High-Affinity-Mediated Viral Entry Triggers Innate Affinity Escape Resulting in Type I IFN Resistance and Impaired T Cell Immunity.

Haifeng C Xu,Piyush Pandey, Harry Ward, Michal Gorzkiewicz, Džiuljeta Abromavičiūtė, Constanze Tinz,Lisa Müller, Caroline Meyer,Aleksandra A Pandyra,Aslihan Yavas,Arndt Borkhardt, Irene Esposito,Karl S Lang,Philipp A Lang

Journal of immunology (Baltimore, Md. : 1950)(2024)

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摘要
Increased receptor binding affinity may allow viruses to escape from Ab-mediated inhibition. However, how high-affinity receptor binding affects innate immune escape and T cell function is poorly understood. In this study, we used the lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV) murine infection model system to create a mutated LCMV exhibiting higher affinity for the entry receptor α-dystroglycan (LCMV-GPH155Y). We show that high-affinity receptor binding results in increased viral entry, which is associated with type I IFN (IFN-I) resistance, whereas initial innate immune activation was not impaired during high-affinity virus infection in mice. Consequently, IFN-I resistance led to defective antiviral T cell immunity, reduced type II IFN, and prolonged viral replication in this murine model system. Taken together, we show that high-affinity receptor binding of viruses can trigger innate affinity escape including resistance to IFN-I resulting in prolonged viral replication.
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