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Autophagy Is an Essential
Component of Drosophila Immunity against Vesicular Stomatitis
Virus
Shelly S, Lukinova N, Bambina S, Berman A and Cherry S.
Immunity. 2009 April 8 (Epub ahead of print).
Intrinsic innate immune mechanisms are the first line of defense
against pathogens and exist to control infection autonomously
in infected cells. Here, we showed that autophagy, an intrinsic
mechanism that can degrade cytoplasmic components, played a
direct antiviral role against the mammalian viral pathogen
vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) in the model organism Drosophila.
We found that the surface glycoprotein, VSV-G, was likely the
pathogen-associated molecular pattern (PAMP) that initiated
this cell-autonomous response. Once activated, autophagy decreased
viral replication, and repression of autophagy led to increased
viral replication and pathogenesis in cells and animals. Lastly,
we showed that the antiviral response was controlled by the
phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K)-Akt-signaling pathway,
which normally regulates autophagy in response to nutrient
availability. Altogether, these data uncover an intrinsic antiviral
program that links viral recognition to the evolutionarily
conserved nutrient-signaling and autophagy pathways.
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