Cellular translation is inhibited following infection with most strains of reovirus, but the mechanisms responsible for this phenomenon remain to be elucidated. The extent of host shutoff varies in a straindependent manner; infection with the majority of strains leads to strong host shutoff, while infection with strain Dearing results in minimal inhibition of cellular translation. A genetic study with reassortant viruses and subsequent biochemical analyses led to the hypothesis that the interferon-induced, double-stranded RNA-activated protein kinase, PKR, is responsible for reovirus-induced host shutoff. To directly determine whether PKR is responsible for reovirus-induced host shutoff, we used a panel of reovirus strains and mouse embryo fibroblasts derived from knockout mice. This approach revealed that PKR contributes to but is not wholly responsible for reovirus-induced host shutoff. Studies with cells lacking RNase L, the endoribonuclease component of the interferon-regulated 2,5-oligoadenylate synthetase-RNase L system, demonstrated that RNase L also down-regulates cellular protein synthesis in reovirus-infected cells. In many viral systems, PKR and RNase L have well-characterized antiviral functions. An analysis of reovirus replication in cells lacking these molecules indicated that, while they contributed to host shutoff, neither PKR nor RNase L exerted an antiviral effect on reovirus growth. In fact, some strains of reovirus replicated more efficiently in the presence of PKR and RNase L than in their absence. Data presented in this report illustrate that the inhibition of cellular translation following reovirus infection is complex and involves multiple interferon-regulated gene products. In addition, our results suggest that reovirus has evolved effective mechanisms to avoid the actions of the interferon-stimulated antiviral pathways that include PKR and RNase L and may even benefit from their expression.Cellular translation is inhibited following infection with most strains of mammalian reovirus, a phenomenon known as host shutoff (54). However, the extent of reovirus-induced host shutoff varies in a strain-specific manner; infection with strain Dearing has a minimal effect on cellular translation, whereas infection with other strains, such as Jones, clone 8 (c8), clone 87 (c87), and clone 93 (c93), leads to dramatic host shutoff (40,41). In most situations, even when cellular translation is inhibited, reovirus proteins are efficiently synthesized. Although the mechanisms responsible for reovirus-induced host shutoff remain to be elucidated, they have been defined for other viruses, including poliovirus and rotavirus (14). In poliovirusinfected cells, virus-encoded protease 2A pro leads to cleavage of eukaryotic translation initiation factors eIF4GI and eIF4GII, thus preventing translation of the vast majority of capped cellular mRNAs (10, 17). Uncapped and internal ribosome entry site-containing poliovirus mRNAs, in contrast, require only the C-terminal cleaved portion of eIF4G for translation initi...