A44 STAT1 ACTS IN INNATE IMMUNE CELLS TO PREVENT LIVER PATHOLOGY FOLLOWING ASYMPTOMATIC INTESTINAL VIRAL INFECTION
A J Sharon, M Portas, B Hardman, L Osborne

TL;DR
This study shows that STAT1 in innate immune cells prevents severe liver damage caused by a harmless gut virus in mice.
Contribution
The study identifies STAT1 as a critical host factor in controlling asymptomatic intestinal viral infections to prevent liver pathology.
Findings
STAT1-deficient mice develop severe liver necrosis and weight loss after asymptomatic intestinal viral infection.
Innate immune cells lacking STAT1 fail to control viral replication, leading to liver pathology.
STAT1 expression in hematopoietic cells is necessary and sufficient to prevent disease.
Abstract
In the mammalian gut, interactions between the host and commensal organisms must be regulated to prevent damage and derive benefits from these organisms. While this regulation has been well-studied in the context of bacteria, much less is known about how commensal-like viruses in the intestine are managed by the host. Evidence demonstrates that viral commensals can provide benefits to the host which supplement those from bacteria. In mice, depletion of the intestinal virome enhances susceptibility to DSS-induced colitis. Contributions of the virome can also be studied using murine norovirus strain CR6 (CR6), which forms persistent asymptomatic infections in the gut; this infection protects mice from both C. rodentium- and DSS-induced colitis. Despite these benefits, host-encoded mechanisms regulating viral commensalism remain understudied. One host-encoded mechanism is STAT1. In…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCytomegalovirus and herpesvirus research · Immune responses and vaccinations · Immunodeficiency and Autoimmune Disorders
