Virulent African swine fever virus infection of porcine monocytes causes SLA I subversion due to loss of proper ER structure/function.

IF 3.6 3区 医学 Q2 IMMUNOLOGY
Luise Brose, Alexander Schäfer, Kati Franzke, Clemens Cammann, Ulrike Seifert, Gang Pei, Sandra Blome, Michael R Knittler, Ulrike Blohm
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Abstract

African swine fever virus (ASFV) is a large DNA virus of the Asfarviridae family that causes a fatal hemorrhagic disease in domestic swine and wild boar. Infections with moderately virulent strains predominantly result in a milder clinical course and lower lethality. As target cells of ASFV, monocytes play a crucial role in triggering T-cell-mediated immune defense and ASF pathogenesis. We compared the effect of the highly virulent "Armenia2008" (ASFV-A) virus strain with that of the naturally attenuated "Estonia2014" (ASFV-E) on cellular immune activation in vivo and on primary monocytes ex vivo. Specifically, we asked whether antigen presentation of porcine monocytes is impaired upon ASFV-A infection. ASFV-A-infected monocytes are characterized by lower levels of swine leukocyte antigen (SLA) class I on the cell surface than ASFV-E-infected and uninfected monocytes. Despite stable steady-state SLA I mRNA/protein levels and expression of critical components of the antigen processing machinery, a marked decrease in maturation and reduced surface transport of SLA I were observed in ASFV-A-infected monocytes. The intracellular maturation block of SLA I was accompanied by a loss of functional rough ER structures and a pronounced formation of ER-associated aggresomes. This unsolved cellular stress resulted in a shutdown of overall host cell protein translation, mitochondrial dysfunction, and caspase-3-mediated apoptosis. In contrast, no such cellular subversion phenomenon was found in ASFV-E-infected monocytes. Our findings suggest that in domestic pigs infected with highly virulent ASFV-A, sequential subversion events occur in infected monocytes, likely leading to compromised T-cell activation and impaired downstream responses against ASFV.

毒力强的非洲猪瘟病毒感染猪单核细胞导致SLA I因正常ER结构/功能的丧失而被颠覆。
非洲猪瘟病毒(ASFV)是一种Asfarviridae家族的大型DNA病毒,可引起家猪和野猪的致命出血性疾病。中等毒性菌株的感染主要导致较轻的临床病程和较低的致死率。单核细胞作为ASFV的靶细胞,在触发t细胞介导的免疫防御和ASF发病中起着至关重要的作用。我们比较了高毒力的“亚美尼亚2008”(ASFV-A)病毒株与自然减毒的“爱沙尼亚2014”(ASFV-E)病毒株对体内细胞免疫激活和体外原代单核细胞的影响。具体来说,我们想知道在感染ASFV-A后,猪单核细胞的抗原呈递是否受损。感染asfv - a的单核细胞的特征是细胞表面的猪白细胞抗原(SLA) I类水平低于感染asfv - e和未感染的单核细胞。在asfv - a感染的单核细胞中,尽管SLA - I mRNA/蛋白水平稳定且抗原加工机制的关键成分表达稳定,但SLA - I的成熟和表面转运明显减少。SLA I的细胞内成熟阻滞伴随着功能粗糙的内质网结构的丧失和内质网相关聚合体的明显形成。这种未解决的细胞应激导致宿主细胞蛋白质翻译的整体关闭,线粒体功能障碍和caspase-3介导的细胞凋亡。相反,在感染asfv - e的单核细胞中未发现这种细胞颠覆现象。我们的研究结果表明,在感染了高毒力ASFV- a的家猪中,被感染的单核细胞发生了连续的颠覆事件,可能导致t细胞激活受损和对ASFV的下游反应受损。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Journal of immunology
Journal of immunology 医学-免疫学
CiteScore
8.20
自引率
2.30%
发文量
495
审稿时长
1 months
期刊介绍: The JI publishes novel, peer-reviewed findings in all areas of experimental immunology, including innate and adaptive immunity, inflammation, host defense, clinical immunology, autoimmunity and more. Special sections include Cutting Edge articles, Brief Reviews and Pillars of Immunology. The JI is published by The American Association of Immunologists (AAI)
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