Lianna Li

North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC, USA

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Publications (4)13.87 Total impact

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    Article: Interferon regulatory factor 3 attenuates reovirus myocarditis and contributes to viral clearance.
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    ABSTRACT: Apoptosis is a pathological hallmark of encephalitis and myocarditis caused by reovirus in newborn mice. In cell culture models, the antiviral transcription factor interferon regulatory factor 3 (IRF-3) enhances reovirus-induced apoptosis following activation via retinoic acid inducible gene I and interferon promoter-stimulating factor 1. To determine the role of IRF-3 in reovirus disease, we infected newborn IRF-3(+/+) and IRF-3(-/-) mice perorally with mildly virulent strain type 1 Lang (T1L) and fully virulent strain type 3 SA+ (T3SA+) and monitored infected animals for survival. Both wild-type and IRF-3(-/-) mice succumbed with equivalent frequencies to infection with T3SA+. However, the absence of IRF-3 was associated with significantly decreased survival rates following infection with T1L. The two virus strains achieved similar peak titers in IRF-3(+/+) and IRF-3(-/-) mice in the intestine, brain, heart, liver, and spleen. However, by day 12 postinoculation, titers in all organs examined were 10- to 100-fold higher in IRF-3(-/-) mice than those in wild-type mice. Increased titers were associated with marked pathological changes in all organs examined, especially in the heart, where absence of IRF-3 resulted in severe myocarditis. Cellular and humoral immune responses were equivalent in wild-type and IRF-3(-/-) animals, suggesting that IRF-3 functions independently of the adaptive immune response to enhance reovirus clearance. Thus, IRF-3 serves to facilitate virus clearance and prevent tissue injury in response to reovirus infection.
    Journal of Virology 07/2010; 84(14):6900-8. · 5.40 Impact Factor
  • Article: Proteomic analysis reveals virus-specific Hsp25 modulation in cardiac myocytes.
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    ABSTRACT: Viruses frequently infect the heart but clinical myocarditis is rare, suggesting that the cardiac antiviral response is uniquely effective. Indeed, the Type I interferon (IFN) response is cardiac cell-type specific and provides one integrated network of protection for the heart. Here, a proteomic approach was used to identify additional proteins that may be involved in the cardiac antiviral response. Reovirus-induced murine myocarditis reflects direct viral damage to cardiac cells and offers an excellent system for study. Primary cultures of murine cardiac myocytes were infected with myocarditic or nonmyocarditic reovirus strains, and whole cell lysates were compared by two-dimensional difference gel electrophoresis (2D-DIGE) and matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization-time-of-flight (MALDI-TOF/TOF) tandem mass spectrometry. Results were quantitative and reproducible and demonstrated that whole proteome changes clustered according to viral pathogenic phenotype. Moreover, the data suggest that the heat shock protein Hsp25 is modulated differentially by myocarditic and nonmyocarditic reoviruses and may play a role in the cardiac antiviral response. Members of seven virus families modulate Hsp25 or Hsp27 expression in a variety of cell types, suggesting that Hsp25 participation in the antiviral response may be widespread. However, results here provide the first evidence for a virus-induced decrease in Hsp25/27 and suggest that viruses may have evolved a mechanism to subvert this protective response, as they have for IFN.
    Journal of Proteome Research 03/2010; 9(5):2460-71. · 5.11 Impact Factor
  • Article: IFN-alpha expression and antiviral effects are subtype and cell type specific in the cardiac response to viral infection.
    Lianna Li, Barbara Sherry
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    ABSTRACT: The interferon-beta (IFN-beta) response is critical for protection against viral myocarditis in several mouse models, and IFN-alpha or -beta treatment is beneficial against human viral myocarditis. The IFN-beta response in cardiac myocytes and cardiac fibroblasts forms an integrated network for organ protection; however, the different IFN-alpha subtypes have not been studied in cardiac cells. We developed a quantitative RT-PCR assay that distinguishes between 13 highly conserved IFN-alpha subtypes and found that reovirus T3D induces five IFN-alpha subtypes in primary cardiac myocyte and fibroblast cultures: IFN-alpha1, -alpha2, -alpha4, -alpha5, and -alpha8/6. Murine IFN-alpha1, -alpha2, -alpha4, or -alpha5 treatment induced IRF7 and ISG56 and inhibited reovirus T3D replication in both cell types. This first investigation of IFN-alpha subtypes in cardiac cells for any virus demonstrates that IFN-alpha is induced in cardiac cells, that it is both subtype and cell type specific, and that it is likely important in the antiviral cardiac response.
    Virology 11/2009; 396(1):59-68. · 3.35 Impact Factor
  • Article: IFN-α expression and antiviral effects are subtype and cell type specific in the cardiac response to viral infection
    Lianna Li, Barbara Sherry
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    ABSTRACT: The interferon-β (IFN-β) response is critical for protection against viral myocarditis in several mouse models, and IFN-α or -β treatment is beneficial against human viral myocarditis. The IFN-β response in cardiac myocytes and cardiac fibroblasts forms an integrated network for organ protection; however, the different IFN-α subtypes have not been studied in cardiac cells. We developed a quantitative RT-PCR assay that distinguishes between 13 highly conserved IFN-α subtypes and found that reovirus T3D induces five IFN-α subtypes in primary cardiac myocyte and fibroblast cultures: IFN-α1, -α2, -α4, -α5, and -α8/6. Murine IFN-α1, -α2, -α4, or -α5 treatment induced IRF7 and ISG56 and inhibited reovirus T3D replication in both cell types. This first investigation of IFN-α subtypes in cardiac cells for any virus demonstrates that IFN-α is induced in cardiac cells, that it is both subtype and cell type specific, and that it is likely important in the antiviral cardiac response.
    Virology.