4.7 Article

Rift Valley fever virus modulates apoptosis and immune response during infection of human astrocytes

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EMERGING MICROBES & INFECTIONS
卷 12, 期 1, 页码 -

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TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/22221751.2023.2207672

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Rift Valley fever virus; arbovirus; astrocytes; apoptosis; immune response; interferon; neurovirulence

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Rift Valley fever (RVF) is a zoonotic disease that causes epidemics in Africa, the Arabic Peninsula, and islands of the South West of the Indian Ocean. It mainly affects livestock but also has severe clinical manifestations in humans, including neurological disorders. The impact of RVFV infection on the human CNS is still poorly understood.
Rift Valley fever (RVF) is an arboviral disease of zoonotic origin that causes recurrent epidemics in Africa, the Arabic Peninsula, and islands of the South West of the Indian Ocean. RVF occurs mainly in livestock but also affects humans with severe clinical manifestations, including neurological disorders. However, human neuropathogenesis of Rift Valley fever virus (RVFV) is still poorly characterized. To study the interactions between RVFV and the central nervous system (CNS), we focused on RVFV infection of astrocytes, the major glial cells of the CNS that have several supporting roles including immune response regulation. We confirmed the permissiveness of astrocytes to RVFV infection and highlighted a strain-dependent infectivity. We showed that RVFV infection of astrocytes induced cell apoptosis and observed that the RVFV Non-Structural protein NSs, a known virulence factor, potentially delayed apoptosis by sequestrating activated-caspase 3 in the nucleus. Our study also showed that RVFV-infected astrocytes upregulated expression of genes associated with inflammatory and type I interferon responses at the mRNA level, but not at the protein level. This inhibition of immune response is potentially due to a NSs-dependent mechanism of mRNA nuclear export inhibition. Together, these results highlighted the direct impact of RVFV infection on the human CNS through the induction of apoptosis and a possible inhibition of early-onset immune responses that are crucial for the host survival.

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