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1.
The human gamma-herpesviruses, EBV and Kaposi's sarcoma-associated herpesvirus, are widely disseminated and are associated with the onset of a variety of malignancies. Thus, the development of prophylactic and therapeutic vaccination strategies is an important goal. The experimental mouse gamma-herpesvirus, gammaHV68 (or MHV-68), has provided an in vivo model for studying immune control of these persistent viruses. In the current studies, we have examined infectivity, immunogenicity, and protective efficacy following infection with a replication-deficient gammaHV68 blocked in late viral gene expression, ORF31STOP. The data show that ORF31STOP was able to latently infect B cells. However, the anatomical site and persistence of the infection depended on the route of inoculation, implicating a role for viral replication in viral spread but not the infectivity per se. Furthermore, i.p. infection with ORF31STOP elicited strong cellular immunity but a non-neutralizing Ab response. In contrast, intranasal infection was poorly immunogenic. Consistent with this, mice infected i.p. had enhanced control of both the lytic and latent viral loads following challenge with wild-type gammaHV68, whereas intranasal infected mice were not protected. These data provide important insight into mechanisms of infection and protective immunity for the gamma-herpesviruses and demonstrate the utility of replication-deficient mutant viruses in direct testing of "proof of principal" vaccination strategies.  相似文献   

2.
A common strategy shared by all known gammaherpesviruses is their ability to establish a latent infection in lymphocytes – predominantly in B cells. In immunocompromised patients, such as transplant recipients or AIDS patients, gammaherpesvirus infections can lead to the development of lymphoproliferative disease and lymphoid malignancies. The human gamma-herpesviruses, EBV and KSHV, encode proteins that are capable of modulating the host immune signaling machinery, thereby subverting host immune responses. Murine gamma-herpesvirus 68 (MHV68) infection of laboratory strains of mice has proven to be useful small-animal model that shares important pathogenic strategies with the human gamma-herpesviruses. The MHV68 M2 protein is known to manipulate B cell signaling and, dependent on route and dose of virus inoculation, plays a role in both the establishment of latency and virus reactivation. M2 contains two tyrosines that are targets for phosphorylation, and have been shown to interact with the B cell signaling machinery. Here we describe in vitro and in vivo studies of M2 mutants which reveals that while both tyrosines Y120 and Y129 are required for M2 induction of IL-10 expression from primary murine B cells in vitro, only Y129 is critical for reactivation from latency and plasma cell differentiation in vivo.  相似文献   

3.
The human gamma-herpesviruses, EBV and Kaposi's sarcoma-associated herpesvirus, establish life-long latency and can reactivate in immunocompromised individuals. T cells play an important role in controlling persistent EBV infection, whereas a role for humoral immunity is less clear. The murine gamma-herpesvirus-68 has biological and structural similarities to the human gamma-herpesviruses, and provides an important in vivo experimental model for dissecting mechanisms of immune control. In the current studies, CD28(-/-) mice were used to address the role of Abs in control of persistent murine gamma-herpesvirus-68 infection. Lytic infection was controlled in the lungs of CD28(-/-) mice, and latency was maintained in B cells at normal frequencies. Although class-switched virus-specific Abs were initially generated in the absence of germinal centers, titers and viral neutralizing activity rapidly waned. T cell depletion in CD28(-/-) mice with compromised Ab responses, but not in control mice with intact Ab responses, resulted in significant recrudescence from latency, both in the spleen and the lung. Recrudescence could be prevented by passive transfer of immune serum. These data directly demonstrate an important contribution of humoral immunity to control of gamma-herpesvirus latency, and have significant implications for clinical intervention.  相似文献   

4.
It has been proposed that the gamma-herpesviruses maintain lifelong latency in B cells by gaining entry into the memory B cell pool and taking advantage of host mechanisms for maintaining these cells. We directly tested this hypothesis by kinetically monitoring viral latency in CD40(+) and CD40(-) B cells from CD40(+)CD40(-) mixed bone marrow chimera mice after infection with a murine gamma-herpesvirus, MHV-68. CD40(+) B cells selectively entered germinal centers and differentiated into memory B cells. Importantly, latency was progressively lost in the CD40(-) B cells and preferentially maintained in the long-lived, isotype-switched CD40(+) B cells. These data directly demonstrate viral exploitation of the normal B cell differentiation pathway to maintain latency.  相似文献   

