4.7 Article

Transcriptomes of Zebrafish in Early Stages of Multiple Viral Invasions Reveal the Role of Sterols in Innate Immune Switch-On

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms24054427

Keywords

early stage of viral infection; stress; steroids; switch-on innate immune

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It has been found that in the early stages of virus infection, fish pattern recognition receptors are the first to identify viruses and initiate innate immune responses. Through infecting larval zebrafish with different viruses and analyzing gene expression profiles, it was discovered that viral infection leads to a large amount of protein synthesis and sterol synthesis, while downregulating immune-related genes and upregulating rare key immune genes IRF3 and IRF7. This study suggests that viral infection can induce stress on the endoplasmic reticulum, suppress the immune system, and trigger the fish's innate immunological response through the activation of IRF3 and IRF7.
Although it is widely accepted that in the early stages of virus infection, fish pattern recognition receptors are the first to identify viruses and initiate innate immune responses, this process has never been thoroughly investigated. In this study, we infected larval zebrafish with four different viruses and analyzed whole-fish expression profiles from five groups of fish, including controls, at 10 h after infection. At this early stage of virus infection, 60.28% of the differentially expressed genes displayed the same expression pattern across all viruses, with the majority of immune-related genes downregulated and genes associated with protein synthesis and sterol synthesis upregulated. Furthermore, these protein synthesis- and sterol synthesis-related genes were strongly positively correlated in the expression pattern of the rare key upregulated immune genes, IRF3 and IRF7, which were not positively correlated with any known pattern recognition receptor gene. We hypothesize that viral infection triggered a large amount of protein synthesis that stressed the endoplasmic reticulum and the organism responded to this stress by suppressing the body's immune system while also mediating an increase in steroids. The increase in sterols then participates the activation of IRF3 and IRF7 and triggers the fish's innate immunological response to the virus infection.

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