- Lee, Eun-Young;
- Lee, Hyun-Cheol;
- Kim, Hyun-Kwan;
- Jang, Song Yee;
- Park, Seong-Jun;
- Kim, Yong-Hoon;
- Kim, Jong Hwan;
- Hwang, Jungwon;
- Kim, Jae-Hoon;
- Kim, Tae-Hwan;
- Arif, Abul;
- Kim, Seon-Young;
- Choi, Young-Ki;
- Lee, Cheolju;
- Lee, Chul-Ho;
- Jung, Jae U;
- Fox, Paul L;
- Kim, Sunghoon;
- Lee, Jong-Soo;
- Kim, Myung Hee
The mammalian cytoplasmic multi-tRNA synthetase complex (MSC) is a depot system that regulates non-translational cellular functions. Here we found that the MSC component glutamyl-prolyl-tRNA synthetase (EPRS) switched its function following viral infection and exhibited potent antiviral activity. Infection-specific phosphorylation of EPRS at Ser990 induced its dissociation from the MSC, after which it was guided to the antiviral signaling pathway, where it interacted with PCBP2, a negative regulator of mitochondrial antiviral signaling protein (MAVS) that is critical for antiviral immunity. This interaction blocked PCBP2-mediated ubiquitination of MAVS and ultimately suppressed viral replication. EPRS-haploid (Eprs+/-) mice showed enhanced viremia and inflammation and delayed viral clearance. This stimulus-inducible activation of MAVS by EPRS suggests an unexpected role for the MSC as a regulator of immune responses to viral infection.