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1.
Herpes simplex virus type 2 (HSV-2) mutants that were unable to express glycoprotein C (gC-2) were isolated. Deletions were made in a cloned copy of the gC-2 gene, and recombinant viruses containing these deletions were screened by using an immunoreactive plaque selection protocol. The viruses did not display a syncytial phenotype. Intravaginal inoculation of BALB/cJ mice with one of the HSV-2 gC-2- viruses produced local inflammation followed by a lethal spread of the viral infection into the nervous system in a manner identical to that produced by parental HSV-2 strain 333. Similarly, intracerebral inoculation of DBA-2 mice with the gC-2- virus produced a lethal neurological disease paralleling that caused by HSV-2 strain 333. These results indicate that gC-2 is not required for the spread of HSV-2 infections in mice.  相似文献   

2.
Fusogenic domains in herpes simplex virus type 1 glycoprotein H   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Infection of eukaryotic cells by enveloped viruses requires fusion between the viral envelope and the cellular plasma or endosomal membrane. The actual merging of the two membranes is mediated by viral envelope glycoproteins, which generally contain a highly hydrophobic region termed the fusion peptide. The entry of herpesviruses is mediated by three conserved proteins: glycoproteins B, H (gH), and L. However, how fusion is executed remains unknown. Herpes simplex virus type 1 gH exhibits features typical of viral fusion glycoproteins, and its ectodomain seems to contain a putative internal fusion peptide. Here, we have identified additional internal segments able to interact with membranes and to induce membrane fusion of large unilamellar vesicles. We have applied the hydrophobicity-at-interface scale proposed by Wimley and White (Wimley, W. C., and White, S. H. (1996) Nat. Struct. Biol. 3, 842-848) to identify six hydrophobic stretches within gH with a tendency to partition into the membrane interface, and four of them were able to induce membrane fusion. Experiments in which equimolar mixtures of gH peptides were used indicated that different fusogenic regions may act in a synergistic way. The functional and structural characterization of these segments suggests that herpes simplex virus type 1 gH possesses several fusogenic internal peptides that could participate in the actual fusion event.  相似文献   

3.
In mammalian cells, formation of heterooligomers consisting of the glycoproteins H and L (gH and gL) of herpes simplex virus type 1 is essential for the cell-to-cell spread of virions and for the penetration of virions into cells. We examined whether formation of gH1/gL1 heterooligomers and cell surface expression of the complex occurs in insect cells. Three recombinant baculoviruses, expressing gL1, gH1, and truncated gH1 (gH1t), which lacks the transmembrane region, were constructed. It was shown that recombinant gH1/gL1 and gH1t/gL1 heterooligomers were produced in insect cells. As in mammalian cells, gH1 and gH1t were not detected on the surfaces of insect cells in the absence of gL1. When coexpressed with gL1, recombinant gH1 was displayed on the surfaces of insect cells. Coexpression of gH1t and gL1 resulted in secretion of the gH1t/gL1 complex into the cell culture medium, indicating that gH1t is also transported to the surfaces of insect cells. Our results indicate that the process of folding and intracellular transport of gH1 and gL1 is comparable in insect cells and mammalian cells and that the baculovirus expression system can be used to examine the complex formation and the intracellular transport of gH1 and gL1. The availability of secreted gH1t/gL1 complex offers the opportunity to further investigate the immunological properties of this complex.  相似文献   

4.
5.
Evidence is presented that the herpes simplex virus type 2 glycoprotein previously designated gF is antigenically related to herpes simplex virus type 1 gC (gC-1). An antiserum prepared against type 1 virion envelope proteins immunoprecipitated gF of type 2 (gF-2), and competition experiments revealed that the anti-gC-1 component of the antiserum was responsible for the anti-gF-2 cross-reactivity. An antiserum prepared against fully denatured purified gF-2, however, and three anti-gF-2 monoclonal antibodies failed to precipitate any type 1 antigen, indicating that the extent of cross-reactivity between gC-1 and gF-2 may be limited. Several aspects of gF-2 synthesis and processing were investigated. Use of the enzymes endo-beta-N-acetylglucosaminidase H and alpha-D-N-acetylgalactosaminyl oligosaccharidase revealed that the fully processed form of gF-2 (about 75,000 [75K] apparent molecular weight) had both complex-type N-linked and O-linked oligosaccharides, whereas newly synthesized forms (67K and 69K) had only high-mannose N-linked oligosaccharides. These last two forms were both reduced in size to 54K by treatment with endo-beta-N-acetylglucosaminidase H and therefore appear to differ only in the number of N-linked chains. Neutralization tests and radioiodination experiments revealed that gF-2 is exposed on the surfaces of virions and that the 75K form of gF-2 is exposed on cell surfaces. The similarities and differences of gF-2 and gC-1 are discussed in light of recent mapping results which suggest collinearity of their respective genes.  相似文献   

