4.7 Article

Nondegradative Role of Atg5-Atg12/Atg16L1 Autophagy Protein Complex in Antiviral Activity of Interferon Gamma

Journal

CELL HOST & MICROBE
Volume 11, Issue 4, Pages 397-409

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.chom.2012.03.002

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Midwest Regional Center of Excellence for Biodefense and Emerging Infectious Diseases [U54 AI065982]
  2. National Institutes of Health [AI054483, CA096511, AI084887]
  3. Rheumatic Diseases Core Center [NIH P30 AR48335]
  4. NCI Cancer Center [P30 CA91842]
  5. ICTS/CTSA [UL1RR024992]
  6. Ministry of Science and Innovation-Spain
  7. Fundacion M. Botin

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Host resistance to viral infection requires type I (alpha/beta) and II (gamma) interferon (IFN) production. Another important defense mechanism is the degradative activity of macroautophagy (herein autophagy), mediated by the coordinated action of evolutionarily conserved autophagy proteins (Atg). We show that the Atg5-Atg12/Atg16L1 protein complex, whose prior known function is in autophagosome formation, is required for IFN gamma-mediated host defense against murine norovirus (MNV) infection. Importantly, the direct antiviral activity of IFN gamma against MNV in macrophages required Atg5-Atg12, Atg7, and Atg16L1, but not induction of autophagy, the degradative activity of lysosomal proteases, fusion of autophagosomes and lysosomes, or the Atg8-processing protein Atg4B. IFN gamma, via Atg5-Atg12/Atg16L1, inhibited formation of the membranous cytoplasmic MNV replication complex, where Atg16L1 localized. Thus, the Atg5-Atg12/Atg16L1 complex performs a pivotal, nondegradative role in IFN gamma-mediated antiviral defense, establishing that multicellular organisms have evolved to use portions of the autophagy pathway machinery in a cassette-like fashion for host defense.

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