Inflammatory-dependent Sting activation induces antiviral autophagy to limit zika virus in the Drosophila brain

炎症依赖性Sting激活诱导抗病毒自噬,从而限制果蝇脑内寨卡病毒的传播。

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Abstract

Incidences of congenital syndrome associated with maternal zika virus (ZIKV) infection during pregnancy are well documented; however, the cellular and molecular mechanisms by which ZIKV infection causes these devastating fetal pathologies are still under active investigation. ZIKV is a member of the flavivirus family and is mainly transmitted to human hosts through Aedes mosquito vectors. However, in vivo models for the neurological tropism of the virus and the arthropod vector have been lacking. A recent study published in Cell Host & Microbe from Dr. Sara Cherry's lab investigates both of these key aspects of the ZIKV infectious life cycle. Liu et al. demonstrate how inflammatory activated Sting/dSTING-dependent antiviral macroautophagy/autophagy is sufficient to restrict ZIKV infection in the Drosophila melanogaster brain. Additionally, this study provides further evidence for the ancestral function of autophagy in protecting host cells from viral invaders. Abbreviations: AGO2: Argonaute 2; ATG: autophagy-related; Dcr-2: Dicer-2; DptA/Dipt: Diptericin A; Drs: Drosomycin; DCV: Drosophila C virus; IMD: immune-deficiency; qRT-PCR: quantitative real-time PCR; Rel/NF-κB: Relish; RNAi: RNA interference; ZIKV: zika virus.

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