Litcius/Paper detail

Pseudorabies Virus Infection Triggers NF-κB Activation via the DNA Damage Response but Actively Inhibits NF-κB-Dependent Gene Expression

Nicolás Romero, Herman W. Favoreel

2021Journal of Virology25 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The NF-κB signaling pathway plays a critical role in coordination of innate immune responses that are of vital importance in the control of infections. The current report generates new insights into the interaction of the alphaherpesvirus pseudorabies virus (PRV) with the NF-κB pathway, as they reveal that (i) PRV infection leads to NF-κB activation via a peculiar "inside-out" nucleus-to-cytoplasm signal that is triggered via the DNA damage response (DDR), (ii) the DDR-NF-κB signaling axis requires expression of viral proteins but is initiated before active PRV replication, and (iii) late viral factor(s) allow PRV to actively and efficiently inhibit NF-κB-dependent (proinflammatory) gene expression. These data suggest that activation of the DDR-NF-κB during PRV infection is host driven and that its potential antiviral consequences are actively inhibited by the virus.

Topics & Concepts

PseudorabiesBiologyVirusCell biologySignal transductionInnate immune systemCheckpoint Kinase 2DNA damageGene expressionVirologyRegulation of gene expressionViral replicationGeneTranscription factorImmediate early geneCytoplasmTranscription (linguistics)DNANuclear export signalDNA repairTransduction (biophysics)Cell nucleusDNA virusImmune systemAlphaherpesvirinaeMolecular biologyNuclear proteinExtracellularViral entryHerpesvirus Infections and TreatmentsNF-κB Signaling Pathwaysinterferon and immune responses