Hepatitis B virus inhibits intrinsic RIG-I and RIG-G immune signaling via inducing miR146a

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Abstract

Previous studies showed that hepatitis B virus (HBV), as a latency invader, attenuated host anti-viral immune responses. miRNAs were shown to be involved in HBV infection and HBV-related diseases, however, the precise role of miRNAs in HBV-mediated immunosuppression remains unclear. Here, we observed that down-regulated RIG-I like receptors might be one critical mechanism of HBV-induced suppression of type I IFN transcription in both HBV + hepatoma cell lines and liver cancer tissues. Then, miR146a was demonstrated to negatively regulate the expression of RIG-I-like receptors by directly targeting both RIG-I and RIG-G. Further investigation showed that antagonizing miR146a by anti-sense inhibitors or sponge approach accelerated HBV clearance and reduced HBV load both in vitro and in a HBV-carrying mouse model. Therefore, our findings indicated that HBV-induced miR146a attenuates cell-intrinsic anti-viral innate immunity through targeting RIG-I and RIG-G, and silencing miR146a might be an effective target to reverse HBV-induced immune suppression.

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Hou, Z., Zhang, J., Han, Q., Su, C., Qu, J., Xu, D., … Tian, Z. (2016). Hepatitis B virus inhibits intrinsic RIG-I and RIG-G immune signaling via inducing miR146a. Scientific Reports, 6. https://doi.org/10.1038/srep26150

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