4.7 Review

Mitochondria and Viral Infection: Advances and Emerging Battlefronts

Journal

MBIO
Volume 13, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/mbio.02096-21

Keywords

mitochondria; virus; mimics; virologs; apoptosis; pyroptosis; mitochondrial dynamics; OXPHOS; TCA cycle; MAVS; DAMP; mtDNA; mtdsRNA; mtROS; MISTR; interferon; supercomplexes; NDUFA4; C15orf48; micropeptides

Categories

Funding

  1. Cancer Prevention & Research Institute of Texas [R00 GM119126-04, 1R35GM142689-01, RR 170047]
  2. National Institutes of Health by Immunology Training Grant [2T32AI005284-41A1]

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Mitochondria play a vital role in energy production and immune defense. They serve as signaling hubs during microbial infection to induce immune responses against invading pathogens. The morphology and stored signals in mitochondria can affect infection outcomes. Furthermore, traditional functions of mitochondria also play important roles in viral infection.
Mitochondria are dynamic organelles vital for energy production with now appreciated roles in immune defense. During microbial infection, mitochondria serve as signaling hubs to induce immune responses to counteract invading pathogens like viruses. Mitochondrial functions are central to a variety of antiviral responses including apoptosis and type I interferon signaling (IFN-I). While apoptosis and IFN-I mediated by mitochondrial antiviral signaling (MAVS) are well-established defenses, new dimensions of mitochondrial biology are emerging as battlefronts during viral infection. Increasingly, it has become apparent that mitochondria serve as reservoirs for distinct cues that trigger immune responses and that alterations in mitochondrial morphology may also tip infection outcomes. Furthermore, new data are foreshadowing pivotal roles for classic, homeostatic facets of this organelle as host-virus interfaces, namely, the tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle and electron transport chain (ETC) complexes like respiratory supercomplexes. Underscoring the importance of housekeeping mitochondrial activities in viral infection is the growing list of viral-encoded inhibitors including mimics derived from cellular genes that antagonize these functions. For example, virologs for ETC factors and several enzymes from the TCA cycle have been recently identified in DNA virus genomes and serve to pinpoint new vulnerabilities during infection. Here, we highlight recent advances for known antiviral functions associated with mitochondria as well as where the next battlegrounds may be based on viral effectors. Collectively, new methodology and mechanistic insights over the coming years will strengthen our understanding of how an ancient molecular truce continues to defend cells against viruses.

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