4.6 Article

Restriction of Viral Replication, Rather than T Cell Immunopathology, Drives Lethality in Murine Norovirus CR6-Infected STAT1-Deficient Mice

Journal

JOURNAL OF VIROLOGY
Volume 96, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/jvi.02065-21

Keywords

STAT1; antiviral immunity; host-microbiome interactions; immunopathology; mucosal immunity; virome

Categories

Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada [RGPIN-2016-04282]
  2. Canadian Institutes of Health Research [PJT-159458]
  3. Canada Research Chair program
  4. University of British Columbia
  5. NIH [R01AI148467]
  6. University of British Columbia Flow Cytometry Core
  7. Centre for Disease Modeling

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The intestinal microbiota is a collection of bacteria, archaea, fungi, and viruses that colonize the mammalian gut. The coevolution of the host and microbiota has required the development of immunological tolerance. This study focuses on the host-directed mechanisms of viral regulation and demonstrates the central role of STAT1 in regulating viral replication and antiviral T cell responses.
The intestinal microbiota is a collection of bacteria, archaea, fungi, and viruses that colonize the mammalian gut. Coevolution of the host and microbiota has required development of immunological tolerance to prevent ongoing inflammatory responses against intestinal microbes. Recent evidence indicates that viral components of the microbiota can contribute to intestinal homeostasis and protection from local inflammatory or infectious insults. However, host-derived mechanisms that regulate the virome remain largely unknown. In this study, we used colonization with the model commensal murine norovirus (MNV; strain CR6) to interrogate host-directed mechanisms of viral regulation, and we show that STAT1 is a central coordinator of both viral replication and antiviral T cell responses. In addition to restricting CR6 replication to the intestinal tract, we show that STAT1 regulates antiviral CD4(+) and CD8(+) T cell responses and prevents systemic viral-induced tissue damage and disease. Despite altered T cell responses that resemble those that mediate lethal immunopathology in systemic viral infections in STAT1-deficient mice, depletion of adaptive immune cells and their associated effector functions had no effect on CR6-induced disease. However, therapeutic administration of an antiviral compound limited viral replication, preventing virus-induced tissue damage and death without impacting the generation of inflammatory antiviral T cell responses. Collectively, our data show that STAT1 restricts MNV CR6 replication within the intestinal mucosa and that uncontrolled viral replication mediates disease rather than the concomitant development of dysregulated antiviral T cell responses in STAT1-deficient mice. IMPORTANCE The intestinal microbiota is a collection of bacteria, archaea, fungi, and viruses that colonize the mammalian gut. Coevolution of the host and microbiota has required development of immunological tolerance to prevent ongoing inflammatory responses against intestinal microbes. Breakdown of tolerance to bacterial components of the microbiota can contribute to immune activation and inflammatory disease. However, the mechanisms that are necessary to maintain tolerance to viral components of the microbiome, and the consequences of loss of tolerance, are less well understood. Here, we show that STAT1 is integral for preventing escape of a commensal-like virus, murine norovirus CR6 (MNV CR6), from the gut and that in the absence of STAT1, mice succumb to infection-induced disease. In contrast to the case with other systemic viral infections, mortality of STAT1-deficient mice is not driven by immune-mediated pathology. Our data demonstrate the importance of host-mediated geographical restriction of commensal-like viruses.

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