Back to Search Start Over

Distinct dictation of Japanese encephalitis virus-induced neuroinflammation and lethality via triggering TLR3 and TLR4 signal pathways.

Authors :
Young Woo Han
Jin Young Choi
Erdenebelig Uyangaa
Seong Bum Kim
Jin Hyoung Kim
Bum Seok Kim
Koanhoi Kim
Seong Kug Eo
Source :
PLoS Pathogens, Vol 10, Iss 9, p e1004319 (2014)
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
Public Library of Science (PLoS), 2014.

Abstract

Japanese encephalitis (JE) is major emerging neurologic disease caused by JE virus. To date, the impact of TLR molecules on JE progression has not been addressed. Here, we determined whether each TLR modulates JE, using several TLR-deficient mouse strains (TLR2, TLR3, TLR4, TLR7, TLR9). Surprisingly, among the tested TLR-deficient mice there were contrasting results in TLR3(-/-) and TLR4(-/-) mice, i.e. TLR3(-/-) mice were highly susceptible to JE, whereas TLR4(-/-) mice showed enhanced resistance to JE. TLR3 ablation induced severe CNS inflammation characterized by early infiltration of inflammatory CD11b(+)Ly-6Chigh monocytes along with profoundly increased viral burden, proinflammatory cytokine/chemokine expression as well as BBB permeability. In contrast, TLR4(-/-) mice showed mild CNS inflammation manifested by reduced viral burden, leukocyte infiltration and proinflammatory cytokine expression. Interestingly, TLR4 ablation provided potent in vivo systemic type I IFN innate response, as well as ex vivo type I IFN production associated with strong induction of antiviral PRRs (RIG-I, MDA5), transcription factors (IRF-3, IRF-7), and IFN-dependent (PKR, Oas1, Mx) and independent ISGs (ISG49, ISG54, ISG56) by alternative activation of IRF3 and NF-κB in myeloid-derived DCs and macrophages, as compared to TLR3(-/-) myeloid-derived cells which were more permissive to viral replication through impaired type I IFN innate response. TLR4 ablation also appeared to mount an enhanced type I IFN innate and humoral, CD4(+) and CD8(+) T cell responses, which were mediated by altered immune cell populations (increased number of plasmacytoid DCs and NK cells, reduced CD11b(+)Ly-6C(high) monocytes) and CD4(+)Foxp3(+) Treg number in lymphoid tissue. Thus, potent type I IFN innate and adaptive immune responses in the absence of TLR4 were closely coupled with reduced JE lethality. Collectively, these results suggest that a balanced triggering of TLR signal array by viral components during JE progression could be responsible for determining disease outcome through regulating negative and positive factors.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15537366 and 15537374
Volume :
10
Issue :
9
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
PLoS Pathogens
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.12e74b2b8a1541679d6805d679c5ed07
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1004319