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Publication : Disruption of Type III Interferon (IFN) Genes <i>Ifnl2</i> and <i>Ifnl3</i> Recapitulates Loss of the Type III IFN Receptor in the Mucosal Antiviral Response.

First Author  Peterson ST Year  2019
Journal  J Virol Volume  93
Issue  22 PubMed ID  31462571
Mgi Jnum  J:287260 Mgi Id  MGI:6415750
Doi  10.1128/JVI.01073-19 Citation  Peterson ST, et al. (2019) Disruption of Type III Interferon (IFN) Genes Ifnl2 and Ifnl3 Recapitulates Loss of the Type III IFN Receptor in the Mucosal Antiviral Response. J Virol 93(22)
abstractText  Type III interferon (IFN), or IFN lambda (IFN-lambda), is an essential component of the innate immune response to mucosal viral infections. In both the intestine and the lung, signaling via the IFN-lambda receptor (IFNLR) controls clinically important viral pathogens, including influenza virus, norovirus, and rotavirus. While it is thought that IFN-lambda cytokines are the exclusive ligands for signaling through IFNLR, it is not known whether genetic ablation of these cytokines phenotypically recapitulates disruption of the receptor. Here, we report the serendipitous establishment of Ifnl2(-) (/) (-) Ifnl3(-) (/) (-) mice, which lack all known functional murine IFN-lambda cytokines. We demonstrate that, like Ifnlr1(-) (/) (-) mice lacking IFNLR signaling, these mice display defective control of murine norovirus, reovirus, and influenza virus and therefore genocopy Ifnlr1(-) (/) (-) mice. Thus, for regulation of viral infections at mucosal sites of both the intestine and lung, signaling via IFNLR can be fully explained by the activity of known cytokines IFN-lambda2 and IFN-lambda3. Our results confirm the current understanding of ligand-receptor interactions for type III IFN signaling and highlight the importance of this pathway in regulation of mucosal viral pathogens.IMPORTANCE Type III interferons are potent antiviral cytokines important for regulation of viruses that infect at mucosal surfaces. Studies using mice lacking the Ifnlr1 gene encoding the type III interferon receptor have demonstrated that signaling through this receptor is critical for protection against influenza virus, norovirus, and reovirus. Using a genetic approach to disrupt murine type III interferon cytokine genes Ifnl2 and Ifnl3, we found that mice lacking these cytokines fully recapitulate the impaired control of viruses observed in mice lacking Ifnlr1 Our results support the idea of an exclusive role for known type III interferon cytokines in signaling via IFNLR to mediate antiviral effects at mucosal surfaces. These findings emphasize the importance of type III interferons in regulation of a variety of viral pathogens and provide important genetic evidence to support our understanding of the ligand-receptor interactions in this pathway.
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