Anti-Infection Measures
Physical Barriers
Intrinsic mechanisms
=> Unspecific, immediate
Skin
Saliva
Mucus
Tears
Defensins
Intrinsic Measures
RNAi (RNA Interference)
Epigenetic Silencing
Apoptosis
Anti-viral Immunity
Innate (after minutes to hours)
Adaptive (after hours to days)
Innate Immunity Components
NK (Natural Killer) cells
Cytokines, Interferons (alpha, beta)
Complement system (part of the humoral innate system, enhances (= complements) the ability of antibodies and phagocytic cells to clear microbes and damaged cells from an organism, promote inflammation, and attack the pathogen's cell membrane)
Sentinel (Mast cells, Dendritic cells, macrophages)
Adaptive Immunity Components
Cell mediated (Interferon gamma, CTL = cytotoxic T Lymphocytes, NK cells and macrophages)
Humoral (antibodies)
Chronic viral Infections (examples)
HIV
Hepatitis B & C
RNAi process
siRNA: Plants, Insects, Fungi
miRNA: Mammals (, vertebrates?)
For miRNA:
In Nucleus: double stranded Pri-miRNA is cut into pre-miRNA via Drosha
pre-miRNA gets transported into the cytoplasm via Exportin 5 and cut into miRNA by DICER
miRNA double strands are separated via RISC/AGO complex and passenger strand is discarded
RISC-enzyme complex gets activated by miRNA and leads to incomplete complementary binding of the guide strand to target mRNA (virus mRNA)
Binding leads to translational repression (in mammals), mRNA degradation and mRNA cleavage (not in mammals)
For siRNA:
DICER cuts viral dsRNA into double stranded siRNA
RISC/AGO enzyme complex cleaves the passenger strand and gets activated
Complementary Binding of the guide strand to target mRNA (virus)
mRNA gets cleaved
Host-virus Interaction
Cycle: Restriction of virus through host and countermeasures of the virus against restriction
Viral Feedbak loop
Viral miRNAs are 100% complementary to other viral miRNA => get cleaved => feedback loop by the virus to stay under the radar
Hallmarks of Apoptosis + Induction pathways
Hallmarks:
Chromatin Condensation
DNA Fragmentation
Apoptotic Bodies
Plasma Membrane Integrity (membrane is stable during the whole process)
Induction Pathways:
Intrinsic = mitochondrial pathway
Extrinsic = Death receptor pathway
Viral Inhibition of Apoptosis
Hepatitis B: Inhibition of p53 (transcription factor inducing apoptosis if there is DNA damage) dependent apoptosis via protein HBx
Polyomaviruses/Papillomaviruses: Degradation/Inhibition of p53 via protein LT-antigen
Humanes Herpesviruses: Inhibition of caspase cascade (get activated during cell stress (intrinsic) or by DISC (extrinsic)) via protein v-FLIP/K13 (FLICE inhibitor)
Adenovirus, EBV: Bcl2 Homologue (protein E1B 19K), TNF alpha inhibition (protein LMP-1)
Apobec 3G (Apolipoprotein B editing complex 3G) and interaction with HIV
APOBEC3G belongs to the family of cytidine deaminases that catalyze the deamination of cytidine to uridine in the single stranded DNA substrate
Is expressed within non-permissive cells (resting T cells, macrophages)
Apobec 3G deaminates C (Cytosin) to U (Uracil) in DNA = non-sense transcription = HIV non-infectious in the next cell
Countermeasures of HIV resrticts Apobec 3G via Vif: ubiquinates A3G via Vif Enzyme complex (Cul5, Ned8, EloB-EloC, Cbf-beta, E2, Rbx-2) and leads to degradation in the proteasome = HIV infectious again
Vif1 binds to A3G as well as the cellular Cullin5 E3 Ubiquitin Ligase (ELOB-ELOC-CUL5) and a CBFB cofactor so that the ligase can be hijacked to tag A3G for degradation
Epigenetic Silencing of Viral Genomes
Function/Principle: Condensing the chromatin of viral genomes via histone marks to repress transcription
Activating histone marks: H3K27Ac, H3K4me3
Repressive histone marks: H3K27me3, H3K9me3
3 pathways
PML-ND10 nuclear bodies: Membraneless nuclear structures Includes: PML (promyelocytic leukaemia protein), Sp100, Smc5, Smc6, Daxx and ATRX Function: Deposits histones with repressive marks (histone H3.3)
IFI16 (Interferon gamma Inducible Protein 16): Innate Immune sensor for intracellular DNA Function: Deposition of repressive histone methylation
NP220 + HUSH (human silencing hub) complex: Deposit heterochromatic marks on unintegrated viral DNA (specifically for the retrovirus murine leukaemia virus)
Counteracting Epigenetic Silencing (examples)
Herpes simplex virus 1 (HSV-1): Protein VP16 associates with the host factors HCF-1 and Oct-1, with HCF-1 recruiting the host H3K9 demethylases LSD1 and JMJD2 to remove repressive marks, along with the H3K4 methyltransferases Set1 and MLL1 to deposit active marks on viral DNA
Several viral proteins target pro-myelocytic leukaemia nuclear body (PML-NB) components in order to avoid epigenetic repression.
