Microbiome-mediated incapacitation of interferon lambda production in the oral mucosa

Carlos J. Rodriguez-Hernandez(University of Louisville), Kevin J. Sokoloski(University of Louisville), Kendall S. Stocke(University of Louisville), Himabindu Dukka(University of Louisville), Shunying Jin(University of Louisville), Melissa A. Metzler(University of Louisville), Konstantin Zaitsev(Washington University in St. Louis), Boris Shpak(Washington University in St. Louis), Daonan Shen(University of Louisville), Daniel P. Miller(University of Louisville), Maxim N. Artyomov(Washington University in St. Louis), Richard J. Lamont(University of Louisville), Juhi Bagaitkar(University of Louisville)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
December 17, 2021
Cited by 26Open Access
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Abstract

Here, we show that Porphyromonas gingivalis ( Pg ), an endogenous oral pathogen, dampens all aspects of interferon (IFN) signaling in a manner that is strikingly similar to IFN suppression employed by multiple viral pathogens. Pg suppressed IFN production by down-regulating several IFN regulatory factors (IRFs 1, 3, 7, and 9), proteolytically degrading STAT1 and suppressing the nuclear translocation of the ISGF3 complex, resulting in profound and systemic repression of multiple interferon-stimulated genes. Pg -induced IFN paralysis was not limited to murine models but was also observed in the oral tissues of human periodontal disease patients, where overabundance of Pg correlated with suppressed IFN generation. Mechanistically, multiple virulence factors and secreted proteases produced by Pg transcriptionally suppressed IFN promoters and also cleaved IFN receptors, making cells refractory to exogenous IFN and inducing a state of broad IFN paralysis. Thus, our data show a bacterial pathogen with equivalence to viruses in the down-regulation of host IFN signaling.


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