Abstract

Interferons represent one of the first and essential host defense mechanisms after infection, and the activation of the IFN-pathway results in the transcriptional activation of hundreds of interferon-stimulated genes. The alpha-inducible protein 27 like 2A (Ifi27l2a) gene (human synonym: ISG12) is strongly up-regulated in the lung after influenza A infection in mice and has been shown in gene expression studies to be highly correlated to other activated genes. Therefore, we investigated the role of Ifi27l2a for the host defense to influenza A infections in more detail. RT-PCR analyses in non-infected mice demonstrated that Ifi27l2a was expressed in several tissues, including the lung. Detailed analyses of reporter gene expression in lungs from Ifi27l2a-LacZ mice revealed that Ifi27l2a was expressed in macrophages and lymphocytes but not in alveolar cells or bronchiolar epithelium cells. The number of macrophages and lymphocyte strongly increased in the lung after infection, but no significant increase in expression levels of the LacZ reporter gene was found within individual immune cells. Also, no reporter gene expression was found in bronchiolar epithelial cells, alveolar cells or infiltrating neutrophils after infection. Thus, up-regulation of Ifi27l2a in infected lungs is mainly due to the infiltration of macrophages and lymphocytes. Most surprisingly, deletion of Ifi27l2a in mouse knock-out lines did not result in increased susceptibility to infections with H1N1 or H7N7 influenza A virus compared to wild type C57BL/6N mice, suggesting a less important role of the gene for the host response to influenza infections than for bacterial infections.

Highlights

  • IntroductionAbout 500 million people are infected by the influenza A virus worldwide, of which about 500,000 die [1]

  • Every year, about 500 million people are infected by the influenza A virus worldwide, of which about 500,000 die [1]

  • We studied expression of Ifi27l2a by RT-PCR and detected transcripts in kidney, liver, lung, spleen, and salivary gland

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Summary

Introduction

About 500 million people are infected by the influenza A virus worldwide, of which about 500,000 die [1]. The emergence of new influenza subtypes has caused severe pandemics [2,3,4], the most severe one in 1918 caused about 30–50 million deaths worldwide [5]. Ifna and Ifn-l genes belong to the type I and type III interferons, respectively, that are produced mainly in infected cells and in plasmacytoid dendritic cells [16] early after infection. They subsequently bind to specific receptors and activate the interferon signaling pathway in infected as well as neighboring cells They subsequently bind to specific receptors and activate the interferon signaling pathway in infected as well as neighboring cells (reviewed in e.g. [11,17,18,19,20,21,22])

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