1 research outputs found
A sodium channel variant in Aedes aegypti as a candidate pathogen sensor for viral-associated molecular patterns.
Recent work demonstrated that a splice variant of a human macrophage voltage-gated sodium
channel expressed on endosomes acts as an intracellular sensor for dsRNA, a viral-associated
molecular pattern. Here our goal was to identify a candidate gene in a clinically relevant
invertebrate model with related cellular and pattern recognition properties. The para gene in
drosophila and other insects encodes voltage-gated sodium channels with similar
electrophysiological properties to those found in vertebrate excitable membranes. A database
search revealed that the AAEL006019 gene in Aedes aegypti, the yellow fever mosquito, encodes
a voltage-gated sodium channel that is distinct from genes that encode para-like sodium
channels. As compared to para-like channels, the protein products from this gene have deletions
in the N-terminus and in the DII-DIII linker region. When over-expressed in an Aedes aegypti
cell line, CCL-125, the AAEL006019 channel demonstrated cytoplasmic expression on vesicularlike
organelles. Electrophysiologic analysis revealed that the channel mediates small inward
currents that are enhanced by synthetic mimics of viral-derived ssRNA, R848 and ORN02, but
not the dsRNA mimic, poly I:C. R848 treatment of CCL-125 cells that express high levels of the
channels led to increased expression of RelA and Ago2, two mediators of insect innate
immunity. These results suggest that the AAEL006019 channel acts as an intracellular pathogen
sensor for ssRNA molecular patterns