2 resultados para Interferon-stimulated gene (ISG)

em ArchiMeD - Elektronische Publikationen der Universität Mainz - Alemanha


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Interferon-gamma is mainly produced by activated T helper cells and cytotoxic T lymphocytes and sustains the immune-defense against viral and bacterial infections. For a better understanding of IFN-gamma promoter regulation in T cells, different DNA-binding motivs were examined. Hereby, a new motiv (-196 to -183) was identified, that binds to the transcription factor AP-1 in T helper cells and Jurkat T cells. This factor acts as an essential activator protein. Further investigation demonstrated that IL-12 and IL-18 induce different regulatory pathways. Both AP-1 and STAT-4 bindings at their cognate DNA elements (-196 to -183 and -224 to -215) are required for the IL-12 dependent activation whereas IL-18 causes direct activation via AP-1.Moreover, the TH2 cytokine IL-4 represses significantly the IFN-gamma promoter activity in CD4+ T cells. IL-4 induces GATA-3, that interacts with two DNA-motivs (-111 to -87) at the IFN-gamma promoter.Furthermore, transgenic mice were generated, yielding a human IFN-gamma promoter construct (410 bp) under the control of a luciferase reporter gene. The data demonstrated a specific IFN-gamma promoter activation by antiCD3 plus antiCD28 in CD4+ and CD8+ T cells. The luciferase activty in CD4+ T cells was reinforced by addition of IL-12 and IL-18 and repressed by IL-4.

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Immune modulation by herpesviruses, such as cytomegalovirus, is critical for the establishment of acute and persistent infection confronting a vigorous antiviral immune response of the host. Therefore, the action of immune-modulatory proteins has long been the subject of research, with the final goal to identify new strategies for antiviral therapy.rnIn the case of murine cytomegalovirus (mCMV), the viral m152 protein has been identified to play a major role in targeting components of both the innate and the adaptive immune system in terms of infected host-cell recognition in the effector phase of the antiviral immune response. On the one hand, it inhibits cell surface expression of RAE-1 and thereby prevents ligation of the activating natural killer (NK)-cell receptor NKG2D. On the other hand, it decreases cell surface expression of peptide-loaded MHC class I molecules thereby preventing antigen presentation to CD8 T cells. Ultimately, the outcome of CMV infection is determined by the interplay between viral and cellular factors.rnIn this context, the work presented here has revealed a novel and intriguing connection between viral m152 and cellular interferon (IFN), a key cytokine of the immune system: rnthe m152 promoter region contains an interferon regulatory factor element (IRFE) perfectly matching the consensus sequence of cellular IRFEs.rnThe biological relevance of this regulatory element was first suggested by sequence comparisons revealing its evolutionary conservation among various established laboratory strains of mCMV and more recent low-passage wild-derived virus isolates. Moreover, search of the mCMV genome revealed only three IRFE sites in the complete sequence. Importantly, the functionality of the IRFE in the m152 promoter was confirmed with the use of a mutant virus, representing a functional deletion of the IRFE, and its corresponding revertant virus. In particular, m152 gene expression was found to be inhibited in an IRFE-dependent manner in infected cells. Essentially, this inhibition proved to have a severe impact on the immune-modulatory function of m152, first demonstrated by a restored direct antigen presentation on infected cells for CD8 T-cell activation. Even more importantly, this effect of IRFE-mediated IFN signaling was validated in vivo by showing that the protective antiviral capacity of adoptively-transferred, antigen-specific CD8 T cells is also significantly restored by the IRFE-dependent inhibition of m152. Somewhat curious and surprising, the decrease in m152 protein simultaneously prevented an enhanced activation of NK cells in acute-infected mice, apparently independent of the RAE-1/NKG2D ligand/receptor interaction but rather due to reduced ‘missing-self’ recognition.rnTaken together, this work presents a so far unknown mechanism of IFN signaling to control mCMV immune modulation in acute infection.rnrn