5.
The gamma-herpesviruses are a group of related agents which share the same broad strategy for infection of and persistence within the lymphoid tissues of their hosts. Yet in evolutionary terms these agents are sufficiently diverse to display multiple different molecular mechanisms whereby that strategy can be achieved. Attempts are made to relate the different in vitro growth transforming capacities of the gamma1-herpesviruses, the T-lymphotropic gamma2-herpesviruses and the B-lymphotropic gamma2-herpesviruses to what is known about the biology of these virus infections in their natural or in experimental hosts. The review then summarizes the evidence linking gamma-herpesviruses with oncogenesis and proposes that the diverse spectrum of Epstein-Barr virus and human herpesvirus 8-associated human tumours falls into three pathogenetically distinct categories. Many questions remain unanswered in the areas of gamma-herpesvirus biology and disease pathogenesis: resolving these questions will require a broadening of our experimental approaches and a willingness to relinquish 'single-model' panaceas.  相似文献   

6.
Therapies that control largely T cell-dependent allograft rejection in humans also possess the undesirable effect of impairing T cell function, leaving transplant recipients susceptible to opportunistic viruses. Prime among these opportunists are the ubiquitous herpesviruses. To date, studies are lacking that address the effect of viruses that establish a true latent state on allograft tolerance or the effect of tolerance protocols on the immune control of latent viruses. By using a mixed chimerism-based tolerance-induction protocol, we found that mice undergoing latent infection with gammaHV68, a murine gamma-herpesvirus closely related to human gamma-herpesviruses such as EBV and Kaposi's sarcoma-associated herpesvirus, significantly resist tolerance to allografts. Limiting the degree of virus reactivation or innate immune response did not reconstitute chimerism in latently infected mice. However, gammaHV68-infected mice showed increased frequency of CD8+ T cell alloreactivity and, interestingly, expansion of virus-induced, alloreactive, "effector/effector memory" TCR Vbeta4+CD8+ T cells driven by the gammaHV68-M1 gene was associated with resistance to tolerance induction in studies using gammaHV68-M1 mutant virus. These results define the viral gene and immune cell types involved in latent infection-mediated resistance to allograft tolerance and underscore the influence of latent herpesviruses on allograft survival.  相似文献   

7.
The human gamma-herpesviruses, EBV and Kaposi's sarcoma-associated herpesvirus, infect >90% of the population worldwide, and latent infection is associated with numerous malignancies. Rational vaccination and therapeutic strategies require an understanding of virus-host interactions during the initial asymptomatic infection. Primary EBV infection is associated with virus replication at epithelial sites and entry into the circulating B lymphocyte pool. The virus exploits the life cycle of the B cell and latency is maintained long term in resting memory B cells. In this study, using a murine gamma-herpesvirus model, we demonstrate an early dominance of latent virus at the site of infection, with lung B cells harboring virus almost immediately after infection. These data reinforce the central role of the B cell not only in the later phase of infection, but early in the initial infection. Early inhibition of lytic replication does not impact the progression of the latent infection, and latency is established in lymphoid tissues following infection with a replication-deficient mutant virus. These data demonstrate that lytic viral replication is not a requirement for gamma-herpesvirus latency in vivo and suggest that viral latency can be disseminated by cellular proliferation. These observations emphasize that prophylactic vaccination strategies must target latent gamma-herpesvirus at the site of infection.  相似文献   

