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Induction of type I interferon genes and interferon-inducible genes in embryonal stem cells devoid of interferon regulatory factor 1.
83
Citations
44
References
1993
Year
GeneticsViral PathogenesisImmunologyStem CellsViral GeneticsIfn Gene InductionBeta GeneVirologyEmbryonal Stem CellsGene ExpressionCell BiologyInduced Pluripotent Stem CellDevelopmental BiologyAntiviral ResponseGene RegulationStem Cell ResearchVirus-host InteractionMedicineInterferon-inducible GenesEmbryonic Stem Cell
Overexpression of interferon regulatory factor 1 (IRF-1) can induce expression of the interferon (IFN) beta gene, at least in certain cells. A role of IRF-1 in the activation of IFN-alpha genes has also been claimed. We have generated embryonal stem cells in which both IRF-1 alleles were disrupted. In undifferentiated embryonal stem cells, virus-induced levels of IFN-alpha RNA were similar for wild-type and IRF-1%, and there was little induction of IFN-beta RNA in either cell type. In 8-day differentiated cells, the levels of virus-induced IFN-beta RNA, but not of IFN-alpha RNA, were about 10-fold higher than in undifferentiated cells and only slightly higher in wild-type than in IRF-1% cells. Thus, although IRF-1 at high levels may elicit or augment induction of IFN genes under certain circumstances, it is not essential for IFN gene induction by virus. Lack of IRF-1 had no effect on the IFN-induced expression levels of the IFN-inducible genes tested; however, there was little or no constitutive expression of (2'-5')oligoadenylate synthetase in IRF-1% embryonal stem cells, in contrast to wild-type cells.
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