survival. TAM receptors also regulate the programmed cell death modes of virus-infected cells, which have profound impacts on the pathogenesis and outcome of infection. Here, we systematically review the functionalities and underlying mechanisms of TAM receptors and propose the potential application of TAM agonists to prevent severe viral encephalitis.

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