Human Herpesvirus 6B U26 Inhibits the Activation of the RLR/MAVS Signaling Pathway

Abstract
U26 is one of the roseolovirus unique genes with unknown function. Human herpesvirus 6B (HHV-6B) pU26 is predicted to be an 8-transmembrane protein containing a mitochondrion location signal. Here, we analyzed U26 function during HHV-6B infection and find that (i) HHV-6B U26 is expressed at a very early stage during HHV-6B infection, and knockdown of it results in a significant decrease of HHV-6B progeny virus production; (ii) U26 inhibits the activation of the retinoic acid-inducible gene I (RIG-I)-like receptor (RLR)/mitochondrial antiviral signaling protein (MAVS) signaling pathway, an important anti-HHV-6B infection innate immune response, by targeting MAVS protein for degradation; and (iii) a portion of U26 locates to the mitochondria, which could affect the mitochondrial membrane potential and finally leads to MAVS degradation. These findings indicate that HHV-6B U26 is a novel antagonistic viral factor against host innate antiviral immunity. IMPORTANCE HHV-6B (human herpesvirus 6B) is well known to evade host antiviral responses and establish a lifelong latent infection. How HHV-6B evades RNA recognition is still poorly understood. Our results indicate that HHV-6 U26 plays a vital role in RLR/MAVS signaling pathway activity. Knockout of endogenous MAVS could facilitate HHV-6B replication. The findings in this study could provide new insights into host-virus interactions and help develop a new therapy against HHV-6B infection.