Exploring antiviral RNA interference in mammals

Lead Research Organisation: Queen Mary University of London
Department Name: Blizard Institute of Cell and Molecular

Abstract

All organisms possess defence mechanisms to combat infections caused by viruses. In plants, insects and worms, one of these mechanisms is called antiviral RNA interference (RNAi). Many viruses have genetic material made of RNA, which after the virus infects a cell, will be copied into molecules called double-stranded RNAs (dsRNAs). These dsRNAs alert the cell to the presence of a virus. A protein made by the cell, called Dicer, then chops these dsRNA molecules up into small inhibitory fragments. It is these RNA fragments that then stick to all copies of the viral genetic material inside the cell and direct their destruction, thereby halting the infection.

Although mammalian cells also contain Dicer protein and other molecules needed for RNAi, they possess an additional antiviral mechanism whereby dsRNA molecules formed during viral infections trigger the production of messenger proteins called interferons (IFNs). These IFNs act on neighbouring cells to alert them of a virus attack and boost their defences to allow them to stop viral invaders. It has been proposed that antiviral RNAi has been superseded in mammals and replaced by an IFN-based defence mechanism.

However, recent data generated by myself and other labs have revealed that the RNAi-based defence system is also active in mammalian cells and might block viruses only in particular cell types. My work has shown that the RNAi pathway is antiviral in mouse embryonic stem cells. These are cells found in early stage embryos that can self-renew and be programmed to develop into all the different cell types that the body needs. Importantly, they lack an IFN-based response and so are dependent on other mechanisms to defend themselves against viruses. In virally infected mouse embryonic stem cells, Dicer efficiently chops up viral dsRNA molecules into inhibitory fragments, while in fully mature cells, Dicer's activity is greatly reduced. Why Dicer works in immature cells but not in mature cells is only beginning to be understood. Interestingly, my own work shows that in mature cells, proteins produced in response to IFNs inhibit Dicer's activity, suggestive of an incompatibility between antiviral RNAi and the IFN system in mammals.

These studies have uncovered another mechanism of innate anti-viral immunity that mammalian cells have at their disposal. The question now is how, where and when this defence mechanism works. To answer the first question I will investigate how Dicer's ability to chop viral dsRNA is controlled. For this, I will focus on three proteins produced by the cell that are known to attach to Dicer and evaluate their role in Dicer's function. My second question aims to define in which cells this RNAi-based defence matters. For this, I will test my working hypothesis that RNAi is active not only in stem cells from the embryo, but also in stem cells found in various tissues of our body. Finally, and most importantly, I will test how much RNAi helps to protect living animals from infections, since inhibitory RNA fragments produced by Dicer have previously been shown to accumulate in infected newborn mice.
There is huge scope for discovery in this field because RNAi has only recently been shown to be antiviral in mammals. This proposal tackles fundamental and exciting questions to elucidate the functional role of this ancestral mode of defence in mammalian immunology. Knowledge generated will improve our understanding and ability to boost natural antiviral mechanisms. Moreover, the results will also be relevant to deciphering the fundamental biology of stem cells and to our understanding of the evolution of the immune system.

Planned Impact

Viruses constitute a constant threat to the human population as illustrated by pandemic outbreaks caused by Influenza virus, Zika virus and human immunodeficiency virus. To develop innovative therapeutic approaches to combact these infections, it is essential to understand the full repertoire of defences available in our cells. My research programme's fundamental aim is to explore an antiviral defense mechanism based on RNA interference (RNAi) only recently revealed in mammals, therefore the scope for impact from my research is broad.

In the short term, this research will directly influence the academic community within the innate immunity field as it will provide wide-ranging insight into how this antiviral defence mechanism works, in which type of cells it is active and how it impacts viral infection either in newborns or adults. My findings will undoubtedly have major effects on the direction of research within the virology and immunology fields and beyond in other academic research communities. My work will notably impact on stem cells research as it will help to understand how these cells are protected from viral attacks. This is important because these cells are at risk of infection as observed for instance during embryogenesis with neural progenitors cells that are targeted by Zika virus.

Beyond academica, this research programme will impact on clinical regenerative medicine. One strategy currently explored to replace cells in damaged tissues, for instance in heart disease, is to harvest progenitors cells from patients, expand them and then transplant them back into the patient to potentially regenerate the malfunctioning tissue. Given the potential risk of infection during the transplantation, a full understanding of the immune mechanisms active in these multipotent cells is important as it could precipitate new strategies to boost these defences, which will be beneficial for the patients.

