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VISP: Center for Viral Infection Structural Proteomics
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VISP: Center for Viral Infection Structural Proteomics > VISPCollaboratorPublications > Interferon regulatory factor 3 is necessary for induction of antiviral genes during human cytomegalovirus infection.  

VISPCollaboratorPublications: Interferon regulatory factor 3 is necessary for induction of antiviral genes during human cytomegalovirus infection.

Title

Interferon regulatory factor 3 is necessary for induction of antiviral genes during human cytomegalovirus infection. 

Authors

DeFilippis VR, et al. 

Abstract

Viral infection activates interferon regulatory factor 3 (IRF3), a cofactor for the induction of interferon-stimulated genes (ISGs). The role of IRF3 in the activation of ISGs by human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) is controversial despite the fact that HCMV has consistently been shown to induce ISGs during infection of fibroblasts. To address the function of IRF3 in HCMV-mediated ISG induction, we monitored ISG expression and global gene expression in HCMV-infected cells in which IRF3 function had been depleted by small interfering RNA or blocked by dominant negative IRF3. A specific reduction of ISG induction was observed, whereas other transcripts were unaffected. We therefore conclude that IRF3 specifically regulates ISG induction during the initial phase of HCMV infection.

Journal

J Virol. 

Date

1/1/2006 

Link

PMID: 16379004 

Reference

DeFillipis, V. R., B Robinson, T. M.Keck, S. G. Hansen, J. A. Nelson, K. J. Frueh. Interferon regulatory factor 3 is necessary for induction of antiviral genes during human cytomegalovirus infection. J Virol 80:1032-7. (2006)

PMID

16379004  

Keyword

VISP, KSHV 
Attachments
Created at 3/1/2007 5:32 PM  by Sophie Coon 
Last modified at 3/1/2007 5:32 PM  by Sophie Coon