4.7 Article

A20 Deficiency in Lung Epithelial Cells Protects against Influenza A Virus Infection

期刊

PLOS PATHOGENS
卷 12, 期 1, 页码 -

出版社

PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1005410

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资金

  1. Emmanuel van der Schueren Award from the Flemish League against cancer
  2. FWO Odysseus Grant
  3. FWO
  4. Belgian Foundation against Cancer
  5. Geneeskundige Stichting Koningin Elisabeth (GSKE)
  6. Charcot Foundation
  7. Concerted Research Actions (GOA)
  8. Group-ID MRP of the Ghent University
  9. Interuniversity Attraction Poles program (IAP7)
  10. Strategic Basis Research program of the IWT
  11. Hercules Foundation
  12. EU FP7 collaborative project FLUNIVAC
  13. FWO-Vlaanderen, Interuniversity Attraction Poles program
  14. Ghent University [BOF12/GOA/014]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

A20 negatively regulates multiple inflammatory signalling pathways. We here addressed the role of A20 in club cells (also known as Clara cells) of the bronchial epithelium in their response to influenza A virus infection. Club cells provide a niche for influenza virus replication, but little is known about the functions of these cells in antiviral immunity. Using airway epithelial cell-specific A20 knockout (A20(AEC-KO)) mice, we show that A20 in club cells critically controls innate immune responses upon TNF or double stranded RNA stimulation. Surprisingly, A20(AEC-KO) mice are better protected against influenza A virus challenge than their wild type littermates. This phenotype is not due to decreased viral replication. Instead host innate and adaptive immune responses and lung damage are reduced in A20(AEC-KO) mice. These attenuated responses correlate with a dampened cytotoxic T cell (CTL) response at later stages during infection, indicating that A20(AEC-KO) mice are better equipped to tolerate Influenza A virus infection. Expression of the chemokine CCL2 (also named MCP-1) is particularly suppressed in the lungs of A20(AEC-KO) mice during later stages of infection. When A20(AEC-KO) mice were treated with recombinant CCL2 the protective effect was abrogated demonstrating the crucial contribution of this chemokine to the protection of A20(AEC-KO) mice to Influenza A virus infection. Taken together, we propose a mechanism of action by which A20 expression in club cells controls inflammation and antiviral CTL responses in response to influenza virus infection.

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