In the long term, the identification of a novel antiviral mechanism active in vivo and how it is counteracted by viral proteins will impact the pharmaceutical industry by providing novel targets for antiviral drugs. One approach might be the design of drugs that specifically enhance the antiviral activity of the RNAi pathway. In addition, designing drugs that target viral proteins that suppress the RNAi defence mechanism could be a potentially highly selective approach to block infection with minimal side effects and therefore directly benefit virally-infected people.

Finally, during this multidisciplinary research programme I will acquire new skills and foster collaborations which will be essential for my development as an independent researcher and to form the optimal foundations to build up my research group. I will also train a postodoctoral researcher in various methods to analyse RNA, to work with stem cells as well as to perform a range of virological assays. During this programme, the postdoctoral researcher will also benefit from the numerous interactions with collaborators or other scientitsts in the fields of virology, immunology and stem cells.

Publications

10 25 50
 
Description The Rising Star programme
Amount £380,000 (GBP)
Organisation Barts Charity 
Sector Charity/Non Profit
Country United Kingdom
Start 01/2020 
End 12/2022
 
Description Design of novel tool to study antiviral RNA interference 
Organisation University of Tartu
Department Institute of Technology
Country Estonia 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution My research team provides the expertise on the topic of antiviral RNA interference, an innate immune pathway recently uncovered to be active in mammals. We will also use the viral system generated by our partners to carry out experiments to investigate this antiviral pathway.
Collaborator Contribution Our collaborators provides expertise on a viral system and is engineering some material that will be key for investigating antiviral RNA interference in mammals.
Impact We recently started our collaboration and ordered some material that is currently being synthesised. This material will then be used by our collaborators to generate new viral systems. We anticipate to gather data using this engineered system and anticipate future publications (s).
Start Year 2022
 
Description Design of novel tool to study antiviral RNA interference 
Organisation University of Tartu
Department Institute of Technology
Country Estonia 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution My research team provides the expertise on the topic of antiviral RNA interference, an innate immune pathway recently uncovered to be active in mammals. We will also use the viral system generated by our partners to carry out experiments to investigate this antiviral pathway.
Collaborator Contribution Our collaborators provides expertise on a viral system and is engineering some material that will be key for investigating antiviral RNA interference in mammals.
Impact We recently started our collaboration and ordered some material that is currently being synthesised. This material will then be used by our collaborators to generate new viral systems. We anticipate to gather data using this engineered system and anticipate future publications (s).
Start Year 2022
 
Description Functional characterisation of viral suppressors of innate immune defence. 
Organisation Pasteur Institute, Paris
Country France 
Sector Charity/Non Profit 
PI Contribution My research team provides expertise on an antiviral pathway (called antiviral RNA interference) to our partners who have a long-standing interest for this immune response and its possible link to their research. We will also use material generated by our partners to carry out experiments to investigate this antiviral pathway.
Collaborator Contribution Our collaborators provide expertise and technical knowledge on the production and manipulation of a specific group of viruses. They provided training to a PDRA in my lab,who acquired the necessary skills to produce and handle this family of viruses.
Impact Viral stocks were generated so far through this collaboration and we are currently carrying out experiments. Data obtained from this collaborations is anticipated to lead to future publication(s).
Start Year 2021
 
Description Innate immune response to the activation of endogenous retroviruses. 
Organisation Queen Mary University of London
Department Blizard Institute
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution My research team contribute to this collaboration by providing expertise on innate immunity, perform some experiments and shared some reagents/material.
Collaborator Contribution The collaborators provide expertise on transposons and epigenetics. They conceived, designed and perform experiments, analysed data and wrote the paper published from our collaboration.
Impact - 1 publication in Nature Comminications: The HUSH complex is a gatekeeper of type I interferon through epigenetic regulation of LINE-1s. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-020-19170-5 This is a multi-disciplinary collaboration bringing together epigenetics and innate immunity.
Start Year 2019
 
