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Caspase-dependent Inhibition of mousepox replicationby gzmB

Authors :
Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España)
Gobierno de Aragón
National Health and Medical Research Council (Australia)
ARAID Foundation
EMBO
Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas (España)
Australian Academy of Science
Gálvez Buerba, Eva Mª [0000-0001-6928-5516]
Pardo, Julián
Gálvez Buerba, Eva Mª
Koskinen, Aulikki
Simon, Markus M.
Lobigs, Mario
Regner, Matthias
Müllbacherd, Arno
Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España)
Gobierno de Aragón
National Health and Medical Research Council (Australia)
ARAID Foundation
EMBO
Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas (España)
Australian Academy of Science
Gálvez Buerba, Eva Mª [0000-0001-6928-5516]
Pardo, Julián
Gálvez Buerba, Eva Mª
Koskinen, Aulikki
Simon, Markus M.
Lobigs, Mario
Regner, Matthias
Müllbacherd, Arno
Publication Year :
2009

Abstract

[Background] Ectromelia virus is a natural mouse pathogen, causing mousepox. The cytotoxic T (Tc) cell granule serine-protease, granzyme B, is important for its control, but the underlying mechanism is unknown. Using ex vivo virus immune Tc cells, we have previously shown that granzyme B is able to activate several independent pro-apoptotic pathways, including those mediated by Bid/Bak/Bax and caspases-3/-7, in target cells pulsed with Tc cell determinants.<br />[Methods and Findings] Here we analysed the physiological relevance of those pro-apoptotic pathways in ectromelia infection, by incubating ectromelia-immune ex vivo Tc cells from granzyme A deficient (GzmB+ Tc cells) or granzyme A and granzyme B deficient (GzmA×B−/− Tc cell) mice with ectromelia-infected target cells. We found that gzmB-induced apoptosis was totally blocked in ectromelia infected or peptide pulsed cells lacking caspases-3/-7. However ectromelia inhibited only partially apoptosis in cells deficient for Bid/Bak/Bax and not at all when both pathways were operative suggesting that the virus is able to interfere with apoptosis induced by gzmB in case not all pathways are activated. Importantly, inhibition of viral replication in vitro, as seen with wild type cells, was not affected by the lack of Bid/Bak/Bax but was significantly reduced in caspase-3/-7-deficient cells. Both caspase dependent processes were strictly dependent on gzmB, since Tc cells, lacking both gzms, neither induced apoptosis nor reduced viral titers.<br />[Significance] Out findings present the first evidence on the biological importance of the independent gzmB-inducible pro-apoptotic pathways in a physiological relevant virus infection model.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1286546783
Document Type :
Electronic Resource