Virus Details


VHFID10115

Host Factor Information

Gene Name IL-1β
HF Protein Name Interleukin-1 beta
HF Function
Uniprot ID P01584
Protein Sequence View Fasta Sequence
NCBI Gene ID 3553
Host Factor (HF) Name in Paper IL-1β
Gene synonyms IL1F2
Ensemble Gene ID ENSG00000125538
Ensemble Transcript ENST00000263341.7
KEGG ID Go to KEGG Database
Gene Ontology ID(s) GO:0001660, GO:0001934, GO:0002711, GO:0005125, GO:0005149, GO:0005178, GO:0005576, GO:0005615, GO:0005764, GO:0005829, GO:0006915, GO:0006954, GO:0006955, GO:0007165, GO:0007254, GO:0007267, GO:0007566, GO:0008284, GO:0008285, GO:0009743, GO:0010573, GO:0010575, GO:0010628, GO:0010718, GO:0010829, GO:0014805, GO:0019221, GO:0019904, GO:0030141, GO:0030213, GO:0030335, GO:0030593, GO:0030730, GO:0030949, GO:0031394, GO:0031622, GO:0032308, GO:0032496, GO:0032725, GO:0032729, GO:0032743, GO:0032755, GO:0032757, GO:0033092, GO:0033198, GO:0034116, GO:0035234, GO:0042102, GO:0043122, GO:0043123, GO:0043406, GO:0043407, GO:0045429, GO:0045766, GO:0045833, GO:0045840, GO:0045893, GO:0045917, GO:0045944, GO:0046330, GO:0046627, GO:0046827, GO:0048143, GO:0050691, GO:0050729, GO:0050767, GO:0050768, GO:0050796, GO:0050805, GO:0050830, GO:0050995, GO:0050996, GO:0050999, GO:0051044, GO:0051091, GO:0051092, GO:0051781, GO:0060252, GO:0060355, GO:0060559, GO:0070164, GO:0070372, GO:0070487, GO:0070498, GO:0070555, GO:0071222, GO:0071260, GO:0071466, GO:0071639, GO:0097192, GO:0097398, GO:0150078, GO:1900745, GO:1901224, GO:1902680, GO:1903140, GO:1903597, GO:1905075, GO:2000556, GO:2001240,
MINT ID N.A.
STRING Click to see interaction map
GWAS Analysis Click to see gwas analysis
OMIM ID 147720
PANTHER ID PTHR10078:SF30;PTHR10078
PDB ID(s) 1HIB, 1I1B, 1IOB, 1ITB, 1L2H, 1S0L, 1T4Q, 1TOO, 1TP0, 1TWE, 1TWM, 21BI, 2I1B, 2KH2, 2NVH, 31BI, 3LTQ, 3O4O, 3POK, 41BI, 4DEP, 4G6J, 4G6M, 4GAF, 4GAI, 4I1B, 5BVP, 5I1B, 5MVZ, 5R7W, 5R85, 5R86, 5R87, 5R88, 5R89, 5R8A, 5R8B, 5R8C, 5R8D, 5R8E, 5R8F, 5R8G, 5R8H, 5R8I, 5R8J, 5R8K, 5R8L, 5R8M, 5R8N, 5R8O, 5R8P, 5R8Q, 6I1B, 6Y8I, 6Y8M, 7CHY, 7CHZ, 7I1B, 7Z4T, 8C3U, 8RYK, 8RYS, 8RZB, 9ILB,
pfam ID PF00340, PF02394,
Drug Bank ID DB05767, DB06168, DB12140, DB00843, DB05442, DB10772, DB12119, DB01017, DB06372, DB05412, DB05133, DB05470, DB05507,
ChEMBL ID CHEMBL1909490
Organism Homo sapiens (Human)

Pathogen Information

Virus Name Japanese encephalitis virus
Virus Short Name JEV
Order Amarillovirales
Virus Family Flaviviridae
Virus Subfamily N.A.
Genus Flavivirus
Species Japanese encephalitis virus
Host Vertebrates
Cell Tropism
Associated Disease Encephalitis
Mode of Transmission Sexual contact, blood, breast feeding
VIPR DB link https://www.viprbrc.org/brc/vipr_search.do?species=Japanese_encephalitis_virus
ICTV DB link https://ictv.global/report/183/flaviviridae
Virus Host DB link

Publication Information

Paper Title Degradation of MicroRNA miR-466d-3p by Japanese Encephalitis Virus NS3 Facilitates Viral Replication and Interleukin-1β Expression
Author's Name Hui Jiang # 1, Lige Bai # 1, Lina Ji 1, Zhuofang Bai 1, Jianwei Su 1, Tian Qin 1, Guojun Wang 1, Vinod Balasubramaniam 2, Xiao Wang 1, Min Cui 3, Jing Ye 3, Shengbo Cao 3, Guangpeng Li 1, Yang Yang 5
Journal Name JOURNAL OF VIROLOGY
Pubmed ID 32461319
Abstract Japanese encephalitis virus (JEV) infection alters microRNA (miRNA) expression in the central nervous system (CNS). However, the mechanism contributing to miRNA regulation in the CNS is not known. We discovered global degradation of mature miRNA in mouse brains and neuroblastoma (NA) cells after JEV infection. Integrative analysis of miRNAs and mRNAs suggested that several significantly downregulated miRNAs and their targeted mRNAs were clustered into an inflammation pathway. Transfection with miRNA 466d-3p (miR-466d-3p) decreased interleukin-1β (IL-1β) expression and inhibited JEV replication in NA cells. However, miR-466d-3p expression increased after JEV infection in the presence of cycloheximide, indicating that viral protein expression reduced miR-466d-3p expression. We generated all the JEV coding proteins and demonstrated NS3 helicase protein to be a potent miRNA suppressor. The NS3 proteins of Zika virus, West Nile virus, and dengue virus serotype 1 (DENV-1) and DENV-2 also decreased miR-466d-3p expression. Results from helicase-blocking assays and in vitro unwinding assays demonstrated that NS3 could unwind pre-miR-466d and induce miRNA dysfunction. Computational models and an RNA immunoprecipitation assay revealed arginine-rich domains of NS3 to be crucial for pre-miRNA binding and degradation of host miRNAs. Importantly, site-directed mutagenesis of conserved residues in NS3 revealed that R226G and R202W reduced the binding affinity and degradation of pre-miR-466d. These results expand the function of flavivirus helicases beyond unwinding duplex RNA to degrade pre-miRNAs. Hence, we revealed a new mechanism for NS3 in regulating miRNA pathways and promoting neuroinflammation.IMPORTANCE Host miRNAs have been reported to regulate JEV-induced inflammation in the CNS. We found that JEV infection could reduce expression of host miRNA. The helicase region of the NS3 protein bound specifically to miRNA precursors and could lead to incorrect unwinding of miRNA precursors, thereby reducing the expression of mature miRNAs. This observation led to two major findings. First, our results suggested that JEV NS3 protein induced miR-466d-3p degradation, which promoted IL-1β expression and JEV replication. Second, arginine molecules on NS3 were the main miRNA-binding sites, because we demonstrated that miRNA degradation was abolished if arginines at R226 and R202 were mutated. Our study provides new insights into the molecular mechanism of JEV and reveals several amino acid sites that could be mutated for a JEV vaccine.
Used Model BV2, NA, bEnd.3, BHK-21, SK-N-SH
DOI 10.1128/JVI.00294-20