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Tyrosine phosphorylation of IRF3 by BLK facilitates its sufficient activation and innate antiviral response. | LitMetric

Tyrosine phosphorylation of IRF3 by BLK facilitates its sufficient activation and innate antiviral response.

PLoS Pathog

State Key Laboratory for Animal Disease Control and Prevention, College of Veterinary Medicine, Lanzhou University, Lanzhou Veterinary Research Institute, Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Lanzhou, China.

Published: October 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • Viral infections activate the transcription factor IRF3, critical for robust antiviral responses, but the precise mechanism for its full activation is not well understood.
  • Researchers identified the kinase BLK as a key player that enhances IRF3 activation and boosts antiviral immune responses, as BLK deficiency leads to reduced interferon production and higher susceptibility to viral infections.
  • Mechanistically, viral infection induces BLK autophosphorylation, enabling BLK to phosphorylate IRF3, which is essential for IRF3's further activation and effective antiviral responses.

Article Abstract

Viral infection triggers the activation of transcription factor IRF3, and its activity is precisely regulated for robust antiviral immune response and effective pathogen clearance. However, how full activation of IRF3 is achieved has not been well defined. Herein, we identified BLK as a key kinase that positively modulates IRF3-dependent signaling cascades and executes a pre-eminent antiviral effect. BLK deficiency attenuates RNA or DNA virus-induced ISRE activation, interferon production and the cellular antiviral response in human and murine cells, whereas overexpression of BLK has the opposite effects. BLK-deficient mice exhibit lower serum cytokine levels and higher lethality after VSV infection. Moreover, BLK deficiency impairs the secretion of downstream antiviral cytokines and promotes Senecavirus A (SVA) proliferation, thereby supporting SVA-induced oncolysis in an in vivo xenograft tumor model. Mechanistically, viral infection triggers BLK autophosphorylation at tyrosine 309. Subsequently, activated BLK directly binds and phosphorylates IRF3 at tyrosine 107, which further promotes TBK1-induced IRF3 S386 and S396 phosphorylation, facilitating sufficient IRF3 activation and downstream antiviral response. Collectively, our findings suggest that targeting BLK enhances viral clearance via specifically regulating IRF3 phosphorylation by a previously undefined mechanism.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10621992PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1011742DOI Listing

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