Mild-mannered metabolic helper rushes to fight invading viruses

In the study, Children's Hospital Boston researchers found, mild-mannered organelles inside the cell known as peroxisomes can detect virus invasion signals and launch a limited antiviral offensive. Other organelles, the mitochondria, follow up with a more definitive antiviral counterattack.

“This is the first demonstration that peroxisomes are involved in immunity,” said Jonathan Kagan, staff scientist in the gastroenterology division and senior author of the paper published May 6 in the online journal Cell. “This work has implications for our understanding of how we interact with infectious viruses and even bacteria.”

The paper establishes a new function for peroxisomes as a cellular compartment that promotes a rapid response to viral infection. With this discovery, the researchers say, scientists need to look for other cellular parts that may do double duty as pathogen detectors. A larger volunteer army may be lurking in cells as needed for the innate immune system.

In a clinical implication, the findings suggest a new approach to rare and largely untreatable conditions known as peroxisome biogenesis disorders, Kagan said. In the most common manifestation, Zellweger syndrome, children suffer from major developmental abnormalities and die as infants. The milder disorders allow children to live into their teens. Many affected children die of lung infections such as pneumonia, which may arise from problems in the antiviral signaling scaffold due to the absence of peroxisomes, Kagan speculates. Previously, the disorders have been considered developmental and metabolic.

When they are not fighting invading microbes, peroxisomes are busy mopping up the potentially damaging free radical byproducts produced by their larger distant cousins, mitochondria, the power plants of the cell. In other house-keeping duties, peroxisomes also make and attach the lipids that grease the cellular machinery so proteins can slide into or through membranes. Both organelles grow, multiply, and shrink in response to metabolic demands.

Peroxisomes acquire their virus-fighting power from a cloak of mitochondrial antiviral signaling protein, or MAVS. Five years ago, MAVS proteins were discovered on mitochondria, a surprising location for which they were named, and shown to be vital to the immune system's ability to fight infections.

MAVS proteins are found in all cells in the body, Kagan said, but until now they were only known to be draped around mitochondria. The latest study started as a search for MAVS on peroxisomes, an idea born from recent reports of other proteins shared by peroxisomes and mitochondria. On a graduate studies sabbatical from Vienna, first author Evelyn Dixit stained cells for MAVS and found the proteins on peroxisomes.

Next, she observed, the same MAVS proteins activated different antiviral immune responses, depending upon the organelle they adorned. “The difference was that the antiviral response was quicker and transient when it originated from peroxisomes compared to mitochondria,” Dixit said.

In another difference, the peroxisomal MAVS turned on a subset of antiviral genes without a secreting interferon. By contrast, mitochondrial MAVS triggers interferon production and release, which alerts both the cell and its neighbors to mount a larger immune response.

“Seeing interferon-stimulated genes but no interferon was at first quite aggravating,” Dixit said. “We thought we did something wrong. Then we had to turn our thinking around 180 degrees and accept that it was not a mistake. Peroxisomal MAVS leads to interferon-stimulated genes while bypassing interferon secretion.”

The differential response may be a way that different kinds of cells can customize their antiviral responses to the special needs of different tissues, Kagan suggests. For example, the interferon response shuts down protein synthesis, promotes inflammation, and causes a general toxic effect that some tissues may be able to handle better than others, such as the intestines.

Without interferon, peroxisomes could mount a limited response in sensitive tissues, such as nerves, eyes, or heart muscle. “We have speculated that certain tissues may only use mitochondria or only use peroxisomes,” Kagan said.

“At the end of the day, we found antiviral signaling can occur from peroxisomes and from mitochondria,” he said. “Only from the peroxisome do we see a rapid response, and that is sufficient to control viruses, but it cannot eliminate them. Signaling from both is needed to effectively knock them out.”

CITATION: “Peroxisomes Are Signaling Platforms for Antiviral Innate Immunity”

Evelyn Dixit,1,2 Steeve Boulant,3,4 Yijing Zhang,1 Amy S. Lee,3,4 Charlotte Odendall,1 Bennett Shum,5 Nir Hacohen,5 Zhijian J. Chen,6,7 Sean P. Whelan,3,4 Marc Fransen,8 Max L. Nibert,3,4 Giulio Superti-Furga,2 and Jonathan C. Kagan1,*

1Harvard Medical School and Division of Gastroenterology, Children's Hospital Boston, Boston, MA 02115, USA
2CeMM-Research Center for Molecular Medicine of the Austrian Academy of Sciences, 1090 Vienna, Austria
3Department of Microbiology and Molecular Genetics, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02115, USA
4Training Programs in Biological and Biomedical Sciences and Virology, Division of Medical Sciences, Harvard University, Boston, MA 02115, USA
5Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard, Cambridge, MA 02142, USA
6Department of Molecular Biology
7Howard Hughes Medical Institute University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, TX 75390, USA

8Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Faculteit Geneeskunde, Departement Moleculaire Celbiologie, LIPIT, Campus Gasthuisberg (O&N 1), 3000 Leuven, Belgium

*Correspondence: jonathan.kagan@childrens.harvard.edu

FUNDING:

This work has been supported by the following sources: Children's Hospital Boston Career Development Fellowship (J.K.), Austrian Science Fund (E.D.), and Fonds voor Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek—Vlaanderen and the Bijzonder Onderzoeksfonds of the K.U. Leuven.

Children's Hospital Boston is home to the world's largest research enterprise based at a pediatric medical center, where its discoveries have benefited both children and adults since 1869. More than 500 scientists, including eight members of the National Academy of Sciences, 13 members of the Institute of Medicine and 12 members of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute comprise Children's research community. Founded as a 20-bed hospital for children, Children's Hospital Boston today is a 396-bed comprehensive center for pediatric and adolescent health care grounded in the values of excellence in patient care and sensitivity to the complex needs and diversity of children and families. Children's also is the primary pediatric teaching affiliate of Harvard Medical School. For more information about the hospital and its research visit: www.childrenshospital.org/newsroom.

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