4.4 Article

Functional motifs responsible for human metapneumovirus M2-2-mediated innate immune evasion

Journal

VIROLOGY
Volume 499, Issue -, Pages 361-368

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.virol.2016.09.026

Keywords

hMPV; M2-2 motif; TRAF; MAVS; Innate immune response

Categories

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health-National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases [1R01AI107033-01, R21AI113771-01A1]
  2. American Lung Association [RG232529N]
  3. American Heart Association [12BGIA12060008]
  4. UTMB CTSA - NCATS [UL1TR001439]

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Human metapneumovirus (hMPV) is a major cause of lower respiratory infection in young children. Repeated infections occur throughout life, but its immune evasion mechanisms are largely unknown. We recently found that hMPV M2-2 protein elicits immune evasion by targeting mitochondrial antiviral-signaling protein (MAVS), an antiviral signaling molecule. However, the molecular mechanisms underlying such inhibition are not known. Our mutagenesis studies revealed that PDZ-binding motifs, 29-DEMI-32 and 39-KEALSDGI-46, located in an immune inhibitory region of M2-2, are responsible for M2-2-mediated immune evasion. We also found both motifs prevent TRAF5 and TRAF6, the MAVS downstream adaptors, to be recruited to MAVS, while the motif 39-KEALSDGI-46 also blocks TRAF3 migrating to MAVS. In parallel, these TRAFs are important in activating transcription factors NF-kB and/or IRF-3 by hMPV. Our findings collectively demonstrate that M2-2 uses its PDZ motifs to launch the hMPV immune evasion through blocking the interaction of MAVS and its downstream TRAFs.

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