Are you a Health Professional? Jump over to the doctors only platform. Click Here

Molecular 'on-off Switch' Controls Immune Defences Against Viruses

Much like flipping a light switch, the hepatitis C virus turns on human immune defences upon entering the body but also turns off those defences by manipulating interaction of key cellular proteins, UT Southwestern Medical Centre researchers have found. This same molecular "on/off switch" controls immunity against many viruses, highlighting a potential new target for novel therapeutics to fight viruses, the researchers report. In a study available online this week and in an upcoming issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, UT Southwestern scientists describe how the proteins RIG-I and LGP2 normally interact to turn on and off immune response to hepatitis C.

It's known that when a virus invades a cell, the RIG-I protein triggers the body to generate an immune response. Once the virus has been cleared out, the LGP2 protein turns off the RIG-I signals.This interaction between RIG-I and LGP2 is vital for properly regulating immunity, but viruses such as hepatitis C can disrupt the normal process to shut down immune defences early, the research team found."This knowledge will help us design drugs that mimic the viral effects on these proteins to either activate a host's immune response or shut it down," said Dr. Michael Gale, associate professor of microbiology and the study's senior author. "This holds great potential in developing new disease therapies, because the tactics employed by hepatitis C to trigger immune response are similar to those employed by other viruses such as West Nile, influenza and the common cold."Dr. Gale's research centres on studying the mechanisms viruses use to evade immune defences. Of particular interest is the hepatitis C virus, a blood-borne infection transmitted by intravenous drug use, blood transfusions and sexual contact. It affects 4 million U.S. residents and is the nation's leading cause of cirrhosis and liver cancer.In 2005 Dr. Gale and his team completed several breakthrough studies on hepatitis C, discovering that the RIG-I protein binds to viral genetic material. Then, RIG-I changes its shape and sends signals to other proteins that spur production of interferon, a molecule that stops viral replication. The researchers also found that the virus launches a counterattack on RIG-I, producing a protein called a protease to disrupt the signalling process, preventing interferon production and allowing viral replication.Just how RIG-I signalling is normally regulated, however, hadn't been known.In the current study, UT Southwestern researchers found that RIG-I and LGP2 each contain a repressor domain, a sort of docking site that controls the actions of each protein. The domain is the key site that regulates the ability of RIG-I to bind to its signalling partners, including LGP2, acting as a switch for controlling immune response, Dr. Gale said."Hepatitis C and others viruses hijack this signalling pathway to stop immune defences," he said.His research team and others are working to design novel therapeutics and drugs that could mimic viral effects on RIG-I to spur antiviral response or, conversely, mimic viral effects on LGP2 to shut down RIG-I activity. RIG-I shutdown would be necessary in cases when the immune system's response to a virus is dangerously overactive, which happened in many flu cases during the 1918 pandemic."Fine-tuning immune response to infection is where antiviral or immune regulatory drugs are headed," said Dr. Gale.(Source: UT Southwestern Medical Centre: January 2007.)


Dates

Posted On: 8 January, 2007
Modified On: 16 January, 2014


Created by: myVMC