1. Academic Validation
  2. Capsid Protein Mediated Evasion of IRAK1-Dependent Signaling is Essential to Sindbis Virus Neuroinvasion and Virulence in Mice

Capsid Protein Mediated Evasion of IRAK1-Dependent Signaling is Essential to Sindbis Virus Neuroinvasion and Virulence in Mice

  • Emerg Microbes Infect. 2024 Jan 2:2300452. doi: 10.1080/22221751.2023.2300452.
V Douglas Landers 1 Milton Thomas 1 Cierra M Isom 1 Deepa Karki 1 Kevin J Sokoloski 1 2
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 Department of Microbiology and Immunology, School of Medicine, University of Louisville, Louisville, KY 40202, USA.
  • 2 Center for Predictive Medicine and Emerging Infectious Diseases, University of Louisville, Louisville, KY 40202, USA.
Abstract

Alphaviruses are arthropod-borne, single-stranded positive-sense RNA viruses that are recognized as rapidly emerging pathogens. Despite being exquisitely sensitive to the effects of the innate immune response alphaviruses can readily replicate, disseminate, and induce pathogenesis in immunologically competent hosts. Nonetheless, how alphaviruses evade the induction of an innate immune response prior to viral gene expression, or in non-permissive infections, is unknown. Previously we reported the identification of a novel host/pathogen interaction between the viral Capsid (CP) protein and the host IRAK1 protein. The CP/IRAK1 interaction was determined to negatively impact IRAK1-dependent PAMP detection in vitro, however, the precise importance of the CP/IRAK1 interaction to alphaviral Infection remained unknown. Here we detail the identification of the CP/IRAK1 interaction determinants of the Sindbis virus (SINV) CP protein and examine the importance of the interaction to alphaviral Infection and pathogenesis in vivo using an interaction deficient mutant of the model neurotropic strain of SINV. Importantly, these interaction determinants are highly conserved across multiple Old-World alphaviruses, including Ross River virus (RRV), Mayaro virus (MAYV), Chikungunya virus (CHIKV), and Semliki Forest virus (SFV). In the absence of a functional CP/IRAK1 interaction SINV replication is significantly restricted and fails to disseminate from the primary site of inoculation due to the induction of a robust type-I Interferon response. Altogether these data indicate that the evasion of IRAK1-dependent signaling is critical to overcoming the host innate immune response and the in vivo data presented here demonstrate the importance of the CP/IRAK1 interaction to neurovirulence and pathogenesis.

Keywords

Alphavirus; Capsid; IRAK1; Innate Immunity; Neurovirulence; Pathogenesis; Sindbis Virus.

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