Publication | Open Access
The cysteine-rich region of respiratory syncytial virus attachment protein inhibits innate immunity elicited by the virus and endotoxin
108
Citations
30
References
2005
Year
Respiratory Virus ImmunityRsv PathogenesisInnate Immune SystemImmunologyViral PathogenesisCysteine-rich RegionInnate ImmunityViral Structural ProteinInflammationRsv InfectionAllergyAutoimmune DiseaseVirologyAutoimmunityAttachment ProteinCytokinePathogenesisAntiviral ResponseInfectious Respiratory DiseaseVirus-host InteractionMedicineViral Immunity
The attachment protein (glycoprotein) of respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) has long been associated with disease potentiation and respiratory symptoms. The glycoprotein has a conserved cysteine-rich region (GCRR) whose function is unknown and which is not necessary for efficient viral replication. In this report, we show that the GCRR is a powerful inhibitor of the innate immune response against RSV, and that early secretion of glycoprotein is critical to modulate inflammation after RSV infection. Importantly, the GCRR is also a potent inhibitor of cytokine production mediated by several TLR agonists, indicating that this peptide sequence displays broad antiinflammatory properties. These findings have important implications for RSV pathogenesis and describe an inhibitor of TLR-mediated inflammatory responses that could have clinical applications.
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