Abstract

For many emerging and re-emerging infectious diseases, definitive solutions via sterilizing adaptive immunity may require years or decades to develop, if they are even possible. The innate immune system offers alternative mechanisms that do not require antigen-specific recognition or a priori knowledge of the causative agent. However, it is unclear whether effective stable innate immune system activation can be achieved without triggering harmful autoimmunity or other chronic inflammatory sequelae. Here, we show that transgenic expression of a picornavirus RNA-dependent RNA polymerase (RdRP), in the absence of other viral proteins, can profoundly reconfigure mammalian innate antiviral immunity by exposing the normally membrane-sequestered RdRP activity to sustained innate immune detection. RdRP-transgenic mice have life-long, quantitatively dramatic upregulation of 80 interferon-stimulated genes (ISGs) and show profound resistance to normally lethal viral challenge. Multiple crosses with defined knockout mice (Rag1, Mda5, Mavs, Ifnar1, Ifngr1, and Tlr3) established that the mechanism operates via MDA5 and MAVS and is fully independent of the adaptive immune system. Human cell models recapitulated the key features with striking fidelity, with the RdRP inducing an analogous ISG network and a strict block to HIV-1 infection. This RdRP-mediated antiviral mechanism does not depend on secondary structure within the RdRP mRNA but operates at the protein level and requires RdRP catalysis. Importantly, despite lifelong massive ISG elevations, RdRP mice are entirely healthy, with normal longevity. Our data reveal that a powerfully augmented MDA5-mediated activation state can be a well-tolerated mammalian innate immune system configuration. These results provide a foundation for augmenting innate immunity to achieve broad-spectrum antiviral protection.

Highlights

  • Most viruses store and replicate their genetic information as RNA, with no DNA component [1]

  • We show in transgenic mouse and human cell culture models that expression of a viral RNA-dependent RNA polymerase (RdRP) profoundly reconfigures mammalian innate antiviral immunity by exposing the normally stringently-sequestered viral RNA copying process to MDA5 detection

  • RdRP mice are robustly healthy with normal longevity despite life-long, constitutive MDA5-mediated innate immune system activation

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Summary

Introduction

Most viruses store and replicate their genetic information as RNA, with no DNA component [1]. All RNA viruses encode RNA-dependent RNA polymerases (RdRPs), which replicate the viral RNA genome and transcribe it into mRNA in a way that requires generation of double-stranded RNA (dsRNA) intermediates. Whereas plants and worms encode RdRPs as components of RNA silencing systems, vertebrates do not [1]. Mammalian innate immune systems sense the replication intermediates synthesized by these viral replicases as pathogen-associated molecular patterns (PAMPs). The resulting activation of cell-intrinsic innate immunity culminates in production of type I interferons (IFNs) and activation of a large class of potent antiviral factors collectively termed IFN-stimulated genes (ISGs) [2]

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