The NS1 protein of influenza B virus binds 5'-triphosphorylated dsRNA to suppress RIG-I activation and the host antiviral response

Influenza A and B viruses overcome the host antiviral response to cause a contagious and often severe human respiratory disease. Here, integrative structural biology and biochemistry studies on non-structural protein 1 of influenza B virus (NS1B) reveal a previously unrecognized viral mechanism for...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inbioRxiv : the preprint server for biology
Main Authors Woltz, Ryan, Schweibenz, Brandon, Tsutakawa, Susan E, Zhao, Chen, Ma, LiChung, Shurina, Ben, Hura, Gregory L, John, Rachael, Vorobiev, Sergey, Swapna, Gvt, Solotchi, Mihai, Tainer, John A, Krug, Robert M, Patel, Smita S, Montelione, Gaetano T
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States 24.01.2024
Online AccessGet more information

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:Influenza A and B viruses overcome the host antiviral response to cause a contagious and often severe human respiratory disease. Here, integrative structural biology and biochemistry studies on non-structural protein 1 of influenza B virus (NS1B) reveal a previously unrecognized viral mechanism for innate immune evasion. Conserved basic groups of its C-terminal domain (NS1B-CTD) bind 5'triphosphorylated double-stranded RNA (5'-ppp-dsRNA), the primary pathogen-associated feature that activates the host retinoic acid-inducible gene I protein (RIG-I) to initiate interferon synthesis and the cellular antiviral response. Like RIG-I, NS1B-CTD preferentially binds blunt-end 5'ppp-dsRNA. NS1B-CTD also competes with RIG-I for binding 5'ppp-dsRNA, and thus suppresses activation of RIG-I's ATPase activity. Although the NS1B N-terminal domain also binds dsRNA, it utilizes a different binding mode and lacks 5'ppp-dsRNA end preferences. In cells infected with wild-type influenza B virus, RIG-I activation is inhibited. In contrast, RIG-I activation and the resulting phosphorylation of transcription factor IRF-3 are not inhibited in cells infected with a mutant virus encoding NS1B with a R208A substitution it its CTD that eliminates its 5'ppp-dsRNA binding activity. These results reveal a novel mechanism in which NS1B binds 5'ppp-dsRNA to inhibit the RIG-I antiviral response during influenza B virus infection, and open the door to new avenues for antiviral drug discovery.
DOI:10.1101/2023.09.25.559316