Human Cytomegalovirus Utilizes a Nontraditional Signal Transducer and Activator of Transcription 1 Activation Cascade via Signaling through Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor and Integrins To Efficiently Promote the Motility, Differentiation, and Polarization of Infected Monocytes

Human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) infects peripheral blood monocytes and triggers biological changes that promote viral dissemination and persistence. We have shown that HCMV induces a proinflammatory state in infected monocytes, resulting in enhanced monocyte motility and transendothelial migration, pro...

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Published inJournal of virology Vol. 91; no. 24
Main Authors Collins-McMillen, Donna, Stevenson, Emily V, Kim, Jung Heon, Lee, Byeong-Jae, Cieply, Stephen J, Nogalski, Maciej T, Chan, Gary C, Frost, 3rd, Robert W, Spohn, Caroline R, Yurochko, Andrew D
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States American Society for Microbiology 15.12.2017
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Summary:Human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) infects peripheral blood monocytes and triggers biological changes that promote viral dissemination and persistence. We have shown that HCMV induces a proinflammatory state in infected monocytes, resulting in enhanced monocyte motility and transendothelial migration, prolonged monocyte survival, and differentiation toward a long-lived M1-like macrophage phenotype. Our data indicate that HCMV triggers these changes, in the absence of viral gene expression and replication, through engagement and activation of epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) and integrins on the surface of monocytes. We previously identified that HCMV induces the upregulation of multiple proinflammatory gene ontologies, with the interferon-associated gene ontology exhibiting the highest percentage of upregulated genes. However, the function of the HCMV-induced interferon (IFN)-stimulated genes (ISGs) in infected monocytes remained unclear. We now show that HCMV induces the enhanced expression and activation of a key ISG transcriptional regulator, signal transducer and activator of transcription (STAT1), via an IFN-independent but EGFR- and integrin-dependent signaling pathway. Furthermore, we identified a biphasic activation of STAT1 that likely promotes two distinct phases of STAT1-mediated transcriptional activity. Moreover, our data show that STAT1 is required for efficient early HCMV-induced enhanced monocyte motility and later for HCMV-induced monocyte-to-macrophage differentiation and for the regulation of macrophage polarization, suggesting that STAT1 may serve as a molecular convergence point linking the biological changes that occur at early and later times postinfection. Taken together, our results suggest that HCMV reroutes the biphasic activation of a traditionally antiviral gene product through an EGFR- and integrin-dependent pathway in order to help promote the proviral activation and polarization of infected monocytes. HCMV promotes multiple functional changes in infected monocytes that are required for viral spread and persistence, including their enhanced motility and differentiation/polarization toward a proinflammatory M1 macrophage. We now show that HCMV utilizes the traditionally IFN-associated gene product, STAT1, to promote these changes. Our data suggest that HCMV utilizes EGFR- and integrin-dependent (but IFN-independent) signaling pathways to induce STAT1 activation, which may allow the virus to specifically dictate the biological activity of STAT1 during infection. Our data indicate that HCMV utilizes two phases of STAT1 activation, which we argue molecularly links the biological changes that occur following initial binding to those that continue to occur days to weeks following infection. Furthermore, our findings may highlight a unique mechanism for how HCMV avoids the antiviral response during infection by hijacking the function of a critical component of the IFN response pathway.
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D.C.-M. and E.V.S. contributed equally to this work.
Present address: Donna Collins-McMillen, BIO5 Institute, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona, USA; Jung Heon Kim, Institute of Endemic Diseases, Seoul National University Medical Research Center, Seoul, Republic of Korea; Maciej T. Nogalski, Department of Molecular Biology, Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey, USA; Gary C. Chan, Department of Microbiology & Immunology, SUNY Upstate Medical University, Syracuse, New York, USA.
Citation Collins-McMillen D, Stevenson EV, Kim JH, Lee B-J, Cieply SJ, Nogalski MT, Chan GC, Frost RW, III, Spohn CR, Yurochko AD. 2017. Human cytomegalovirus utilizes a nontraditional signal transducer and activator of transcription 1 activation cascade via signaling through epidermal growth factor receptor and integrins to efficiently promote the motility, differentiation, and polarization of infected monocytes. J Virol 91:e00622-17. https://doi.org/10.1128/JVI.00622-17.
ISSN:0022-538X
1098-5514
DOI:10.1128/jvi.00622-17