| Literature DB >> 27214229 |
Carolina Sanabria-Solano1, Carmen Elena Gonzalez1, Nicolas Richerioux1, Luc Bertrand1, Slimane Dridi1, Anthony Griffiths2, Yves Langelier3, Angela Pearson4.
Abstract
UL24 is conserved among all Herpesviridae. In herpes simplex virus 1 (HSV-1), UL24 mutations lead to reduced viral titers both in cell culture and in vivo, and reduced pathogenicity. The human cytomegalovirus ortholog of UL24 has a gene regulatory function; however, it is not known whether other UL24 orthologs also affect gene expression. We discovered that in co-transfection experiments, expression of UL24 correlated with a reduction in the expression of several viral proteins and transcripts. Substitution mutations targeting conserved residues in UL24 impaired this function. Reduced transcript levels did not appear attributable to changes in mRNA stability. The UL24 ortholog of Herpes B virus exhibited a similar activity. An HSV-1 mutant that does not express UL24 produced more viral R1 and R2 transcripts than the wild type or rescue virus relative to the amount of viral DNA. These results reveal a new role for HSV-1UL24 in regulating viral mRNA accumulation.Entities:
Keywords: Herpes simplex virus 1; UL24; Viral gene regulation
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27214229 DOI: 10.1016/j.virol.2016.05.006
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Virology ISSN: 0042-6822 Impact factor: 3.616