8.
It is not known what is required for successive relapses in autoimmune diseases or evolution to a progressive chronic disease. Autoimmune arthritis caused by passive transfer of autoantibodies against glucose 6-phosphate isomerase is transient and therefore lends itself well to test for what might extend the disease. Herpesviruses have long been suspected of contributing to human autoimmune disease. We infected mice with a murine gamma-herpesvirus (MHV-68). In immunodeficient mice, transient arthritis was followed by a relapse. This was due to lytic viral infection of synovial tissues demonstrated by PCR, immunohistochemistry, and electron microscopy. Latent infection could be reactivated in the synovium of normal mice when treated with Cytoxan and this was associated with increased clinical arthritis. We conclude that herpesviruses may play an ancillary pathogenic role in autoimmune arthritis by infection of the inflammatory target tissue.  相似文献   

9.
B cells can use antibody-dependent mechanisms to control latent viral infections. It is unknown whether this represents the sole function of B cells during chronic viral infection. We report here that hen egg lysozyme (HEL)-specific B cells can contribute to the control of murine gamma-herpesvirus 68 (gammaHV68) latency without producing anti-viral antibody. HEL-specific B cells normalized defects in T cell numbers and proliferation observed in B cell-/- mice during the early phase of gammaHV68 latency. HEL-specific B cells also reversed defects in CD8 and CD4 T cell cytokine production observed in B cell-/- mice, generating CD8 and CD4 T cells necessary for control of latency. Furthermore, HEL-specific B cells were able to present virally encoded antigen to CD8 T cells. Therefore, B cells have antibody independent functions, including antigen presentation, that are important for control of gamma-herpesvirus latency. Exploitation of this property of B cells may allow enhanced vaccine responses to chronic virus infection.  相似文献   

10.
Murine gamma-herpesvirus 68 (MHV-68) is a natural pathogen of small rodents and insectivores (mice, voles and shrews). The primary infection is characterized by virus replication in lung epithelial cells and the establishment of a latent infection in B lymphocytes. The virus is also observed to persist in lung epithelial cells, dendritic cells and macrophages. Splenomegaly is observed two weeks after infection, in which there is a CD4+ T-cell-mediated expansion of B and T cells in the spleen. At three weeks post-infection an infectious mononucleosis-like syndrome is observed involving a major expansion of Vbeta4+CD8+ T cells. Later in the course of persistent infection, ca. 10% of mice develop lymphoproliferative disease characterized as lymphomas of B-cell origin. The genome from MHV-68 strain g2.4 has been sequenced and contains ca. 73 genes, the majority of which are collinear and homologous to other gamma-herpesviruses. The genome includes cellular homologues for a complement-regulatory protein, Bcl-2, cyclin D and interleukin-8 receptor and a set of novel genes M1 to M4. The function of these genes in the context of latent infections, evasion of immune responses and virus-mediated pathologies is discussed. Both innate and adaptive immune responses play an active role in limiting virus infection. The absence of type I interferon (IFN) results in a lethal MHV-68 infection, emphasizing the central role of these cytokines at the initial stages of infection. In contrast, type II IFN is not essential for the recovery from infection in the lung, but a failure of type II IFN receptor signalling results in the atrophy of lymphoid tissue associated with virus persistence. Splenic atrophy appears to be the result of immunopathology, since in the absence of CD8+ T cells no pathology occurs. CD8+ T cells play a major role in recovery from the primary infection, and also in regulating latently infected cells expressing the M2 gene product. CD4+ T cells have a key role in surveillance against virus recurrences in the lung, in part mediated through 'help' in the genesis of neutralizing antibodies. In the absence of CD4+ T cells, virus-specific CD8+ T cells are able to control the primary infection in the respiratory tract, yet surprisingly the memory CD8+ T cells generated are unable to inhibit virus recurrences in the lung. This could be explained in part by the observations that this virus can downregulate major histocompatibility complex class I expression and also restrict inflammatory cell responses by producing a chemokine-binding protein (M3 gene product). MHV-68 provides an excellent model to explore methods for controlling gamma-herpesvirus infection through vaccination and chemotherapy. Vaccination with gp150 (a homologue of gp350 of Epstein-Barr virus) results in a reduction in splenomegaly and virus latency but does not block replication in the lung, nor the establishment of a latent infection. Even when lung virus infection is greatly reduced following the action of CD8+ T cells, induced via a prime-boost vaccination strategy, a latent infection is established. Potent antiviral compounds such as the nucleoside analogue 2'deoxy-5-ethyl-beta-4'-thiouridine, which disrupts virus replication in vivo, cannot inhibit the establishment of a latent infection. Clearly, devising strategies to interrupt the establishment of latent virus infections may well prove impossible with existing methods.  相似文献   

