Abstract

Infectious pancreatic necrosis virus (IPNV) can induce Bad-mediated apoptosis followed by secondary necrosis in fish cells, but it is not known how these two types of cell death are regulated by IPNV. We found that IPNV infection can regulate Bad/Bid-mediated apoptotic and Rip1/ROS-mediated necrotic death pathways via the up-regulation of TNFα in zebrafish ZF4 cells. Using a DNA microarray and quantitative RT-PCR analyses, two major subsets of differentially expressed genes were characterized, including the innate immune response gene TNFα and the pro-apoptotic genes Bad and Bid. In the early replication stage (0–6 h post-infection, or p.i.), we observed that the pro-inflammatory cytokine TNFα underwent a rapid six-fold induction. Then, during the early-middle replication stages (6–12 h p.i.), TNFα level was eight-fold induction and the pro-apoptotic Bcl-2 family members Bad and Bid were up-regulated. Furthermore, specific inhibitors of TNFα expression (AG-126 or TNFα-specific siRNA) were used to block apoptotic and necrotic death signaling during the early or early-middle stages of IPNV infection. Inhibition of TNFα expression dramatically reduced the Bad/Bid-mediated apoptotic and Rip1/ROS-mediated necrotic cell death pathways and rescued host cell viability. Moreover, we used Rip1-specific inhibitors (Nec-1 and Rip1-specific siRNA) to block Rip1 expression. The Rip1/ROS-mediated secondary necrotic pathway appeared to be reduced in IPNV-infected fish cells during the middle-late stage of infection (12–18 h p.i.). Taken together, our results indicate that IPNV triggers two death pathways via up-stream induction of the pro-inflammatory cytokine TNFα, and these results may provide new insights into the pathogenesis of RNA viruses.

Highlights

  • Infectious pancreatic necrosis virus (IPNV) is an aquatic virus that causes acute contagious diseases in freshwater and marine fish, which can result in heavy losses to the aquaculture industry

  • We examine how IPNV-induced apoptotic cell death is linked to secondary necrosis in the zebrafish cell line ZF4

  • We first determined if IPNV (multiplicity of infection (MOI) = 5) can infect ZF4 cells

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Summary

Introduction

Infectious pancreatic necrosis virus (IPNV) is an aquatic virus that causes acute contagious diseases in freshwater and marine fish, which can result in heavy losses to the aquaculture industry. IPNV is a member of the Birnaviridae family [1]. The birnavirus genome encodes three to five structural proteins that are generated through various posttranslational cleavages. VP1 is a viral polymerase that is encoded by the smaller segment, B [3]. The larger segment, A, encodes a polyprotein that is processed into the capsid proteins VP2 and VP3 as well as the viral protease VP4 [4]. Smaller open reading frame (ORF) on segment A encodes one 17kDa non-structural protein, VP5 [5], which is a viral Bcl-2 (B-cell CLL/lymphoma 2) family member that can regulate Mcl-1 and viral protein expression to inhibit apoptosis of infected cells [6,7]

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