Abstract
ABSTRACTInterferon alpha/beta (IFN-α/β) is a critical mediator of protection against most viruses, with host survival frequently impossible in its absence. Many studies have investigated the pathways involved in the induction of IFN-α/β after virus infection and the resultant upregulation of antiviral IFN-stimulated genes (ISGs) through IFN-α/β receptor complex signaling. However, other than examining the effects of genetic deletion of induction or effector pathway components, little is known regarding the functionality of these responses in intact hosts and whether host genetic or environmental factors might influence their potency. Here, we demonstrate that the IFN-α/β response against multiple arthropod-vectored viruses, which replicate over a wide temperature range, is extremely sensitive to fluctuations in temperature, exhibiting reduced antiviral efficacy at subnormal cellular temperatures and increased efficacy at supranormal temperatures. The effect involves both IFN-α/β and ISG upregulation pathways with a major aspect of altered potency reflecting highly temperature-dependent transcription of IFN response genes that leads to altered IFN-α/β and ISG protein levels. Discordantly, signaling steps prior to transcription that were examined showed the opposite effect from gene transcription, with potentiation at low temperature and inhibition at high temperature. Finally, we demonstrate that by lowering the temperature of mice, chikungunya arbovirus replication and disease are exacerbated in an IFN-α/β-dependent manner. This finding raises the potential for use of hyperthermia as a therapeutic modality for viral infections and in other contexts such as antitumor therapy. The increased IFN-α/β efficacy at high temperatures may also reflect an innate immune-relevant aspect of the febrile response.
Highlights
Interferon alpha/beta (IFN-␣/) is a critical mediator of protection against most viruses, with host survival frequently impossible in its absence
To test the hypothesis that arboviruses are differentially sensitive to IFN-␣/ treatment at different temperatures, we compared growth of wild-type strains from three distinct arbovirus genera, Alphavirus, Flavivirus, and Phlebovirus, in Vero cells treated with IFN-␣/ at temperatures between 30 and 39°C with growth in temperature-matched untreated cells
We examined whether arboviruses, which are replication competent across a wide range of temperatures due to their evolution in both arthropod vectors and mammalian or avian hosts, represented another type of pathogen capable of subverting IFN-␣/ responses occurring at subnormal temperatures
Summary
Interferon alpha/beta (IFN-␣/) is a critical mediator of protection against most viruses, with host survival frequently impossible in its absence. We demonstrate that the IFN-␣/ response against multiple arthropod-vectored viruses, which replicate over a wide temperature range, is extremely sensitive to fluctuations in temperature, exhibiting reduced antiviral efficacy at subnormal cellular temperatures and increased efficacy at supranormal temperatures The effect involves both IFN-␣/ and ISG upregulation pathways with a major aspect of altered potency reflecting highly temperature-dependent transcription of IFN response genes that leads to altered IFN-␣/ and ISG protein levels. We observed that IFN-␣/ efficacy was dramatically lower at subnormal temperatures and modestly enhanced at febrile temperatures, with the effects involving altered IFN␣/ response gene transcription but not IFN-␣/ pathway signaling These results provide insight into the functioning of the IFN-␣/ response in vivo and suggest that temperature elevation may represent an immune-enhancing therapeutic modality for a wide variety of IFN-␣/-sensitive infections and pathologies. Other early studies including some with arboviruses, which identified temperature variation as a factor in IFN-␣/ effectiveness implicated temperature-altered virus replication rather than the IFN-␣/ response [24,25,26,27,28,29,30,31,32,33,34,35]
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