Mouse SAMHD1 Has Antiretroviral Activity and Suppresses a Spontaneous Cell-Intrinsic Antiviral Response.

  • Behrendt, Rayk
  • Schumann, Tina
  • Gerbaulet, Alexander
  • Nguyen, Laura A
  • Schubert, Nadja
  • Alexopoulou, Dimitra
  • Berka, Ursula
  • Lienenklaus, Stefan
  • Peschke, Katrin
  • Gibbert, Kathrin
  • Wittmann, Sabine
  • Lindemann, Dirk
  • Weiss, Siegfried
  • Dahl, Andreas
  • Naumann, Ronald
  • Dittmer, Ulf
  • Kim, Baek
  • Mueller, Werner
  • Gramberg, Thomas
  • Roers, Axel
Publication date
August 2013
Publisher
Elsevier BV
Journal
Cell Reports

Abstract

Aicardi-Goutières syndrome (AGS), a hereditary autoimmune disease, clinically and biochemically overlaps with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) and, like SLE, is characterized by spontaneous type I interferon (IFN) production. The finding that defects of intracellular nucleases cause AGS led to the concept that intracellular accumulation of nucleic acids triggers inappropriate production of type I IFN and autoimmunity. AGS can also be caused by defects of SAMHD1, a 3' exonuclease and deoxynucleotide (dNTP) triphosphohydrolase. Human SAMHD1 is an HIV-1 restriction factor that hydrolyzes dNTPs and decreases their concentration below the levels required for retroviral reverse transcription. We show in gene-targeted mice that also mouse SAMHD1...

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