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MicroRNAs regulate the immunometabolic response to viral infection in the liver.

Ragunath SingaraveluShifawn O'HaraDaniel M JonesRan ChenNathan G TaylorPrashanth SrinivasanCurtis QuanDominic G RoyRineke H SteenbergenAnil KumarRodney K LynDennis ÖzcelikYanouchka RouleauMy-Anh NguyenKatey J RaynerTom C HobmanDavid Lorne TyrrellRodney S RussellJohn Paul Pezacki
Published in: Nature chemical biology (2015)
Immune regulation of cellular metabolism can be responsible for successful responses to invading pathogens. Viruses alter their hosts' cellular metabolism to facilitate infection. Conversely, the innate antiviral responses of mammalian cells target these metabolic pathways to restrict viral propagation. We identified miR-130b and miR-185 as hepatic microRNAs (miRNAs) whose expression is stimulated by 25-hydroxycholesterol (25-HC), an antiviral oxysterol secreted by interferon-stimulated macrophages and dendritic cells, during hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection. However, 25-HC only directly stimulated miR-185 expression, whereas HCV regulated miR-130b expression. Independently, miR-130b and miR-185 inhibited HCV infection. In particular, miR-185 significantly restricted host metabolic pathways crucial to the HCV life cycle. Interestingly, HCV infection decreased miR-185 and miR-130b levels to promote lipid accumulation and counteract 25-HC's antiviral effect. Furthermore, miR-185 can inhibit other viruses through the regulation of immunometabolic pathways. These data establish these microRNAs as a key link between innate defenses and metabolism in the liver.
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