=> HSV-1 ICP0 and human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) IE1 induce the degradation of PML and Sp100
=> Epstein–Barr virus (EBV) BNRF1 disassembles the Daxx–ATRX histone chaperone complex, whereas HCMV pp71 degrades Daxx
=> Hepatitis B virus (HBV) protein HBx induces the degradation of Smc5 or Smc6.
HSV-1 can also induce the degradation of IFI16 with ICP0 implicated as being involved in this degradation.
Retroviruses avoid epigenetic repression by integrating their DNA into host euchromatin, where it can no longer be identified as foreign DNA. MLV, murine leukaemia virus
PAMP-Sensors
= Pathogen associated molecular pattern
Lead to expression of IFN-alpha/beta => activate ISGs (interferon stimulated genes) = alpha-viral effector proteins (PKR,Mx, APOBEC, Trim5alpha, 2’5’OAS => RNAseL, Tetherin)
PAMP-Sensoren:
TLRs: TLR7,-8 (ssRNA), TLR3 (dsRNA), TLR9 (unmethylated DNA)
RLRs: RIG-I (ssRNA), MDA5 (dsRNA), cGAS/STING (cytosolic DNA)
IFN- α/β
Type I Interferons (IFN- α and IFN-β; 13 IFN- α subspecies, 1 single IFN- β gene, IFN-ε; IFN- κ + IFN- ω (single gene, produced by epithelial of specific tissues)
Direct response to viral infection
pDC and macrophages produce high levels of IFN- α
Fibroblasts mainly produce IFN-β
Tightly regulated on transcriptional level (promoter of IFN-β contains binding sites (ISRE) for IRF3, IRF7 and NFkB)
IFN- α subtypes bind to type I IFN receptor (2 subunits) => Heterodimerization, conformational changes, activation of signalling cascade
> 1000 genes are activated by stimulation of type I IFNAR
==> Antiviral, anti-proliferative, immunomodulatory functions
TLR (Toll-like Receptors)
Function: cell to cell interaction and signalling + host antimicrobial defence (vertebrates) ==> NF-kB activation, MAPK activation, Expression of pro-inflammatory cytokines, Maturation of DC
Extracellular domain: LRR = leucine rich repeat (22-29aa repeats; protein-protein interaction; binding to carbohydrates, lipids and nucleic acids)
=> pathogen recognition
Intracellular domain: TIR = Toll/Interleukin 1 receptor; Five TIR-containing cytosolic adaptors (MyD88, TIRAP, TRIF, TRAM, SARM)
=> downstream signalling
TLR1,2,4,6: recognize lipids
TLR3,7,8,9: recognize nucleic acids
TLR1,2,4,5,6,10 are expressed on cell surface
TLR3,7,8,9 are expressed in intracellular compartments (endosome)
At least 13 TLR members in mammals
pDC
= plasmacytoid DCs
recognize viral nucleic acids
MyD88 (myeloid differentiation factor 88)
N-terminal DD (Death domain); C-terminal TIR (Toll/Interleukin receptor) domain
TLR7,8
ssRNA
IRAK-4 (Interleukin 1 R associated kinase) binds to MyD88
TRIF
TIR Domain containing adaptor IFNβ
TLR3
dsRNA
Activation of ISGs
RLRs (RIGI-like receptor)
Detect PAMPs
RIG-I
MDA5
cGAS/STING
RIG-1 (Retinoic acid inducible gene I): DExD/F box RNA helicase domain
MDA-5 (melanoma differentiation associated protein 5): DExD/F box RNA helicase domain
MAVS (mitochondrial antiviral signalling proteins): IPS1 (Interferon promotor stimulating Factor I), CARD-like domain
cGAS: binds to dsDNA/cytoplasm => undergoes conformational change to build cGAMP (cyclic dinucleotide)
STING: stimulator of Interferon genes
TBK1: Tank-binding kinase 1
Viruses recognized by RIG-1/MDA5
Recognized by RIG-1: Paramyxoviruses (Sendai virus, parainfluenza), Orthomyxoviruses (Influenza), Rhabdoviruses (vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV)), Flaviviruses (Hepatitis C virus (HCV), Japanese encephalitis virus)
Recognized by MDA-5: Picornaviruses (Rhinovirus, Theiler’s disease virus)
Recognized by both: Flaviviruses (West Nile virus (WNV), Dengue virus)
PKR
an ISG
Expressed at low levels in all cells
Induced by IFN (autophosphorylation, homodimerization)
Activated by cellular and viral RNA with partial ds structures, heparin and other polyanionic compounds
Translation inhibition and apoptosis as result of PKR activation
Overexpression of PKR = inhibition of HBV replication
Viruses inhibit PKR by either sequestering PKR through viral binding (Adenovirus or HIV) or inhibiting PKR phosphorylation (HepC Virus NS5A protein)
Tetherin (BST-2, CD317)
Type II integral membrane protein
IFN induced expression in other cells
constitutively expressed in mature B cells, plasma cells and plasmacytoid dendritic cells
inhibits release of many enveloped viruses (HIV, EBOLA, LASSA, MARBURG Virus, CMV)
Viruses counteract by targeting Tetherin to proteasomal degradation (HIV) or lysosomal degradation (KSHV)
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