The adaptor protein FHL2 enhances the cellular innate immune response to influenza A virus infection

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Abstract

The innate immune response of influenza A virus-infected cells is predominantly mediated by type I interferon-induced proteins. Expression of the interferon β (IFNβ) itself is initiated by accumulating viral RNA and is transmitted by different signalling cascades that feed into activation of the three transcriptional elements located in the IFNβ promoter, AP-1, IRF-3 and NF-κB. FHL2 (four-and-a-half LIM domain protein 2) is an adaptor molecule that shuttles between membrane and nucleus regulating signalling cascades and gene transcription. Here we describe FHL2 as a novel regulator of influenza A virus propagation. Using mouse FHL2 wild-type, knockout and rescued cells and human epithelial cells with different expression levels of FHL2 we showed that FHL2 decreases influenza A virus propagation by regulating the intrinsic cellular antiviral immune response. On virus infection FHL2 translocates into the nucleus, potentiating the IRF-3-dependent transcription of the IFNβ gene. © 2012 Blackwell Publishing Ltd.

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Nordhoff, C., Hillesheim, A., Walter, B. M., Haasbach, E., Planz, O., Ehrhardt, C., … Wixler, V. (2012). The adaptor protein FHL2 enhances the cellular innate immune response to influenza A virus infection. Cellular Microbiology, 14(7), 1135–1147. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1462-5822.2012.01787.x

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