TLR3 controls constitutive IFN-β antiviral immunity in human fibroblasts and cortical neurons

Daxing Gao(University of Science and Technology of China), Michael J. Ciancanelli(Cell Biologics (United States)), Peng Zhang(Rockefeller University), Oliver Harschnitz(Kettering University), Vincent Bondet(Institut Pasteur), Mary L. Hasek(Rockefeller University), Jie Chen(Rockefeller University), Xin Mu(Harvard University), Yuval Itan(Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai), Aurélie Cobat(Inserm), Vanessa Sancho‐Shimizu(Inserm), Benedetta Bigio(Rockefeller University), Lazaro Lorenzo(Inserm), Gabriele Ciceri(Kettering University), Jessica L. McAlpine(Kettering University), Esperanza Anguiano(Baylor Institute for Rehabilitation), Emmanuelle Jouanguy(Inserm), Damien Chaussabel(Baylor Institute for Rehabilitation), Isabelle Meyts(Child Health and Development Institute), Michael Diamond(Washington University in St. Louis), Laurent Abel(Inserm), Sun Hur(Harvard University), Gregory A. Smith(Northwestern University), Luigi D. Notarangelo(National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases), Darragh Duffy(Institut Pasteur), Lorenz Studer(Kettering University), Jean‐Laurent Casanova(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Shen‐Ying Zhang(Inserm)
Journal of Clinical Investigation
January 3, 2021
Cited by 99Open Access
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Abstract

Human herpes simplex virus 1 (HSV-1) encephalitis can be caused by inborn errors of the TLR3 pathway, resulting in impairment of CNS cell-intrinsic antiviral immunity. Deficiencies of the TLR3 pathway impair cell-intrinsic immunity to vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) and HSV-1 in fibroblasts, and to HSV-1 in cortical but not trigeminal neurons. The underlying molecular mechanism is thought to involve impaired IFN-α/β induction by the TLR3 recognition of dsRNA viral intermediates or by-products. However, we show here that human TLR3 controls constitutive levels of IFNB mRNA and secreted bioactive IFN-β protein, and thereby also controls constitutive mRNA levels for IFN-stimulated genes (ISGs) in fibroblasts. Tlr3-/- mouse embryonic fibroblasts also have lower basal ISG levels. Moreover, human TLR3 controls basal levels of IFN-β secretion and ISG mRNA in induced pluripotent stem cell-derived cortical neurons. Consistently, TLR3-deficient human fibroblasts and cortical neurons are vulnerable not only to both VSV and HSV-1, but also to several other families of viruses. The mechanism by which TLR3 restricts viral growth in human fibroblasts and cortical neurons in vitro and, by inference, by which the human CNS prevents infection by HSV-1 in vivo, is therefore based on the control of early viral infection by basal IFN-β immunity.


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