About: MDA5 is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 740 publications have been published within this topic receiving 80681 citations. The topic is also known as: DEAD/H (Asp-Glu-Ala-Asp/His) box polypeptide & MDA-5.
TL;DR: In this article, the authors reported the identification of TAPE (TBK1-associated protein in endolysosomes) as a novel regulator of the RLR pathways.
TL;DR: The interplay between the IFN system and some selected clinically important and challenging viruses and bacteria is discussed, highlighting the wide array of pathogen-triggered molecular mechanisms involved in evasion strategies.
TL;DR: The essential and nonredundant role of nucleic acid recognition in the induction of type I interferon production is highlighted and important questions regarding the nature of cell-autonomous virus detection in coordinating the antiviral response are raised.
Abstract: Mice lacking the adaptor protein that initiates an antiviral response downstream of the RNA helicases retinoic acid–inducible gene I (RIG-I) and melanoma differentiation-associated gene 5 (MDA5) have recently been described. These studies highlight the essential and nonredundant role of nucleic acid recognition in the induction of type I interferon production and raise important questions regarding the nature of cell-autonomous virus detection in coordinating the antiviral response.
TL;DR: Although Mda5 is functionally active in the chicken, the absence of an apparent RIG-I–like function may contribute to the chicken’s susceptibility to highly pathogenic influenza.
Abstract: In mammals, Mda5 and RIG-I are members of the evolutionary conserved RIG-like helicase family that play critical roles in the outcome of RNA virus infections. Resolving influenza infection in mammals has been shown to require RIG-I; however, the apparent absence of a RIG-I homolog in chickens raises intriguing questions regarding how this species deals with influenza virus infection. Although chickens are able to resolve certain strains of influenza, they are highly susceptible to others, such as highly pathogenic avian influenza H5N1. Understanding RIG-like helicases in the chicken is of critical importance, especially for developing new therapeutics that may use these systems. With this in mind, we investigated the RIG-like helicase Mda5 in the chicken. We have identified a chicken Mda5 homolog (ChMda5) and assessed its functional activities that relate to antiviral responses. Like mammalian Mda5, ChMda5 expression is upregulated in response to dsRNA stimulation and following IFN activation of cells. Furthermore, RNA interference-mediated knockdown of ChMda5 showed that ChMda5 plays an important role in the IFN response of chicken cells to dsRNA. Intriguingly, although ChMda5 levels are highly upregulated during influenza infection, knockdown of ChMda5 expression does not appear to impact influenza proliferation. Collectively, although Mda5 is functionally active in the chicken, the absence of an apparent RIG-I–like function may contribute to the chicken’s susceptibility to highly pathogenic influenza.
TL;DR: The data indicate a novel role of the TLR3-TICAM-1 pathway in controlling miR-21 levels in EVs, which is currently unknown in other studies of pattern-recognition receptors.