Published in

American Association of Immunologists, The Journal of Immunology, 4(182), p. 2248-2257, 2009

DOI: 10.4049/jimmunol.0802466

Links

Tools

Export citation

Search in Google Scholar

TANK-Binding Kinase-1 Plays an Important Role during In Vitro and In Vivo Type I IFN Responses to DNA Virus Infections

Journal article published in 2009 by Andrea K. Miyahira ORCID, Arash Shahangian, Seungmin Hwang, Ren Sun, Genhong Cheng
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

Full text: Download

Green circle
Preprint: archiving allowed
Red circle
Postprint: archiving forbidden
Red circle
Published version: archiving forbidden
Data provided by SHERPA/RoMEO

Abstract

TANK-binding kinase-1 (TBK1) and the inducible IkappaB kinase (IKK-i) have recently been shown to activate type I IFN responses elicited by intracellular detection of RNA or DNA from infecting viruses. Detection of viral RNA is mediated by retinoic acid inducible gene-I or melanoma differentiation-associated gene-5 pathways in which TBK1 and IKK-i have been demonstrated to play redundant roles in IFN activation. In this study, we have examined whether such redundancy occurs in the type I IFN response to DNA viral challenges by examining induction of IFNs and IFN-mediated signaling and gene programs in TBK1(-/-) macrophages. In contrast to the normal IFN responses in TBK1(-/-) macrophages infected with an RNA virus, IFN responses were severely abrogated during DNA virus infections in TBK1(-/-) macrophages. Because both TBK1 and IKK-i are expressed in macrophages, our studies suggest that TBK1 and IKK-i differ functionally in DNA virus-mediated IFN responses; however, they are redundant in RNA virus-mediated IFN responses. Confirmatively, reconstitution of TBK1(-/-)IKK-i(-/-) fibroblasts revealed that TBK1 rescued IFN responses to transfected B-DNA to a much stronger degree than IKK-i. Finally, we demonstrate the requirement for the TBK1-IFN regulatory factor-3 pathway in host defense against a DNA virus infection in vivo.