| Literature DB >> 22110506 |
Lindsay C Spender1, Gareth J Inman.
Abstract
To establish a persistent latent infection, Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) faces a challenge in that the virus-infected host cell must transit through the germinal centre reaction. This is a site of B cell differentiation where antibody responses are optimised, and the selection criteria for B cells are stringent. The germinal centre environment is harsh, and the vast majority of B cells here die by apoptosis. Only cells receiving adequate survival signals will differentiate fully to be released into the periphery as long-term memory B cells (the site of persistence). In this review, we detail the apoptotic pathways potentially encountered by EBV-infected B cells during the process of infection, and we describe the functions of those EBV-regulated cellular and viral genes that help promote survival of the host B cell.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 22110506 PMCID: PMC3202104 DOI: 10.1155/2011/829525
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Hematol
Figure 1Model of establishment of EBV latency in B cells. EBV infects naïve IgD-positive B cells and drives their proliferation by expression of the viral latency III genes, including the latent membrane proteins LMP1, LMP2A, and LMP2B, the EBV nuclear antigens EBNA1, 2, LP, 3A, 3B, and 3C and noncoding RNA species, the EBV-encoded RNAs (EBERS), and BamHI-A rightward transcripts (BARTs). In vitro, these blasts form continuously proliferating immortalised, lymphoblastoid cell lines (LCLs). EBV-infected cells participate in the GC reaction during which time the number of viral gene products expressed decreases due to the downregulation of the viral transcription factor EBNA-2. Following differentiation, long-lived memory B cells emerge as the site of persistent latent infection carrying viral episomal DNA and expressing few viral genes to avoid immune surveillance. *Transient lytic gene expression may occur but without virion production.
Figure 2EBV infection impacts on cell death and survival pathways in GC B cells. Interconnected signalling pathways regulate the apoptosis of GC B cells. Proapoptotic signals via B cell receptors and the canonical Smad pathway activated by the TGF-β receptor control the elimination of unwanted B cells by inducing intrinsic apoptosis. Intrinsic apoptosis is dependent on the activation of the proapoptotic BCL-2 family members BAX and BAK, permeabilisation of the mitochondrial membrane (ΔΨm) and release of proapoptotic factors resulting in the activation of the initiator caspase, caspase 9. An extrinsic apoptotic pathway occurs via the death receptor FAS. FAS stimulation results in the formation of the death-inducing signalling complex (DISC) comprised of FAS, the Fas-associated death domain (FADD), and pro-caspase 8. GC B cells, however, have a preformed DISC whose activation is inhibited by binding of the protein cFLIP. The cells are, therefore, dependent on continuous survival signals via CD40 for maintenance of cFLIP levels. CD40 signalling (along with other signals through BLyS (BAFF) and the BCR not shown on this diagram) also induces BCL-2 family members such as BFL-1 and BCL-XL which promote cell survival by inhibiting the intrinsic apoptosis pathway. EBV gene products target multiple points in the apoptosis pathways (shown in red). *In vitro studies of cell lines report the LMP-1-dependent upregulation of BCL-2, however, LMP-1 and BCL-2 expression levels do not correlate in primary tissue.