11.
Murine gamma-herpesvirus 68 (MHV-68) provides an important experimental model for analyzing gamma-herpesvirus latent infection. After intranasal infection with MHV-68, we analyzed the distribution of the virus in different anatomical locations and purified populations of cells. Our data show that long-term latency is maintained in a variety of anatomical locations and cell populations with different frequencies. Importantly, we demonstrate that although latency in the lung is established in a variety of cell subsets, long-term latency in the lung is only maintained in B cells. In contrast, splenic latency is maintained in macrophages and dendritic cells, as well as in B cells. In blood, isotype-switched B cells constitute the major viral reservoir. These results show that the cell subsets in which latency is established vary within different anatomical sites. Finally, we demonstrate that long-term latency is accompanied by a low level of infectious virus in lung and spleen. These data have important implications for understanding the establishment and maintenance of latency by gamma(2)-herpesviruses.  相似文献   

12.
Several gamma-herpesviruses encode proteins related to the mammalian cyclins, regulatory subunits of cyclin-dependent kinases (cdks) essential for cell cycle progression. We report a 2.5 A crystal structure of a full-length oncogenic viral cyclin from gamma-herpesvirus 68 complexed with cdk2. The viral cyclin binds cdk2 with an orientation different from cyclin A and makes several novel interactions at the interface, yet it activates cdk2 by triggering conformational changes similar to cyclin A. Sequences within the viral cyclin N-terminus lock part of the cdk2 T-loop within the core of the complex. These sequences and others are conserved amongst the viral and cellular D-type cyclins, suggesting that this structure has wider implications for other cyclin-cdk complexes. The observed resistance of this viral cyclin-cdk complex to inhibition by the p27(KIP:) cdk inhibitor is explained by sequence and conformational variation in the cyclin rendering the p27(KIP:)-binding site on the cyclin subunit non-functional.  相似文献   

13.
Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) is a progressive, fibrotic lung disease of unknown etiology. A viral pathogenesis in IPF has been suggested since >95% of IPF patients have evidence of chronic pulmonary infection with one or more herpesviruses. To determine whether pulmonary infection with herpesvirus can cause lung fibrosis, we infected mice with the murine gamma-herpesvirus 68 (MHV68). Because IPF patients have a T helper type 2 (Th2) pulmonary phenotype, we used IFN-gammaR-/-, a strain of mice biased to develop Th2 responses. Chronic MHV68 infection of IFN-gammaR-/- mice resulted in progressive deposition of interstitial collagen as shown by light and electron microscopy. A significant decrease in tidal volume paralleled the collagen deposition. Five features typically seen in IPF, increased transforming growth factor-beta expression, myofibroblast transformation, production of Th2 cytokines, hyperplasia of type II cells, and increased expression of matrix metalloproteinase-7, were also present in chronically infected IFN-gammaR-/- mice. There also was altered synthesis of surfactant proteins, which is seen in some patients with familial IPF. MHV68 viral protein was found in type II alveolar epithelial cells, especially in lung areas with extensive alveolar remodeling. In summary, chronic herpesvirus pulmonary infection in IFN-gammaR-/- mice causes progressive pulmonary fibrosis and many of the pathological features seen in IPF.  相似文献   

