Human TMEFF1 is a restriction factor for herpes simplex virus in the brain.

Yi-Hao Chan,Zhiyong Liu,Paul Bastard, Noopur Khobrekar, Kennen M Hutchison,Yasuhiro Yamazaki, Qing Fan,Daniela Matuozzo, Oliver Harschnitz, Nacim Kerrouche, Koji Nakajima, Param Amin,Ahmad Yatim,Darawan Rinchai,Jie Chen,Peng Zhang,Gabriele Ciceri, Jia Chen,Kerry Dobbs,Serkan Belkaya,Danyel Lee,Adrian Gervais, Kürşad Aydın, Ayse Kartal,Mary L Hasek,Shuxiang Zhao, Eduardo Garcia Reino,Yoon Seung Lee,Yoann Seeleuthner, Matthieu Chaldebas,Rasheed Bailey, Catherine Vanhulle,Lazaro Lorenzo,Soraya Boucherit, Flore Rozenberg,Nico Marr,Trine H Mogensen,Mélodie Aubart, Aurélie Cobat,Olivier Dulac, Melike Emiroglu,Søren R Paludan,Laurent Abel,Luigi Notarangelo, Richard Longnecker, Greg Smith,Lorenz Studer,Jean-Laurent Casanova,Shen-Ying Zhang

Nature(2024)

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Abstract
Most cases of herpes simplex virus 1 (HSV-1) encephalitis (HSE) remain unexplained1,2. Here, we report on two unrelated people who had HSE as children and are homozygous for rare deleterious variants of TMEFF1, which encodes a cell membrane protein that is preferentially expressed by brain cortical neurons. TMEFF1 interacts with the cell-surface HSV-1 receptor NECTIN-1, impairing HSV-1 glycoprotein D- and NECTIN-1-mediated fusion of the virus and the cell membrane, blocking viral entry. Genetic TMEFF1 deficiency allows HSV-1 to rapidly enter cortical neurons that are either patient specific or derived from CRISPR-Cas9-engineered human pluripotent stem cells, thereby enhancing HSV-1 translocation to the nucleus and subsequent replication. This cellular phenotype can be rescued by pretreatment with type I interferon (IFN) or the expression of exogenous wild-type TMEFF1. Moreover, ectopic expression of full-length TMEFF1 or its amino-terminal extracellular domain, but not its carboxy-terminal intracellular domain, impairs HSV-1 entry into NECTIN-1-expressing cells other than neurons, increasing their resistance to HSV-1 infection. Human TMEFF1 is therefore a host restriction factor for HSV-1 entry into cortical neurons. Its constitutively high abundance in cortical neurons protects these cells from HSV-1 infection, whereas inherited TMEFF1 deficiency renders them susceptible to this virus and can therefore underlie HSE.
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