Literature DB >> 29343572

Gammaherpesvirus Colonization of the Spleen Requires Lytic Replication in B Cells.

Clara Lawler1, Marta Pires de Miranda2, Janet May3, Orry Wyer1, J Pedro Simas2, Philip G Stevenson4,5.   

Abstract

Gammaherpesviruses infect lymphocytes and cause lymphocytic cancers. Murid herpesvirus-4 (MuHV-4), Epstein-Barr virus, and Kaposi's sarcoma-associated herpesvirus all infect B cells. Latent infection can spread by B cell recirculation and proliferation, but whether this alone achieves systemic infection is unclear. To test the need of MuHV-4 for lytic infection in B cells, we flanked its essential ORF50 lytic transactivator with loxP sites and then infected mice expressing B cell-specific Cre (CD19-Cre). The floxed virus replicated normally in Cre- mice. In CD19-Cre mice, nasal and lymph node infections were maintained; but there was little splenomegaly, and splenic virus loads remained low. Cre-mediated removal of other essential lytic genes gave a similar phenotype. CD19-Cre spleen infection by intraperitoneal virus was also impaired. Therefore, MuHV-4 had to emerge lytically from B cells to colonize the spleen. An important role for B cell lytic infection in host colonization is consistent with the large CD8+ T cell responses made to gammaherpesvirus lytic antigens during infectious mononucleosis and suggests that vaccine-induced immunity capable of suppressing B cell lytic infection might reduce long-term virus loads.IMPORTANCE Gammaherpesviruses cause B cell cancers. Most models of host colonization derive from cell cultures with continuous, virus-driven B cell proliferation. However, vaccines based on these models have worked poorly. To test whether proliferating B cells suffice for host colonization, we inactivated the capacity of MuHV-4, a gammaherpesvirus of mice, to reemerge from B cells. The modified virus was able to colonize a first wave of B cells in lymph nodes but spread poorly to B cells in secondary sites such as the spleen. Consequently, viral loads remained low. These results were consistent with virus-driven B cell proliferation exploiting normal host pathways and thus having to transfer lytically to new B cells for new proliferation. We conclude that viral lytic infection is a potential target to reduce B cell proliferation.
Copyright © 2018 American Society for Microbiology.

Entities:  

Keywords:  B cell; Cre/lox; gammaherpesvirus; lytic infection; pathogenesis

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2018        PMID: 29343572      PMCID: PMC5972879          DOI: 10.1128/JVI.02199-17

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Virol        ISSN: 0022-538X            Impact factor:   5.103


  75 in total

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Authors:  R C Rickert; J Roes; K Rajewsky
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3.  A gamma-herpesvirus sneaks through a CD8(+) T cell response primed to a lytic-phase epitope.

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4.  Large clonal expansions of CD8+ T cells in acute infectious mononucleosis.

Authors:  M F Callan; N Steven; P Krausa; J D Wilson; P A Moss; G M Gillespie; J I Bell; A B Rickinson; A J McMichael
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7.  Phase I trial of a CD8+ T-cell peptide epitope-based vaccine for infectious mononucleosis.

Authors:  Suzanne L Elliott; Andreas Suhrbier; John J Miles; Greg Lawrence; Stephanie J Pye; Thuy T Le; Andrew Rosenstengel; Tam Nguyen; Anthony Allworth; Scott R Burrows; John Cox; David Pye; Denis J Moss; Mandvi Bharadwaj
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8.  A murid gamma-herpesviruses exploits normal splenic immune communication routes for systemic spread.

Authors:  Bruno Frederico; Brittany Chao; Janet S May; Gabrielle T Belz; Philip G Stevenson
Journal:  Cell Host Microbe       Date:  2014-04-09       Impact factor: 21.023

9.  Selective gene expression of latent murine gammaherpesvirus 68 in B lymphocytes.

Authors:  Sofia Marques; Stacey Efstathiou; K G Smith; Matthias Haury; J Pedro Simas
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Journal:  PLoS Pathog       Date:  2008-10-10       Impact factor: 6.823

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Review 5.  Dangerous Liaisons: Gammaherpesvirus Subversion of the Immunoglobulin Repertoire.

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6.  Immune Control of γ-Herpesviruses.

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Journal:  Viral Immunol       Date:  2019-07-22       Impact factor: 2.257

7.  Deletion of immune evasion genes provides an effective vaccine design for tumor-associated herpesviruses.

Authors:  Gurpreet Brar; Nisar A Farhat; Alisa Sukhina; Alex K Lam; Yong Hoon Kim; Tiffany Hsu; Leming Tong; Wai Wai Lin; Carl F Ware; Marcia A Blackman; Ren Sun; Ting-Ting Wu
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8.  Conquering the Host: Determinants of Pathogenesis Learned from Murine Gammaherpesvirus 68.

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