1. Correction for Mo et al., 'Respiratory Syncytial Virus Activates Rab5a to Suppress IRF1-Dependent Lambda Interferon Production, Subverting the Antiviral Defense of Airway Epithelial Cells'
- Author
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Shi Mo, Wei Tang, Jun Xie, Sisi Chen, Luo Ren, Na Zang, Xiaohong Xie, Yu Deng, Leiqiong Gao, and Enmei Liu
- Subjects
viruses ,respiratory syncytial virus ,Immunology ,interferon lambda ,virus diseases ,Ras-related protein in brain 5a ,respiratory system ,interferon regulatory factor 1 ,Microbiology ,Virus-Cell Interactions ,Virology ,Insect Science ,antiviral defense ,Author Correction - Abstract
This study highlights the important role of Rab5a in respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) infection, such that its depletion inhibits RSV infection by stimulating the endogenous respiratory epithelial antiviral immunity and attenuates inflammation of the airway, which suggests that Rab5a is a powerful potential target for novel therapeutics against RSV infection., The limited antiviral options and lack of an effective vaccine against human respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) highlight the need for a novel antiviral therapy. One alternative is to identify and target the host factors required for viral infection. Here, using RNA interference to knock down Rab proteins, we provide multiple lines of evidence that Rab5a is required for RSV infection: (i) Rab5a is upregulated both in RSV A2-infected A549 cells and RSV A2-challenged BALB/c mouse airway epithelial cells at early infection phase; (ii) short hairpin RNA (shRNA)-mediated knockdown of Rab5a is associated with reduced lung pathology in RSV A2-challenged mice; (iii) Rab5a expression is correlated with disease severity of RSV infection of infants. Knockdown of Rab5a increases lambda interferon (IFN-λ) production by mediating interferon regulatory factor 1 (IRF1) nuclear translocation. Our results highlight a new role for Rab5a in RSV infection, such that its depletion inhibits RSV infection by stimulating the endogenous respiratory epithelial antiviral immunity, which suggests that Rab5a is a potential target for novel therapeutics against RSV infection. IMPORTANCE This study highlights the important role of Rab5a in respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) infection, such that its depletion inhibits RSV infection by stimulating the endogenous respiratory epithelial antiviral immunity and attenuates inflammation of the airway, which suggests that Rab5a is a powerful potential target for novel therapeutics against RSV infection.
- Published
- 2022