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Publication : Type I interferons link viral infection to enhanced epithelial turnover and repair.

First Author  Sun L Year  2015
Journal  Cell Host Microbe Volume  17
Issue  1 Pages  85-97
PubMed ID  25482432 Mgi Jnum  J:268956
Mgi Id  MGI:6272692 Doi  10.1016/j.chom.2014.11.004
Citation  Sun L, et al. (2015) Type I interferons link viral infection to enhanced epithelial turnover and repair. Cell Host Microbe 17(1):85-97
abstractText  The host immune system functions constantly to maintain chronic commensal and pathogenic organisms in check. The consequences of these immune responses on host physiology are as yet unexplored, and may have long-term implications in health and disease. We show that chronic viral infection increases epithelial turnover in multiple tissues, and the antiviral cytokines type I interferons (IFNs) mediate this response. Using a murine model with persistently elevated type I IFNs in the absence of exogenous viral infection, the Irgm1(-/-) mouse, we demonstrate that type I IFNs act through nonepithelial cells, including macrophages, to promote increased epithelial turnover and wound repair. Downstream of type I IFN signaling, the highly related IFN-stimulated genes Apolipoprotein L9a and b activate epithelial proliferation through ERK activation. Our findings demonstrate that the host immune response to chronic viral infection has systemic effects on epithelial turnover through a myeloid-epithelial circuit.
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