Interferon-alpha treatment inhibits acute Friend retrovirus replication primarily through the antiviral effector molecule Apobec3
Therapeutic administration of IFN-α in clinical trials significantly reduced HIV-1 plasma viral load and HTLV-I proviral load in infected patients. The mechanism may involve the concerted action of multiple antiretroviral effectors collectively known as ‘restriction factors’, which could vary in rel...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Journal of immunology (1950) 2013-01, Vol.190 (4), p.1583-1590 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Therapeutic administration of IFN-α in clinical trials significantly reduced HIV-1 plasma viral load and HTLV-I proviral load in infected patients. The mechanism may involve the concerted action of multiple antiretroviral effectors collectively known as ‘restriction factors’, which could vary in relative importance according to the magnitude of transcriptional induction. However, direct genetic approaches to identify the relevant IFN-α restriction factors will not be feasible in humans
in vivo
. On the other hand, mice encode an analogous set of restriction factor genes and could be used to obtain insights on how IFN-α could inhibit retroviruses
in vivo
. As expected, IFN-α treatment of mice significantly upregulated the transcription of multiple restriction factors including
Tetherin/BST2, SAMHD1, Viperin, ISG15, OAS1
and
IFITM3
. However, a dominant antiretroviral factor,
Apobec3,
was only minimally induced. To determine whether
Apobec3
was necessary for direct IFN-α antiretroviral action
in vivo
, wild-type and
Apobec3
-deficient mice were infected with Friend retrovirus then treated with IFN-α. Treatment of infected wild-type mice with IFN-α significantly reduced acute plasma viral load 28-fold, splenic proviral load 5-fold, bone marrow proviral load 14-fold and infected bone marrow cells 7-fold, but no inhibition was observed in
Apobec3
-deficient mice. These findings reveal that IFN-α inhibits acute Friend retrovirus infection primarily through the antiviral effector Apobec3
in vivo
, demonstrate that transcriptional induction levels did not predict the mechanism of IFN-α-mediated control, and highlight the potential of the human APOBEC3 proteins as therapeutic targets against pathogenic retrovirus infections. |
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ISSN: | 0022-1767 1550-6606 |
DOI: | 10.4049/jimmunol.1202920 |