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Dive into the research topics where Karin Fink is active.

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Featured researches published by Karin Fink.


PLOS Pathogens | 2010

Requirement of NOX2 and Reactive Oxygen Species for Efficient RIG-I-Mediated Antiviral Response through Regulation of MAVS Expression

Anton Soucy-Faulkner; Espérance Mukawera; Karin Fink; Alexis Martel; Loubna Jouan; Yves Nzengue; Daniel Lamarre; Christine Vande Velde; Nathalie Grandvaux

The innate immune response is essential to the host defense against viruses, through restriction of virus replication and coordination of the adaptive immune response. Induction of antiviral genes is a tightly regulated process initiated mainly through sensing of invading virus nucleic acids in the cytoplasm by RIG-I like helicases, RIG-I or Mda5, which transmit the signal through a common mitochondria-associated adaptor, MAVS. Although major breakthroughs have recently been made, much remains unknown about the mechanisms that translate virus recognition into antiviral genes expression. Beside the reputed detrimental role, reactive oxygen species (ROS) act as modulators of cellular signaling and gene regulation. NADPH oxidase (NOX) enzymes are a main source of deliberate cellular ROS production. Here, we found that NOX2 and ROS are required for the host cell to trigger an efficient RIG-I-mediated IRF-3 activation and downstream antiviral IFNβ and IFIT1 gene expression. Additionally, we provide evidence that NOX2 is critical for the expression of the central mitochondria-associated adaptor MAVS. Taken together these data reveal a new facet to the regulation of the innate host defense against viruses through the identification of an unrecognized role of NOX2 and ROS.


Journal of Immunology | 2008

Dual Role of NOX2 in Respiratory Syncytial Virus- and Sendai Virus-Induced Activation of NF-κB in Airway Epithelial Cells

Karin Fink; Annick Duval; Alexis Martel; Anton Soucy-Faulkner; Nathalie Grandvaux

Human respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), a member of the Paramyxoviridae family, is the most important viral agent of pediatric respiratory tract disease worldwide. Human airway epithelial cells (AEC) are the primary targets of RSV. AEC are responsible for the secretion of a wide spectrum of cytokines and chemokines that are important mediators of the exacerbated airway inflammation triggered by the host in response to RSV infection. NF-κB is a key transcription factor responsible for the regulation of cytokine and chemokine gene expression and thus represents a potential therapeutic target. In the present study, we sought to delineate the role of RSV-induced reactive oxygen species in the regulation of the signaling pathways leading to NF-κB activation. First, we demonstrate that besides the well-characterized IκBα-dependent pathway, phosphorylation of p65 at Ser536 is an essential event regulating NF-κB activation in response to RSV in A549. Using antioxidant and RNA-interference strategies, we show that a NADPH oxidase 2 (NOX2)-containing NADPH oxidase is an essential regulator of RSV-induced NF-κB activation. Molecular analyses revealed that NOX2 acts upstream of both the phosphorylation of IκBα at Ser32 and of p65 at Ser536 in A549 and normal human bronchial epithelial cells. Similar results were obtained in the context of infection by Sendai virus, thus demonstrating that the newly identified NOX2-dependent NF-κB activation pathway is not restricted to RSV among the Paramyxoviridae. These results illustrate a previously unrecognized dual role of NOX2 in the regulation of NF-κB in response to RSV and Sendai virus in human AEC.


Journal of Virology | 2007

Inhibition of Transcription of the Beta Interferon Gene by the Human Herpesvirus 6 Immediate-Early 1 Protein

