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Dive into the research topics where Line S. Reinert is active.

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Featured researches published by Line S. Reinert.


Journal of Immunology | 2008

TLR2 and TLR9 Synergistically Control Herpes Simplex Virus Infection in the Brain

Louise N. Sørensen; Line S. Reinert; Lene Malmgaard; Christina Bartholdy; Allan Randrup Thomsen; Søren R. Paludan

Viruses are recognized by the innate immune system through pattern recognition receptors (PRRs). For instance, HSV virions and genomic DNA are recognized by TLR2 and TLR9, respectively. Although several viruses and viral components have been shown to stimulate cells through TLRs, only very few studies have defined essential roles for single TLRs in innate immune defense in vivo. This could suggest that PRRs act in concert to mount the first line of defense against virus infections. To test this hypothesis we have examined the host response of C57BL/6, TLR2−/−, TLR9−/−, and TLR2/9−/− mice toward HSV-2 infection. After a systemic infection, the cytokine serum response was markedly reduced in the double knockout mice, but only partly affected in either strain of the single knockout mice. This was supported by in vitro data showing that HSV-induced cytokine expression relayed on TLR2 and TLR9 in a cytokine- and cell type-dependent manner. With respect to the cellular response to infection, we found that recruitment but not activation of NK cells was impaired in TLR2/9−/− mice. Importantly, the viral load in the brain, but not liver, was significantly higher in the brain of TLR2/9−/− mice whereas the viral loads in organs of single knockout mice were statistically indistinguishable from C57BL/6 mice. In the brain we found that TNF-α and the IFN-stimulated gene CXCL9 were expressed during infection and were dependent on either TLR2 or TLR9. Thus, TLR2 and TLR9 synergistically stimulate innate antiviral activities, thereby protecting against HSV infection in the brain.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2012

TLR3 deficiency renders astrocytes permissive to herpes simplex virus infection and facilitates establishment of CNS infection in mice

Line S. Reinert; Louis Andreas Harder; Christian K. Holm; Marie B. Iversen; Kristy A. Horan; Frederik Dagnæs-Hansen; Benedicte Parm Ulhøi; Thomas Hellesøe Holm; Trine H. Mogensen; Trevor Owens; Jens R. Nyengaard; Allan Randrup Thomsen; Søren R. Paludan

Herpes simplex viruses (HSVs) are highly prevalent neurotropic viruses. While they can replicate lytically in cells of the epithelial lineage, causing lesions on mucocutaneous surfaces, HSVs also establish latent infections in neurons, which act as reservoirs of virus for subsequent reactivation events. Immunological control of HSV involves activation of innate immune pattern-recognition receptors such as TLR3, which detects double-stranded RNA and induces type I IFN expression. Humans with defects in the TLR3/IFN pathway have an elevated susceptibility to HSV infections of the CNS. However, it is not known what cell type mediates the role of TLR3 in the immunological control of HSV, and it is not known whether TLR3 sensing occurs prior to or after CNS entry. Here, we show that in mice TLR3 provides early control of HSV-2 infection immediately after entry into the CNS by mediating type I IFN responses in astrocytes. Tlr3-/- mice were hypersusceptible to HSV-2 infection in the CNS after vaginal inoculation. HSV-2 exhibited broader neurotropism in Tlr3-/- mice than it did in WT mice, with astrocytes being most abundantly infected. Tlr3-/- mice did not exhibit a global defect in innate immune responses to HSV, but astrocytes were defective in HSV-induced type I IFN production. Thus, TLR3 acts in astrocytes to sense HSV-2 infection immediately after entry into the CNS, possibly preventing HSV from spreading beyond the neurons mediating entry into the CNS.


Apmis | 2009

Innate recognition of intracellular pathogens: detection and activation of the first line of defense

Simon B. Rasmussen; Line S. Reinert; Søren R. Paludan

The innate immune system constitutes the first line of defense against infections and is also important for initiating the development of an adaptive immune response. The innate immune system recognizes microbial infection through germline‐encoded pattern recognition receptors, which are responsible for decoding the microbial fingerprint and activating an appropriate response against the invading pathogen. In this review, we present and discuss current knowledge on how the innate immune system recognizes intracellular pathogens, activates intracellular signaling, induces gene expression, and orchestrates the microbicidal response against pathogens with a habitat within host cells.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2015

Functional IRF3 deficiency in a patient with herpes simplex encephalitis

Line Lykke Andersen; Nanna Mørk; Line S. Reinert; Emil Kofod-Olsen; Ryo Narita; Sofie Jørgensen; Kristian Alsbjerg Skipper; Klara Höning; Hans Henrik Gad; Lars Østergaard; Torben F. Ørntoft; Veit Hornung; Søren R. Paludan; Jacob Giehm Mikkelsen; Takashi Fujita; Mette Christiansen; Rune Hartmann; Trine H. Mogensen

