Viperin restricts chikungunya virus replication and pathology
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Foo, Suan-Sin
Simamarta, Diane
Lum, Fok-Moon
Teo, Teck-Hui
Lulla, Aleksei
K.W. Yeo, Nicholas
G.L. Koh, Esther
Chow, Angela
Leo, Yee-Sin
Merits, Andres
Chin, Keh-Chuang
F.P. Ng, Lisa
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Abstract
Chikungunya virus (CHIKV) is a mosquito-borne arthralgia arbovirus that is reemergent in sub-Saharan Africa and Southeast Asia. CHIKV infection has been shown to be self-limiting, but the molecular mechanisms of the innate immune response that control CHIKV replication remain undefined. Here, longitudinal transcriptional analyses of PBMCs from a cohort of CHIKV-infected patients revealed that type I IFNs controlled CHIKV infection via RSAD2 (which encodes viperin), an enigmatic multifunctional IFN-stimulated gene (ISG). Viperin was highly induced in monocytes, the major target cell of CHIKV in blood. Anti-CHIKV functions of viperin were dependent on its localization in the ER, and the N-terminal amphipathic a-helical domain was crucial for its antiviral activity in controlling CHIKV replication. Furthermore, mice lacking Rsad2 had higher viremia and severe joint inflammation compared with wild-type mice. Our data demonstrate that viperin is a critical antiviral host protein that controls CHIKV infection and provide a preclinical basis for the design of effective control strategies against CHIKV and other reemerging arthrogenic alphaviruses.
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Journal of Clinical Investigation
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122
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12
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© 2012 American Society for Clinical Investigation (ASCI). The attached file is reproduced here in accordance with the copyright policy of the publisher. Please refer to the journal's website for access to the definitive, published version.
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Virology
Medical and Health Sciences