C. elegans RIG-I-like receptor DRH-1 signals via CARDs to activate anti-viral immunity in intestinal cells.

bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology(2024)

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Abstract
Upon sensing viral RNA, mammalian RIG-I-like receptors activate downstream signals using caspase activation and recruitment domains (CARDs), which ultimately promote transcriptional immune responses that have been well-studied. In contrast, the downstream signaling mechanisms for invertebrate RIG-I-like receptors are much less clear. For example, the Caenorhabditis elegans RIG-I-like receptor DRH-1 lacks annotated CARDs and upregulates the distinct output of RNA interference (RNAi). Here we found that, similar to mammal RIG-I-like receptors, DRH-1 signals through two tandem caspase activation and recruitment domains (2CARD) to induce a transcriptional immune response. Expression of DRH-1(2CARD) alone in the intestine was sufficient to induce immune gene expression, increase viral resistance, and promote thermotolerance, a phenotype previously associated with immune activation. We also found that DRH-1 is required in the intestine to induce immune gene expression, and we demonstrate subcellular colocalization of DRH-1 puncta with double-stranded RNA inside the cytoplasm of intestinal cells upon viral infection. Altogether, our results reveal mechanistic and spatial insights into anti-viral signaling in C. elegans, highlighting unexpected parallels in RIG-I-like receptor signaling between C. elegans and mammals.
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