Abstract

ABSTRACTRotavirus (RV)-encoded nonstructural protein 1 (NSP1), the product of gene segment 5, effectively antagonizes host interferon (IFN) signaling via multiple mechanisms. Recent studies with the newly established RV reverse genetics system indicate that NSP1 is not essential for the replication of the simian RV SA11 strain in cell culture. However, the role of NSP1 in RV infection in vivo remains poorly characterized due to the limited replication of heterologous simian RVs in the suckling mouse model. Here, we used an optimized reverse genetics system and successfully recovered recombinant murine RVs with or without NSP1 expression. While the NSP1-null virus replicated comparably with the parental murine RV in IFN-deficient and IFN-competent cell lines in vitro, it was highly attenuated in 5-day-old wild-type suckling pups in both the 129sv and C57BL/6 backgrounds. In the absence of NSP1 expression, murine RV had significantly reduced replication in the ileum, systemic spread to mesenteric lymph nodes, fecal shedding, diarrhea occurrence, and transmission to uninoculated littermates. The defective replication of the NSP1-null RV in small intestinal tissues occurred as early as 1 day postinfection. Of interest, the replication and pathogenesis defects of NSP1-null RV were only minimally rescued in Stat1 knockout pups, suggesting that NSP1 facilitates RV replication in an IFN-independent manner. Our findings highlight a pivotal function of NSP1 during homologous RV infections in vivo and identify NSP1 as an ideal viral protein for targeted attenuation for future vaccine development.

Highlights

  • Rotavirus (RV)-encoded nonstructural protein 1 (NSP1), the product of gene segment 5, effectively antagonizes host interferon (IFN) signaling via multiple mechanisms

  • In this study, we exploited a recently developed and further optimized plasmidbased reverse genetics (RG) system to examine the role of NSP1 in RV replication in vivo

  • Previous studies showed that naturally isolated RV SA11-5S and SA11-30-1A variants [26], and some RGrescued recombinant RVs, albeit unable to induce interferon regulatory factor 3 (IRF3) degradation, replicate efficiently in cell culture [20]

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Summary

Introduction

Rotavirus (RV)-encoded nonstructural protein 1 (NSP1), the product of gene segment 5, effectively antagonizes host interferon (IFN) signaling via multiple mechanisms. The role of NSP1 in RV infection in vivo remains poorly characterized due to the limited replication of heterologous simian RVs in the suckling mouse model. NSP1 is dispensable for rotavirus replication in cell culture, its exact role in virus infection in vivo remains unclear. Several RV-encoded factors, including VP3, VP4, NSP1, NSP2, and NSP3, have been implicated in contributing to this host range restriction phenotype [7] Among these viral proteins, NSP1 has been identified as an interferon (IFN) antagonist with several distinct mechanisms that enhances virus replication [8,9,10,11,12]. All of these studies have established NSP1 as a potent inhibitor of the host IFN responses to facilitate RV replication

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