SREBP2-dependent lipid gene transcription enhances the infection of human dendritic cells by Zika virus

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Abstract

The emergence of Zika virus (ZIKV) as a global health threat has highlighted the unmet need for ZIKV-specific vaccines and antiviral treatments. ZIKV infects dendritic cells (DC), which have pivotal functions in activating innate and adaptive antiviral responses; however, the mechanisms by which DC function is subverted to establish ZIKV infection are unclear. Here we develop a genomics profiling method that enables discrete analysis of ZIKV-infected versus neighboring, uninfected primary human DCs to increase the sensitivity and specificity with which ZIKV-modulated pathways can be identified. The results show that ZIKV infection specifically increases the expression of genes enriched for lipid metabolism-related functions. ZIKV infection also increases the recruitment of sterol regulatory element-binding protein (SREBP) transcription factors to lipid gene promoters, while pharmacologic inhibition or genetic silencing of SREBP2 suppresses ZIKV infection of DCs. Our data thus identify SREBP2-activated transcription as a mechanism for promoting ZIKV infection amenable to therapeutic targeting.

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Branche, E., Wang, Y. T., Viramontes, K. M., Valls Cuevas, J. M., Xie, J., Ana-Sosa-Batiz, F., … Carlin, A. F. (2022). SREBP2-dependent lipid gene transcription enhances the infection of human dendritic cells by Zika virus. Nature Communications, 13(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-022-33041-1

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