14.
DNA virus infection can elicit the DNA damage response in host cells, including ATM kinase activation and H2AX phosphorylation. This is considered to be the host cell response to replicating viral DNA. In contrast, we show that during infection of macrophages murine gamma-herpesvirus 68 (gammaHV68) actively induces H2AX phosphorylation by expressing a viral kinase (orf36). GammaHV68-encoded orf36 kinase and its EBV homolog, BGLF4, induce H2AX phosphorylation independently of other viral genes. The process requires the kinase domain of Orf36 and is enhanced by ATM. Orf36 is important for gammaHV68 replication in infected animals, and orf36, H2AX, and ATM are all critical for efficient gammaHV68 replication in primary macrophages. Thus, activation of proximal components of the DNA damage signaling response is an active viral kinase-driven strategy required for efficient gamma-herpesvirus replication.  相似文献   

15.
Control of virus infection is mediated in part by major histocompatibility complex (MHC) Class Ia presentation of viral peptides to conventional CD8 T cells. Although important, the absolute requirement for MHC Class Ia-dependent CD8 T cells for control of chronic virus infection has not been formally demonstrated. We show here that mice lacking MHC Class Ia molecules (K(b-/-)xD(b-/-) mice) effectively control chronic gamma-herpesvirus 68 (gammaHV68) infection via a robust expansion of beta2-microglobulin (beta2-m)-dependent, but CD1d-independent, unconventional CD8 T cells. These unconventional CD8 T cells expressed: (1) CD8alphabeta and CD3, (2) cell surface molecules associated with conventional effector/memory CD8 T cells, (3) TCRalphabeta with a significant Vbeta4, Vbeta3, and Vbeta10 bias, and (4) the key effector cytokine interferon-gamma (IFNgamma). Unconventional CD8 T cells utilized a diverse TCR repertoire, and CDR3 analysis suggests that some of that repertoire may be utilized even in the presence of conventional CD8 T cells. This is the first demonstration to our knowledge that beta2-m-dependent, but Class Ia-independent, unconventional CD8 T cells can efficiently control chronic virus infection, implicating a role for beta2-n-dependent non-classical MHC molecules in control of chronic viral infection. We speculate that similar unconventional CD8 T cells may be able to control of other chronic viral infections, especially when viruses evade immunity by inhibiting generation of Class Ia-restricted T cells.  相似文献   

16.
Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) is a gamma-herpesvirus that infects over 90% of the human population worldwide. It is usually transmitted between individuals in saliva, and establishes replicative infection within the oropharynx as well as life-long latent infection of B cells. Primary EBV infection generally occurs during early childhood and is asymptomatic. If delayed until adolescence or later, it can be associated with the clinical syndrome of infectious mononucleosis (also known as glandular fever or 'mono'), an illness characterised by fevers, pharyngitis, lymphadenopathy and malaise. EBV infection is also associated with the development of EBV-associated lymphoid or epithelial cell malignancies in a small proportion of individuals. This review focuses on primary EBV infection in individuals suffering from infectious mononucleosis. It discusses the mechanism by which EBV establishes infection within its human host and the primary immune response that it elicits. It describes the spectrum of clinical disease that can accompany primary infection and summarises studies that are leading to the development of a vaccine designed to prevent infectious mononucleosis.  相似文献   

17.
18.
Human gammaherpesvirus infections are associated with development of lymphoproliferative disease. Understanding of the mechanisms of gammaherpesvirus lymphomagenesis during chronic infection in a natural host has been limited by the exquisite species specificity of human gammaherpesviruses and the expense of primates. Murine gammaherpesvirus gammaHV68 is genetically and biologically related to human gammaherpesviruses and herpesvirus saimiri and has been reported to be associated with lymphoproliferative disease in mice (N. P. Sunil-Chandra, J. Arno, J. Fazakerley, and A. A. Nash, Am. J. Pathol. 145:818-826, 1994). We report the development of an animal model of gammaHV68 lymphomagenesis in BALB/c beta2 microglobulin-deficient mice (BALB beta2m-/-). GammaHV68 infection induced two lymphoproliferative lesions: B-cell lymphoma and atypical lymphoid hyperplasia (ALH). ALH lesion histology resembled lesions of Epstein-Barr virus-associated posttransplant lymphoproliferative disease and was characterized by the abnormal infiltration of the white pulp with cells expressing the plasma cell marker CD138. Lymphomas observed in gammaHV68-infected animals were B220+/CD3- large-cell lymphomas. GammaHV68-infected cells were common in ALH lesions as measured by in situ hybridization with a probe specific for viral tRNAs (vtRNAs), but they were scarce in gammaHV68-infected spleens with normal histology. Unlike ALH lesions, gammaHV68 vtRNA-positive cells were rare in lymphomas. GammaHV68 infection of BALB beta2m-/- mice results in lymphoproliferation and lymphoma, providing a valuable tool for identifying viral and host genes involved in gammaherpesvirus-associated malignancies. Our findings suggest that gammaHV68 induces lymphomas via hit-and-run oncogenesis, paracrine effects, or stimulation of chronic inflammation.  相似文献   

