Abstract

The type I interferon (IFN) response is the major host arsenal against invading viruses. IRGM is a negative regulator of IFN responses under basal conditions. However, the role of human IRGM during viral infection has remained unclear. In this study, we show that IRGM expression is increased upon viral infection. IFN responses induced by viral PAMPs are negatively regulated by IRGM. Conversely, IRGM depletion results in a robust induction of key viral restriction factors including IFITMs, APOBECs, SAMHD1, tetherin, viperin, and HERC5/6. Additionally, antiviral processes such as MHC‐I antigen presentation and stress granule signaling are enhanced in IRGM‐deficient cells, indicating a robust cell‐intrinsic antiviral immune state. Consistently, IRGM‐depleted cells are resistant to the infection with seven viruses from five different families, including Togaviridae, Herpesviridae, Flaviviverdae, Rhabdoviridae, and Coronaviridae. Moreover, we show that Irgm1 knockout mice are highly resistant to chikungunya virus (CHIKV) infection. Altogether, our work highlights IRGM as a broad therapeutic target to promote defense against a large number of human viruses, including SARS‐CoV‐2, CHIKV, and Zika virus.

Highlights

  • The type I interferon (IFN) response is the major host arsenal against invading viruses

  • We show that a large number of well-established viral restriction factors and other antiviral mechanisms are induced upon Immunity-related GTPase M (IRGM) depletion

  • We tested whether IRGM expression is modulated by a viral infection and synthetic analogs of viral pathogenassociated molecular patterns (PAMPs)

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Summary

Introduction

The type I interferon (IFN) response is the major host arsenal against invading viruses. A Total RNA was isolated from mock and CHIKV (MOI 1, 24 h) infected control and IRGM knockdown HT-29 cells and subjected to qRT–PCR with CHIKV specific primers to quantitate total viral load (n = 3, mean Æ SE, **P < 0.005, Student’s unpaired t-test).

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