Cellular Importin-α3 Expression Dynamics in the Lung Regulate Antiviral Response Pathways against Influenza A Virus Infection

  • Swantje Thiele
  • Stephanie Stanelle-Bertram
  • Sebastian Beck
  • Nancy Mounogou Kouassi
  • Martin Zickler
  • Martin Müller
  • Berfin Tuku
  • Patricia Resa-Infante
  • Debby van Riel
  • Malik Alawi
  • Thomas Günther
  • Franziska Rother
  • Stefanie Hügel
  • Susanne Reimering
  • Alice McHardy
  • Adam Grundhoff
  • Wolfram Brune
  • Albert Osterhaus
  • Michael Bader
  • Enno Hartmann
  • Gülsah Gabriel

Related Research units

Abstract

Importin-α adaptor proteins orchestrate dynamic nuclear transport processes involved in cellular homeostasis. Here, we show that importin-α3, one of the main NF-κB transporters, is the most abundantly expressed classical nuclear transport factor in the mammalian respiratory tract. Importin-α3 promoter activity is regulated by TNF-α-induced NF-κB in a concentration-dependent manner. High-level TNF-α-inducing highly pathogenic avian influenza A viruses (HPAIVs) isolated from fatal human cases harboring human-type polymerase signatures (PB2 627K, 701N) significantly downregulate importin-α3 mRNA expression in primary lung cells. Importin-α3 depletion is restored upon back-mutating the HPAIV polymerase into an avian-type signature (PB2 627E, 701D) that can no longer induce high TNF-α levels. Importin-α3-deficient mice show reduced NF-κB-activated antiviral gene expression and increased influenza lethality. Thus, importin-α3 plays a key role in antiviral immunity against influenza. Lifting the bottleneck in importin-α3 availability in the lung might provide a new strategy to combat respiratory virus infections.

Bibliographical data

Original languageEnglish
Article number107549
ISSN2211-1247
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 21.04.2020
PubMed 32320654