Matching Items (1)
Filtering by
- Member of: Theses and Dissertations
![156619-Thumbnail Image.png](https://d1rbsgppyrdqq4.cloudfront.net/s3fs-public/styles/width_400/public/2021-09/156619-Thumbnail%20Image.png?versionId=G8lBeyq6JgYCQuIbLV5lzBBH9G_Yt71D&X-Amz-Content-Sha256=UNSIGNED-PAYLOAD&X-Amz-Algorithm=AWS4-HMAC-SHA256&X-Amz-Credential=AKIASBVQ3ZQ42ZLA5CUJ/20240618/us-west-2/s3/aws4_request&X-Amz-Date=20240618T115316Z&X-Amz-SignedHeaders=host&X-Amz-Expires=120&X-Amz-Signature=4ff90137d96b0e8d5f8b1bdffc725f641e68578f87952642a965f845383ffc01&itok=tJ0YyDFZ)
Description
Cell death is a powerful tool through which organisms can inhibit the spread of viruses by preventing their replication. In this work, I used viral and chemical stressors to elucidate the mechanisms by which one anti-viral system might be activated over another, focusing on the programmable death pathway necroptosis and Protein Kinase R (PKR). PKR can detect viral dsRNA and trigger antiviral effects such as cessation of translation and induction of programmed death. Necroptosis is a rapid cellular death that can be induced via sensors such as DNA-dependent activator of IFN-regulatory factors (DAI), also known as Z-DNA-binding protein 1 (ZBP1). DAI contains a Z-form nucleic acid (ZNA) binding domain. E3, the primary vaccinia virus (VACV) interferon resistance protein, contains a similar domain in its amino terminus. We have previously reported this domain to be necessary for the inhibition of both PKR activation and DAI/ZBP1-mediated necroptosis.
Monkeypox virus is a reemerging human pathogen. Despite a partial amino-terminal deletion in its E3 homolog, it does not activate PKR. In chapter 2, I show that MPXV produces less dsRNA than VACV, which could explain how the virus avoids activating PKR.
The amino-terminus of vaccinia is associated with ZNA binding, inhibition of PKR, and inhibition of necroptosis. To determine the roles of PKR inhibition and ZNA binding in necroptosis inhibition, I characterized the VACV mutants Za(ADAR1)-E3, which binds ZNA but does not inhibit PKR, and E3:Y48A, which cannot bind ZNA. I found that while Za(ADAR1)-E3 fails to induce necroptosis, E3:Y48A does not activate PKR but does induce necroptosis. This suggests that Z-form nucleic acid binding is not necessary for vaccinia E3-mediated inhibition of PKR, nor is the inhibition of PKR sufficient for the inhibition of necroptosis.
Finally, all known ZNA-binding proteins have immune functions and home to stress granules. I asked if stress granule formation alone could lead to necroptosis. I found that in L929 cells sodium arsenite, a known inducer of stress granules, could trigger DAI-dependent necroptosis. This suggests that DAI/ZBP1 is not necessarily a sensor of viral ligands but perhaps is a sensor of stress signals brought about by infection.
Monkeypox virus is a reemerging human pathogen. Despite a partial amino-terminal deletion in its E3 homolog, it does not activate PKR. In chapter 2, I show that MPXV produces less dsRNA than VACV, which could explain how the virus avoids activating PKR.
The amino-terminus of vaccinia is associated with ZNA binding, inhibition of PKR, and inhibition of necroptosis. To determine the roles of PKR inhibition and ZNA binding in necroptosis inhibition, I characterized the VACV mutants Za(ADAR1)-E3, which binds ZNA but does not inhibit PKR, and E3:Y48A, which cannot bind ZNA. I found that while Za(ADAR1)-E3 fails to induce necroptosis, E3:Y48A does not activate PKR but does induce necroptosis. This suggests that Z-form nucleic acid binding is not necessary for vaccinia E3-mediated inhibition of PKR, nor is the inhibition of PKR sufficient for the inhibition of necroptosis.
Finally, all known ZNA-binding proteins have immune functions and home to stress granules. I asked if stress granule formation alone could lead to necroptosis. I found that in L929 cells sodium arsenite, a known inducer of stress granules, could trigger DAI-dependent necroptosis. This suggests that DAI/ZBP1 is not necessarily a sensor of viral ligands but perhaps is a sensor of stress signals brought about by infection.
ContributorsJohnson, Brian Patrick (Author) / Jacobs, Bertram L (Thesis advisor) / Blattman, Joseph N (Committee member) / Langland, Jeffrey O (Committee member) / Stout, Valerie G (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2018