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Reduced vacuolar ATPase protects mice from Friend virus infection -an unintended but instructive effect in Hif-2afl mice.

Timm SchreiberN KollClaudia PadbergB Delos ReyesTheresa QuintingAnna MalyshkinaEric MetzenKathrin SutterJoachim FandreySandra Winning
Published in: Journal of cell science (2024)
During acute viral infections, innate immune cells invade inflamed tissues and face hypoxic areas. Hypoxia-inducible factors (HIFs) adapt cellular responses towards these conditions. We wanted to investigate the effects of a loss of HIF-2α in macrophages during acute Friend murine leukemia retrovirus (FV) infection in C57BL/6 mice using a Cre/loxP system. Remarkably, mice with a floxed Hif-2a (Hif-2afl) did not show any signs of FV infection, independent of Cre activity. This prevented a detailed analysis of the role of macrophage HIF-2α for FV infection but allowed to study a model of unexpected FV resistance. Hif-2afl mice showed a significant decrease in the expression of the Atp6v1e2 gene encoding for the E2 subunit of the vacuolar H+-ATPase, which resulted in a decreased acidification of lysosomes and limited virus entry into the cell. These findings highlight that the insertion of loxP sites is not always without functional consequences and has established a phenotype in the floxed Hif2a mouse, which is not only unexpected, but unwanted and it is of relevance for the use of this mouse strain in (at least virus) experiments.
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