19.
The persisting ancient view of cancer as a contagious disease ended with 19th century scientific investigations which seemed to show it was not. The resulting dogma against an infectious cause for cancer produced great prejudice in the scientific community against the first report of an oncogenic virus by Rous early in the 20th century and, even in the 1950s, against Gross's finding of a murine leukaemia virus and a murine virus causing solid tumours. The Lucké frog renal carcinoma virus was the first cancer-associated herpesvirus. Intriguingly, an environmental factor, ambient temperature, determines virus genome expression in the poikilothermic frog cells. Although an alpha-herpesvirus, Marek's disease virus of chickens shares some aspects of biological behaviour with Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) of man. Very significantly, its lymphomas are the first naturally occurring malignancy to be controlled by an antiviral vaccine, with implications for human virus-associated cancers. The circumstances and climate of opinion in which successive gamma-herpesviruses were discovered are described. The identification of EBV involved two unconventionalities: its finding in cultured Burkitt's lymphoma cells when no human lymphoid cell had ever been maintained in vitro, and its recognition in the absence of biological activity by the then new technique of electron microscopy. These factors engendered hostility to its acceptance as a new human tumour-associated virus. The EBV-like agents of Old World apes and monkeys and the T-lymphotropic gamma-herpesviruses of New World monkeys were found at about the same time, not long after the discovery of EBV. For many years these were thought to be the only gamma-herpesviruses of non-human primates; however, very recently B-lymphotropic EBV-like agents have been identified in New World species as well. Mouse herpesvirus 68 came to light by chance during a search for arboviruses and has become important as a laboratory model because of its close genetic relatedness to EBV and its comparable biological behaviour. The discovery of Kaposi's sarcoma-associated herpesvirus six years ago was made using unconventional new methods, but, unlike with EBV 30 years before, this did not hinder its acceptance. This contrast is discussed in the context of the great progress in human tumour virology which has been made in recent years.  相似文献   

20.
One component of the protective host response against mucosal pathogens includes the local production and increased expression of certain neuropeptides and their receptors. The present study further demonstrates this fact by investigating the contribution that substance P receptor expression makes toward immunity against a gamma-herpesvirus infection. Following intragastric inoculation with murine gamma-herpesvirus 68 (gamma HV-68), expression of substance P and its receptor was increased in mucosal and peripheral lymphoid organs in wild-type strains of mice. These results suggested that this receptor/ligand pair might be an important component of the host response against this viral infection. Such a hypothesis was supported by the demonstration that mice, genetically deficient in substance P receptor expression, showed an increased viral burden when compared with syngeneic C57BL/6 mice. Furthermore, substance P receptor-deficient mice showed a reduced CTL response against gamma HV-68, suggesting a mechanism to explain this increased viral burden. Such limitations in the Ag-specific CTL response in substance P receptor-deficient mice could result from lowered expression of IL-12 during viral infection. Consistent with this hypothesis, increases in mRNA encoding IL-12 and secretion of this cytokine into sera of infected, wild-type animals were markedly reduced in substance P receptor-deficient mice. These studies demonstrate that genetic elimination of substance P receptors in mice results in an increased gamma-herpesvirus burden and an altered host response.  相似文献   

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