Disruption of innate immunity due to mitochondrial targeting of a picornaviral protease precursor

Y Yang, Y Liang, L Qu, Z Chen, MK Yi… - Proceedings of the …, 2007 - National Acad Sciences
Y Yang, Y Liang, L Qu, Z Chen, MK Yi, K Li, SM Lemon
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2007National Acad Sciences
Mitochondrial antiviral signaling protein (MAVS) is an essential component of virus-activated
signaling pathways that induce protective IFN responses. Its localization to the outer
mitochondrial membrane suggests an important yet unexplained role for mitochondria in
innate immunity. Here, we show that hepatitis A virus (HAV), a hepatotropic picornavirus,
ablates type 1 IFN responses by targeting the 3ABC precursor of its 3Cpro cysteine protease
to mitochondria where it colocalizes with and cleaves MAVS, thereby disrupting activation of …
Mitochondrial antiviral signaling protein (MAVS) is an essential component of virus-activated signaling pathways that induce protective IFN responses. Its localization to the outer mitochondrial membrane suggests an important yet unexplained role for mitochondria in innate immunity. Here, we show that hepatitis A virus (HAV), a hepatotropic picornavirus, ablates type 1 IFN responses by targeting the 3ABC precursor of its 3Cpro cysteine protease to mitochondria where it colocalizes with and cleaves MAVS, thereby disrupting activation of IRF3 through the MDA5 pathway. The 3ABC cleavage of MAVS requires both the protease activity of 3Cpro and a transmembrane domain in 3A that directs 3ABC to mitochondria. Lacking this domain, mature 3Cpro protease is incapable of MAVS proteolysis. HAV thus disrupts host signaling by a mechanism that parallels that of the serine NS3/4A protease of hepatitis C virus, but differs in its use of a stable, catalytically active polyprotein processing intermediate. The unique requirement for mitochondrial localization of 3ABC underscores the importance of mitochondria to host control of virus infections within the liver.
National Acad Sciences