Andersen et al. identify a novel genetic etiology of herpes encephalitis in an adult patient carrying a heterozygous loss-of-function mutation in the IRF3 gene. This mutation results in impaired INF production in response to viral infection


Trends in Immunology | 2014

Innate antiviral signalling in the central nervous system

Michael Carty; Line S. Reinert; Søren R. Paludan; Andrew G. Bowie

The innate immune system mediates protection against neurotropic viruses capable of infecting the central nervous system (CNS). Neurotropic viruses include herpes simplex virus (HSV), West Nile virus (WNV), rabies virus, La Crosse virus, and poliovirus. Viral infection triggers activation of pattern recognition receptors (PRRs) such as Toll-like receptors (TLRs), retinoic acid-inducible gene 1 (RIG-I) like receptors (RLRs), nucleotide-binding oligomerization domain (NOD)-like receptors (NLRs), and cytosolic DNA sensors. Although originally characterised in peripheral immune cells, emerging evidence points to important roles for these PRRs in cells of the CNS. Here, we review recent advances in our understanding of the mechanisms by which these PRRs provide protection against neurotropic viruses, and discuss instances in which these responses become detrimental and cause immunopathology in the CNS.


Journal of Immunology | 2014

TRAM Is Required for TLR2 Endosomal Signaling to Type I IFN Induction

Julianne Stack; Sarah L. Doyle; Dympna J. Connolly; Line S. Reinert; Kate M. O’Keeffe; Rachel M. McLoughlin; Søren R. Paludan; Andrew G. Bowie

Detection of microbes by TLRs on the plasma membrane leads to the induction of proinflammatory cytokines such as TNF-α, via activation of NF-κB. Alternatively, activation of endosomal TLRs leads to the induction of type I IFNs via IFN regulatory factors (IRFs). TLR4 signaling from the plasma membrane to NF-κB via the Toll/IL-1R (TIR) adaptor protein MyD88 requires the TIR sorting adaptor Mal, whereas endosomal TLR4 signaling to IRF3 via the TIR domain–containing adaptor-inducing IFN-β (TRIF) requires the TRIF-related adaptor molecule (TRAM). Similar to TLR4 homodimers, TLR2 heterodimers can also induce both proinflammatory cytokines and type I IFNs. TLR2 plasma membrane signaling to NF-κB is known to require MyD88 and Mal, whereas endosomal IRF activation by TLR2 requires MyD88. However, it was unclear whether TLR2 requires a sorting adaptor for endosomal signaling, like TLR4 does. In this study, we show that TLR2-dependent IRF7 activation at the endosome is both Mal- and TRAM-dependent, and that TRAM is required for the TLR2-dependent movement of MyD88 to endosomes following ligand engagement. TRAM interacted with both TLR2 and MyD88, suggesting that TRAM can act as a bridging adapter between these two molecules. Furthermore, infection of macrophages lacking TRAM with herpes viruses or the bacterium Staphylococcus aureus led to impaired induction of type I IFN, indicating a role for TRAM in TLR2-dependent responses to human pathogens. Our work reveals that TRAM acts as a sorting adaptor not only for TLR4, but also for TLR2, to facilitate signaling to IRF7 at the endosome, which explains how TLR2 is capable of causing type I IFN induction.


Nature Communications | 2016

Sensing of HSV-1 by the cGAS-STING pathway in microglia orchestrates antiviral defence in the CNS

Line S. Reinert; Katarína Lopušná; Henriette Winther; Chenglong Sun; Martin K. Thomsen; Ramya Nandakumar; Trine H. Mogensen; Morten Meyer; Christian Bjerggaard Vaegter; Jens R. Nyengaard; Katherine A. Fitzgerald; Søren R. Paludan

Herpes simplex encephalitis (HSE) is the most common form of acute viral encephalitis in industrialized countries. Type I interferon (IFN) is important for control of herpes simplex virus (HSV-1) in the central nervous system (CNS). Here we show that microglia are the main source of HSV-induced type I IFN expression in CNS cells and these cytokines are induced in a cGAS–STING-dependent manner. Consistently, mice defective in cGAS or STING are highly susceptible to acute HSE. Although STING is redundant for cell-autonomous antiviral resistance in astrocytes and neurons, viral replication is strongly increased in neurons in STING-deficient mice. Interestingly, HSV-infected microglia confer STING-dependent antiviral activities in neurons and prime type I IFN production in astrocytes through the TLR3 pathway. Thus, sensing of HSV-1 infection in the CNS by microglia through the cGAS–STING pathway orchestrates an antiviral program that includes type I IFNs and immune-priming of other cell types.


