Toll-like receptors 9 and 3 as essential components of innate immune defense against mouse cytomegalovirus infection

Koichi Tabeta(Scripps Research Institute), Philippe Georgel(Scripps Research Institute), Edith M. Janssen(Scripps Research Institute), Xin Du(Scripps Research Institute), Kasper Hoebe(Scripps Research Institute), Karine Crozat(Scripps Research Institute), Suzanne Mudd(Scripps Research Institute), Louis Shamel(Scripps Research Institute), Sosathya Sovath(Scripps Research Institute), Jason Goode(Scripps Research Institute), Lena Alexopoulou(Scripps Research Institute), R. A. Flavell(Scripps Research Institute), Bruce Beutler(Scripps Research Institute)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
March 1, 2004
Cited by 932

Abstract

Several subsets of dendritic cells have been shown to produce type I IFN in response to viral infections, thereby assisting the natural killer cell-dependent response that eliminates the pathogen. Type I IFN production can be induced both by unmethylated CpG-oligodeoxynucleotide and by double-stranded RNA. Here, we describe a codominant CpG-ODN unresponsive phenotype that results from an N-ethyl-N-nitrosourea-induced missense mutation in the Tlr9 gene (Tlr9(CpG1)). Mice homozygous for the Tlr9(CpG1) allele are highly susceptible to mouse cytomegalovirus infection and show impaired infection-induced secretion of IFN-alpha/beta and natural killer cell activation. We also demonstrate that both the Toll-like receptor (TLR) 9 --> MyD88 and TLR3 --> Trif signaling pathways are activated in vivo on viral inoculation, and that each pathway contributes to innate defense against systemic viral infection. Whereas both pathways lead to type I IFN production, neither pathway offers full protection against mouse cytomegalovirus infection in the absence of the other. The Tlr9(CpG1) mutation alters a leucine-rich repeat motif and lies within a receptor domain that is conserved within the evolutionary cluster encompassing TLRs 7, 8, and 9. In other TLRs, including three mouse-specific TLRs described in this paper, the affected region is not represented. The phenotypic effect of the Tlr9(CpG1) allele thus points to a critical role for TLR9 in viral sensing and identifies a vulnerable amino acid within the ectodomain of three TLR proteins, essential for a ligand response.


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