Zika virus infection induces host inflammatory responses by facilitating NLRP3 inflammasome assembly and interleukin-1β secretion

Wenbiao Wang(Jinan University), Geng Li(Guangzhou University of Chinese Medicine), De Wu, Zhen Luo(Jinan University), Pan Pan(Wuhan University), Mingfu Tian(Wuhan University), Yingchong Wang(Wuhan University), Feng Xiao(Wuhan University), Aixin Li(Wuhan University), Kailang Wu(Wuhan University), Xiaohong Liu(Guangzhou University of Chinese Medicine), Lang Rao(Wuhan University), Fang Liu(Wuhan University), Yingle Liu(Jinan University), Jianguo Wu(Jinan University)
Nature Communications
January 3, 2018
Cited by 215Open Access
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Abstract

Zika virus (ZIKV) infection is a public health emergency and host innate immunity is essential for the control of virus infection. The NLRP3 inflammasome plays a key role in host innate immune responses by activating caspase-1 to facilitate interleukin-1β (IL-1β) secretion. Here we report that ZIKV stimulates IL-1β secretion in infected patients, human PBMCs and macrophages, mice, and mice BMDCs. The knockdown of NLRP3 in cells and knockout of NLRP3 in mice inhibit ZIKV-mediated IL-1β secretion, indicating an essential role for NLRP3 in ZIKV-induced IL-1β activation. Moreover, ZIKV NS5 protein is required for NLRP3 activation and IL-1β secretion by binding with NLRP3 to facilitate the inflammasome complex assembly. Finally, ZIKV infection in mice activates IL-1β secretion, leading to inflammatory responses in the mice brain, spleen, liver, and kidney. Thus we reveal a mechanism by which ZIKV induces inflammatory responses by facilitating NLRP3 inflammasome complex assembly and IL-1β activation.


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