Viruses (Aug 2018)

Suppression of NF-κB Activity: A Viral Immune Evasion Mechanism

  • Liyao Deng,
  • Qiurui Zeng,
  • Mingshu Wang,
  • Anchun Cheng,
  • Renyong Jia,
  • Shun Chen,
  • Dekang Zhu,
  • Mafeng Liu,
  • Qiao Yang,
  • Ying Wu,
  • Xinxin Zhao,
  • Shaqiu Zhang,
  • Yunya Liu,
  • Yanling Yu,
  • Ling Zhang,
  • Xiaoyue Chen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/v10080409
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 8
p. 409

Abstract

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Nuclear factor-κB (NF-κB) is an important transcription factor that induces the expression of antiviral genes and viral genes. NF-κB activation needs the activation of NF-κB upstream molecules, which include receptors, adaptor proteins, NF-κB (IκB) kinases (IKKs), IκBα, and NF-κB dimer p50/p65. To survive, viruses have evolved the capacity to utilize various strategies that inhibit NF-κB activity, including targeting receptors, adaptor proteins, IKKs, IκBα, and p50/p65. To inhibit NF-κB activation, viruses encode several specific NF-κB inhibitors, including NS3/4, 3C and 3C-like proteases, viral deubiquitinating enzymes (DUBs), phosphodegron-like (PDL) motifs, viral protein phosphatase (PPase)-binding proteins, and small hydrophobic (SH) proteins. Finally, we briefly describe the immune evasion mechanism of human immunodeficiency virus 1 (HIV-1) by inhibiting NF-κB activity in productive and latent infections. This paper reviews a viral mechanism of immune evasion that involves the suppression of NF-κB activation to provide new insights into and references for the control and prevention of viral diseases.

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