Extracellular ISG15 triggers ISGylation via a type-I interferon independent non-canonical mechanism to regulate host response during virus infection

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Abstract

Type-I interferons (IFN) induce cellular proteins with antiviral activity. One such protein is Interferon Stimulated Gene 15 (ISG15). ISG15 is conjugated to proteins during ISGylation to confer antiviral activity and regulate cellular activities associated with inflammatory and neurodegenerative diseases and cancer. Apart from ISGylation, unconjugated free ISG15 is also released from cells during various conditions, including virus infection. The role of extracellular ISG15 during virus infection was unknown. We show that extracellular ISG15 triggers ISGylation and acts as a soluble antiviral factor to restrict virus infection via an IFN-independent mechanism. Specifically, extracellular ISG15 acts post-translationally to markedly enhance the stability of basal intracellular ISG15 protein levels to support ISGylation. Furthermore, extracellular ISG15 interacts with cell surface integrin (α5β1 integrins) molecules via its RGD-like motif to activate the integrin-FAK (Focal Adhesion Kinase) pathway resulting in IFN-independent ISGylation. Thus, our studies have identified extracellular ISG15 protein as a new soluble antiviral factor that confers IFN-independent non-canonical ISGylation via the integrin-FAK pathway by post-translational stabilization of intracellular ISG15 protein.

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