Hepatology | 2016

Lack of immunological DNA sensing in hepatocytes facilitates hepatitis B virus infection

Martin K. Thomsen; Ramya Nandakumar; Daniela Stadler; Antje Malo; Roser Marin Valls; Fan Wang; Line S. Reinert; Frederik Dagnæs-Hansen; Anne Kruse Hollensen; Jacob Giehm Mikkelsen; Ulrike Protzer; Søren R. Paludan

Hepatitis B virus (HBV) is a major human pathogen, and about one third of the global population will be exposed to the virus in their lifetime. HBV infects hepatocytes, where it replicates its DNA and infection can lead to acute and chronic hepatitis with a high risk of liver cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma. Despite this, there is limited understanding of how HBV establishes chronic infections. In recent years it has emerged that foreign DNA potently stimulates the innate immune response, particularly type 1 interferon (IFN) production; and this occurs through a pathway dependent on the DNA sensor cyclic guanosine monophosphate‐adenosine monophosphate synthase and the downstream adaptor protein stimulator of IFN genes (STING). In this work we describe that human and murine hepatocytes do not express STING. Consequently, hepatocytes do not produce type 1 IFN in response to foreign DNA or HBV infection and mice lacking STING or cyclic guanosine monophosphate‐adenosine monophosphate synthase exhibit unaltered ability to control infection in an adenovirus‐HBV model. Stimulation of IFN production in the murine liver by administration of synthetic RNA decreases virus infection, thus demonstrating that IFN possesses anti‐HBV activity in the liver. Importantly, introduction of STING expression specifically in hepatocytes reconstitutes the DNA sensing pathway, which leads to improved control of HBV in vivo. Conclusion: The lack of a functional innate DNA‐sensing pathway in hepatocytes hampers efficient innate control of HBV infection; this may explain why HBV has adapted to specifically replicate in hepatocytes and could contribute to the weak capacity of this cell type to clear HBV infection. (Hepatology 2016;64:746‐759)


The EMBO Journal | 2016

HSV‐1 ICP27 targets the TBK1‐activated STING signalsome to inhibit virus‐induced type I IFN expression

Maria H Christensen; Søren B. Jensen; Juho J. Miettinen; Stefanie Luecke; Thaneas Prabakaran; Line S. Reinert; Thomas C. Mettenleiter; Zhijian J. Chen; David M. Knipe; Rozanne M. Sandri-Goldin; Lynn W. Enquist; Rune Hartmann; Trine H. Mogensen; Stephen A. Rice; Tuula A. Nyman; Sampsa Matikainen; Søren R. Paludan

Herpes simplex virus (HSV) 1 stimulates type I IFN expression through the cGAS–STING–TBK1 signaling axis. Macrophages have recently been proposed to be an essential source of IFN during viral infection. However, it is not known how HSV‐1 inhibits IFN expression in this cell type. Here, we show that HSV‐1 inhibits type I IFN induction through the cGAS–STING–TBK1 pathway in human macrophages, in a manner dependent on the conserved herpesvirus protein ICP27. This viral protein was expressed de novo in macrophages with early nuclear localization followed by later translocation to the cytoplasm where ICP27 prevented activation of IRF3. ICP27 interacted with TBK1 and STING in a manner that was dependent on TBK1 activity and the RGG motif in ICP27. Thus, HSV‐1 inhibits expression of type I IFN in human macrophages through ICP27‐dependent targeting of the TBK1‐activated STING signalsome.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006

A novel splice donor site in the gag-pol gene is required for HIV-1 RNA stability

Martin Lützelberger; Line S. Reinert; Atze T. Das; Ben Berkhout; Jørgen Kjems

Productive infection and successful replication of human immunodeficiency virus 1 (HIV-1) requires the balanced expression of all viral genes. This is achieved by a combination of alternative splicing events and regulated nuclear export of viral RNA. Because viral splicing is incomplete and intron-containing RNAs must be exported from the nucleus where they are normally retained, it must be ensured that the unspliced HIV-1 RNA is actively exported from the nucleus and protected from degradation by processes such as nonsense-mediated decay. Here we report the identification of a novel 178-nt-long exon located in the gag-pol gene of HIV-1 and its inclusion in at least two different mRNA species. Although efficiently spliced in vitro, this exon appears to be tightly repressed and infrequently used in vivo. The splicing is activated or repressed in vitro by the splicing factors ASF/SF2 and heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein A1, respectively, suggesting that splicing is controlled by these factors. Interestingly, mutations in the 5′-splice site resulted in a dramatic reduction in the steady-state level of HIV-1 RNA, and this effect was partially reversed by expression of U1 small nuclear RNA harboring the compensatory mutation. This implies that U1 small nuclear RNA binding to optimal but non-functional splice sites might have a role in protecting unspliced HIV-1 mRNA from degradation.

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