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Temporal activation of NF-kappaB regulates an interferon-independent innate antiviral response against cytoplasmic RNA viruses.


ABSTRACT: NF-kappaB is known to exert its antiviral innate immune response via the IFN-beta-induced Janus kinase/signal transducers and activators of transcription pathway. However, our current studies have demonstrated that activated NF-kappaB is capable of directly establishing an antiviral state independent of IFN or secreted soluble factor(s) against two highly pathogenic respiratory RNA viruses. Human parainfluenza virus type 3, a mildly cytopathic virus that induced NF-kappaB very early during infection was converted to a virulent virus after NF-kappaB inhibition. In contrast, a highly cytopathic virus, human respiratory syncytial virus that induced NF-kappaB late during infection, was converted to a mildly cytopathic virus after NF-kappaB induction before virus replication. This interconversion of cytopathic phenotypes of viruses after NF-kappaB modulation was further shown to be independent of IFN and soluble secreted factors(s). Moreover, tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha) and IL-1beta elicited an antiviral response, which was NF-kappaB-dependent. Thus, NF-kappaB induction directly confers an essential innate antiviral response against human parainfluenza virus type 3 and respiratory syncytial virus, which is independent of IFN-inducible factor(s).

SUBMITTER: Bose S 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC196898 | biostudies-literature | 2003 Sep

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Temporal activation of NF-kappaB regulates an interferon-independent innate antiviral response against cytoplasmic RNA viruses.

Bose Santanu S   Kar Niladri N   Maitra Ratan R   DiDonato Joseph A JA   Banerjee Amiya K AK  

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 20030905 19


NF-kappaB is known to exert its antiviral innate immune response via the IFN-beta-induced Janus kinase/signal transducers and activators of transcription pathway. However, our current studies have demonstrated that activated NF-kappaB is capable of directly establishing an antiviral state independent of IFN or secreted soluble factor(s) against two highly pathogenic respiratory RNA viruses. Human parainfluenza virus type 3, a mildly cytopathic virus that induced NF-kappaB very early during infec  ...[more]

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