Joanna Jaworska; Annie Gravel; Karin Fink; Nathalie Grandvaux; Louis Flamand

ABSTRACT Human herpesviruses (HHV) are stealth pathogens possessing several decoy or immune system evasion mechanisms favoring their persistence within the infected host. Of these viruses, HHV-6 is among the most successful human parasites, establishing lifelong infections in nearly 100% of individuals around the world. To better understand this host-pathogen relationship, we determined whether HHV-6 could interfere with the development of the innate antiviral response by affecting interferon (IFN) biosynthesis. Using inducible cell lines and transient transfection assays, we have identified the immediate-early 1 (IE1) protein as a potent inhibitor of IFN-β gene expression. IE1 proteins from both HHV-6 variants were capable of suppressing IFN-β gene induction. IE1 prevents IFN-β gene expression triggered by Sendai virus infection, double-stranded RNA (dsRNA) and dsDNA transfection, or the ectopic expression of IFN-β gene activators such as retinoic inducible gene I protein, mitochondrial antiviral signaling protein, TBK-1, IκB kinase ε (IKKε), and IFN regulatory factor 3 (IRF3). While the stability of IFN-β mRNA is not affected, IE1-expressing cells have reduced levels of dimerized IRF3 and nucleus-translocated IRF3 in response to activation by TBK-1 or IKKε. Using nuclear extracts and gel shift experiments, we could demonstrate that in the presence of IE1, IRF3 does not bind efficiently to the IFN-β promoter sequence. Overall, these results indicate that the IE1 protein of HHV-6, one of the first viral proteins synthesized upon viral entry, is a potent suppressor of IFN-β gene induction and likely contributes to favor the establishment of and successful infection of cells with this virus.


JAK-STAT | 2013

STAT2 and IRF9: Beyond ISGF3.

Karin Fink; Nathalie Grandvaux

Cytokine signaling is mediated by the combinatorial usage of seven STAT proteins that form homo- or heterodimers involved in the regulation of specific transcriptional programs. Among STATs, STAT2 is classically known to dimerize with STAT1 and together with IRF9 forms the ISGF3 transcription factor complex that has long been considered a hallmark of activation by type I and type III interferons. However, accumulating evidence reveal distinct facets of STAT2 and IRF9 activity mediated by the segregation in alternative STAT1-independent complexes/pathways that are thought to trigger different transcriptional programs. The goal of this review is to summarize our current knowledge of the stimuli, regulatory mechanisms, and function of these alternative pathways.


PLOS Pathogens | 2013

Genome-wide RNAi screen reveals a new role of a WNT/CTNNB1 signaling pathway as negative regulator of virus-induced innate immune responses.

Martin Baril; Salwa Es-Saad; Laurent Chatel-Chaix; Karin Fink; Tram Pham; Valérie-Ann Raymond; Karine Audette; Anne-Sophie Guenier; Jean Duchaine; Marc J. Servant; Marc Bilodeau; Éric A. Cohen; Nathalie Grandvaux; Daniel Lamarre

To identify new regulators of antiviral innate immunity, we completed the first genome-wide gene silencing screen assessing the transcriptional response at the interferon-β (IFNB1) promoter following Sendai virus (SeV) infection. We now report a novel link between WNT signaling pathway and the modulation of retinoic acid-inducible gene I (RIG-I)-like receptor (RLR)-dependent innate immune responses. Here we show that secretion of WNT2B and WNT9B and stabilization of β-catenin (CTNNB1) upon virus infection negatively regulate expression of representative inducible genes IFNB1, IFIT1 and TNF in a CTNNB1-dependent effector mechanism. The antiviral response is drastically reduced by glycogen synthase kinase 3 (GSK3) inhibitors but restored in CTNNB1 knockdown cells. The findings confirm a novel regulation of antiviral innate immunity by a canonical-like WNT/CTNNB1 signaling pathway. The study identifies novel avenues for broad-spectrum antiviral targets and preventing immune-mediated diseases upon viral infection.


Cell Research | 2013

IFNβ/TNFα synergism induces a non-canonical STAT2/IRF9-dependent pathway triggering a novel DUOX2 NADPH Oxidase-mediated airway antiviral response

Karin Fink; Lydie Martin; Espérance Mukawera; Stéfany Chartier; Xavier De Deken; Emmanuelle Brochiero; Françoise Miot; Nathalie Grandvaux