Description Therapeutic approaches for autoinflammatory diseases 
Organisation Leiden University Medical Center
Country Netherlands 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution We approached our collaborator to test various proteins that we suspected would act as inhibitor of a pathway activated in autoinflammatory diseases. We generated various constructs, tested their expression, performed various functional tests to validate the constructs. We also provided proteins that we purified.
Collaborator Contribution Our collaborator previously developed an assay to study autoinflammatory diseases. They performed functional experiments in their experimental model using the various constructs that we sent. They also generated additional constructs and tested them. An additional lab in Leiden University Medical Center designed and produced peptides that are currently being tested experimentally by our collaborator.
Impact This collaboration started recently (in 2022), but we anticipate that the results obtained from this collaboration will result in a publication.
Start Year 2022
 
Description Centre of the Cell workshop 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach Regional
Primary Audience Schools
Results and Impact The intended purpose of the Centre of the Cell workshop is to communicate to school pupils at the GCSE/A-level stage the enthusiasm for science and to answer their questions about a career in science. A class of 30 pupils at GCSE level (year 11) attended the workshop. There were different tables with various activities related to science . The class was divided into small groups of 5-6 pupils that will go at each table and rotate to another table after a certain time limit (10 minutes). I was sitting at a table call "meet a scientist". My role was to answer their questions about my career such as "how did you get into your career?", "what's your favourite thing about your career?" , "what are the most challenging aspect of your job as a scientist?". All these questions sparked a lot of discussion with the pupils who were at the stage of defining which direction they would like to pursue for their professional career.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2021
URL https://www.centreofthecell.org/
 
Description Centre of the Cell, Immunology workshop (topic: Invasion! Infection and Immunity (Year 10-13)) 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Schools
Results and Impact The Centre of the Cell organises various outreach activities for schools (key stage 1 to 5).
A workshop is a presenter-led experience which includes challenges and tasks for the groups to complete as they go through the workshop. workshops are very interactive using sound, film and team games to explain the different scientific concepts.
Various activities related to immunology and infection were set up for each table with 5 students per table. I was in a table called "meet an immunologist" where I could explain what we do in my lab and answer students' questions about our lab research but also more generally about career in science, challenges, day to day life as a scientist...etc. Every 10 minutes, students change table and another group of students come to my table. I have so far participated in 2023 in 3 workshops of 1 hour each. Classes were from the UK and from the Republic of Ireland.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2023
URL https://www.centreofthecell.org/what-we-do/science-workshops-and-shows/invasion-infection-and-immuni...
 
Description Filming for STEMPod refurbishment project 
Form Of Engagement Activity A broadcast e.g. TV/radio/film/podcast (other than news/press)
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Schools
Results and Impact I participated in a film for the new Centre of the Cell's STEMpod. I was interviewed to explain the work carried out in my lab.
Centre of the Cell is an informal science education centre based at Queen Mary University of London. It is the first science education centre in the world to be located within working biomedical research laboratories.The STEMPod Experience is a five-scene, 1.5 hour-interactive science experience for ages 7 and up. The immersive show features films, digital interactive games and interesting objects such as a human brain. Since its opening in September 2009 Centre of the Cell has inspired more than 228,000 young people from East London and beyond through an immersive experience about cells and biomedical science in STEMPod and science shows and workshops in Neuron Pod. Queen Mary University of London (QMUL) recently invested £438,000 to fully refurbish STEMPod - the iconic orange multimedia hub suspended above research labs in the Blizard building. The revamp will provide the space with state-of-the-art computer and film technology and a refresh of activities and film to reflect the latest in biomedical research at QMUL. The film in which I participated will be part of the refurbished STEMPod (reopening mid-2023).
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2023
URL https://www.qmul.ac.uk/media/news/2022/smd/centre-of-the-cells-stempod-to-undergo-state-of-the-art-c...
 
Description Lecture on innate immunity 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach Local
Primary Audience Undergraduate students
Results and Impact I have been invited by my former host organisation (University College London, UCL) to provide a 2 hours lecture on innate immunity as part of a Module called " Fundamentals of Cell Biology from a Virus Perspective" for UCL undergraduates students. The lecture included "antiviral RNA interference ", which is at the core of my research programme funded by UKRI FLF.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2020
 
Description Talk to the Centre for Immunbiology 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach Local
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact Online presentation of my research programme to the Centre for Immunobiology at the Blizard Institute to introduce myself and my team to the Centre as I just started my group. The presentation resulted in many questions from the audience and brought to my attention a potential collaboration to set up on the UKRI-funded project.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2020