Abstract
The cellular recognition of viruses evokes the secretion of type-I interferons (IFNs) that induce an antiviral protective state. By live-cell imaging, we show that key steps of virus-induced signal transduction, IFN-β expression, and induction of IFN-stimulated genes (ISGs) are stochastic events in individual cells. The heterogeneity in IFN production is of cellular-and not viral-origin, and temporal unpredictability of IFN-β expression is largely due to cell-intrinsic noise generated both upstream and downstream of the activation of nuclear factor-κB and IFN regulatory factor transcription factors. Subsequent ISG induction occurs as a stochastic all-or-nothing switch, where the responding cells are protected against virus replication. Mathematical modelling and experimental validation show that reliable antiviral protection in the face of multi-layered cellular stochasticity is achieved by paracrine response amplification. Achieving coherent responses through intercellular communication is likely to be a more widely used strategy by mammalian cells to cope with pervasive stochasticity in signalling and gene expression. © 2012 EMBO and Macmillan Publishers Limited bacterial artificial chromosomes; gene expression; interferon regulatory factor-7; live-cell microscopy; multi-scale modelling. © 2012 EMBO and Macmillan Publishers Limited All rights reserved.
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CITATION STYLE
Rand, U., Rinas, M., Werk, J. S., Nöhren, G., Linnes, M., Kröger, A., … Köster, M. (2012). Multi-layered stochasticity and paracrine signal propagation shape the type-l interferon response. Molecular Systems Biology, 8. https://doi.org/10.1038/msb.2012.17
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