Airway epithelial cells are key initial innate immune responders in the fight against respiratory viruses, primarily via the secretion of antiviral and proinflammatory cytokines that act in an autocrine/paracrine fashion to trigger the establishment of an antiviral state. It is currently thought that the early antiviral state in airway epithelial cells primarily relies on IFNβ secretion and the subsequent activation of the interferon-stimulated gene factor 3 (ISGF3) transcription factor complex, composed of STAT1, STAT2 and IRF9, which regulates the expression of a panoply of interferon-stimulated genes encoding proteins with antiviral activities. However, the specific pathways engaged by the synergistic action of different cytokines during viral infections, and the resulting physiological outcomes are still ill-defined. Here, we unveil a novel delayed antiviral response in the airways, which is initiated by the synergistic autocrine/paracrine action of IFNβ and TNFα, and signals through a non-canonical STAT2- and IRF9-dependent, but STAT1-independent cascade. This pathway ultimately leads to the late induction of the DUOX2 NADPH oxidase expression. Importantly, our study uncovers that the development of the antiviral state relies on DUOX2-dependent H2O2 production. Key antiviral pathways are often targeted by evasion strategies evolved by various pathogenic viruses. In this regard, the importance of the novel DUOX2-dependent antiviral pathway is further underlined by the observation that the human respiratory syncytial virus is able to subvert DUOX2 induction.


Clinical Science | 2015

Lung epithelial NOX/DUOX and respiratory virus infections

Nathalie Grandvaux; Mélissa Mariani; Karin Fink

Determining the role of NADPH oxidases in the context of virus infection is an emerging area of research and our knowledge is still sparse. The expression of various isoforms of NOX/DUOX (NADPH oxidase/dual oxidase) in the epithelial cells (ECs) lining the respiratory tract renders them primary sites from which to orchestrate the host defence against respiratory viruses. Accumulating evidence reveals distinct facets of the involvement of NOX/DUOX in host antiviral and pro-inflammatory responses and in the control of the epithelial barrier integrity, with individual isoforms mediating co-operative, but surprisingly also opposing, functions. Although in vivo studies in mice are in line with some of these observations, a complete understanding of the specific functions of epithelial NOX/DUOX awaits lung epithelial-specific conditional knockout mice. The goal of the present review is to summarize our current knowledge of the role of individual NOX/DUOX isoforms expressed in the lung epithelium in the context of respiratory virus infections so as to highlight potential opportunities for therapeutic intervention.


Journal of Innate Immunity | 2014

Sustained Activation of Interferon Regulatory Factor 3 during Infection by Paramyxoviruses Requires MDA5

Nathalie Grandvaux; Xiaochun Guan; Fabrice Yoboua; Nicolas Zucchini; Karin Fink; Priscilla Doyon; Lydie Martin; Marc J. Servant; Stéfany Chartier

Retinoic acid-inducible gene I (RIG-I) and melanoma differentiation-associated gene 5 (MDA5) are the main cytosolic sensors of single-stranded RNA viruses, including paramyxoviruses, and are required to initiate a quick and robust innate antiviral response. Despite different ligand-binding properties, the consensus view is that RIG-I and MDA5 trigger common signal(s) to activate interferon regulatory factor 3 (IRF-3) and NF-κB, and downstream antiviral and proinflammatory cytokine expression. Here, we performed a thorough analysis of the temporal involvement of RIG-I and MDA5 in the regulation of IRF-3 during respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) infection. Based on specific RNA interference-mediated knockdown of RIG-I and MDA5 in A549 cells, we confirmed that RIG-I is critical for the initiation of IRF-3 phosphorylation, dimerization and downstream gene expression. On the other hand, our experiments yielded the first evidence that knockdown of MDA5 leads to early ubiquitination and proteasomal degradation of active IRF-3. Conversely, ectopic expression of MDA5 prolonged RIG-I-induced IRF-3 activation. Altogether, we provide novel mechanistic insight into the temporal involvement of RIG-I and MDA5 in the innate antiviral response. While RIG-I is essential for initial IRF-3 activation, engagement of induced MDA5 is essential to prevent early degradation of IRF-3, thereby sustaining IRF-3-dependent antiviral gene expression. MDA5 plays a similar role during Sendai virus infection suggesting that this model is not restricted to RSV amongst paramyxoviruses.


Biochimie | 2007

Innate host defense : Nox and Duox on phox's tail

Nathalie Grandvaux; Anton Soucy-Faulkner; Karin Fink


Free Radical Biology and Medicine | 2015

69 – Epithelial DUOX2 Regulates a Specific Subset of Antiviral and Proinflammatory Cytokines During Virus Infection

Pablo Godoy; Espérance Mukawera; Karin Fink; Alexa C. Robitaille; Nathalie Grandvaux

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Alexis Martel

Université de Montréal

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Jean Duchaine

Université de Montréal

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