Necroptosis restricts influenza A virus as a stand-alone cell death mechanism.

Journal: The Journal Of Experimental Medicine
Published:
Abstract

Influenza A virus (IAV) activates ZBP1-initiated RIPK3-dependent parallel pathways of necroptosis and apoptosis in infected cells. Although mice deficient in both pathways fail to control IAV and succumb to lethal respiratory infection, RIPK3-mediated apoptosis by itself can limit IAV, without need for necroptosis. However, whether necroptosis, conventionally considered a fail-safe cell death mechanism to apoptosis, can restrict IAV-or indeed any virus-in the absence of apoptosis is not known. Here, we use mice selectively deficient in IAV-activated apoptosis to show that necroptosis drives robust antiviral immune responses and promotes effective virus clearance from infected lungs when apoptosis is absent. We also demonstrate that apoptosis and necroptosis are mutually exclusive fates in IAV-infected cells. Thus, necroptosis is an independent, "stand-alone" cell death mechanism that fully compensates for the absence of apoptosis in antiviral host defense.

Authors
Maria Shubina, Bart Tummers, David Boyd, Ting Zhang, Chaoran Yin, Avishekh Gautam, Xi-zhi Guo, Diego Rodriguez, William Kaiser, Peter Vogel, Douglas Green, Paul Thomas, Siddharth Balachandran