6.
The gene encoding glycoprotein F (gF) of herpes simplex virus type 2 (HSV-2) was mapped to the region of the viral genome from 0.62 to 0.64 map units. This region is colinear with, and partially homologous to, the region of the HSV-1 genome previously shown to encode gC. Mapping of the gF gene was done by insertion of HSV-2 DNA fragments into the thymidine kinase gene of an HSV-1 virus and screening of the resultant recombinant viruses for the expression of gF. In this way, DNA sequences necessary for the expression of gF in infected cells were also delimited. Because several plaque morphology mutants (syncytial mutants) of HSV-1 have previously been shown to be gC-, a syncytial mutant of HSV-2 (GP) was tested for the expression of gF. It was found to be gF-, indicating that gF is not essential for replication of HSV-2 in cell culture, just as gC is not essential for replication of HSV-1. This result also suggests that the gF- and gC- phenotypes are related in the same, as yet undefined, way to the expression of a syncytial marker. A proposal to change the name of HSV-2 gF to gC (gC-2) is discussed.  相似文献   

7.
A mutant of herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) in which glycoprotein H (gH) coding sequences were deleted and replaced by the Escherichia coli lacZ gene under the control of the human cytomegalovirus IE-1 gene promoter was constructed. The mutant was propagated in Vero cells which contained multiple copies of the HSV-1 gH gene under the control of the HSV-1 gD promoter and which therefore provide gH in trans following HSV-1 infection. Phenotypically gH-negative virions were obtained by a single growth cycle in Vero cells. These virions were noninfectious, as judged by plaque assay and by expression of beta-galactosidase following high-multiplicity infection, but partial recovery of infectivity was achieved by using the fusogenic agent polyethylene glycol. Adsorption of gH-negative virions to cells blocked the adsorption of superinfecting wild-type virus, a result in contrast to that obtained with gD-negative virions (D. C. Johnson and M. W. Ligas, J. Virol. 62:4605-4612, 1988). The simplest conclusion is that gH is required for membrane fusion but not for receptor binding, a conclusion consistent with the conservation of gH in all herpesviruses.  相似文献   

8.
The gH-gL complex of herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) is essential for virion infectivity and virus-induced cell fusion, but functional domains of the gH molecule remain to be defined. We have addressed this question by mutagenesis. A set of linker insertion mutants in HSV-1 gH was generated and tested in transient assays for their ability to complement a gH-negative virus. Insertions at three sites in the C-terminal third of the external domain affected the ability of gH to function in cell-cell fusion and virus entry, while insertions at six sites in the N-terminal half of the external domain induced conformational changes in gH such that it was not recognized by monoclonal antibody LP11, although expression at the cell surface was unchanged. A recombinant virus in which a potential integrin-binding motif, RGD, in gH was changed to the triplet RGE entered cells as efficiently as the wild type, indicating that HSV-1 entry is not mediated by means of the gH-RGD motif binding to cell surface integrins. Furthermore, mutagenesis of the glycosylation site which is positionally conserved in all herpesvirus gH sequences in close proximity to the transmembrane domain generated a recombinant virus that grew in vitro with wild-type single-step kinetics.  相似文献   

9.
10.
The region of the herpes simplex virus type 2 (HSV-2) genome which maps colinearly with the HSV-1 glycoprotein C (gC) gene has been cloned, and the DNA sequence of a 2.29-kilobase region has been determined. Contained within this sequence is a major open reading frame of 479 amino acids. The carboxyterminal three-fourths of the derived HSV-2 protein sequence showed a high degree of sequence homology to the HSV-1 gC amino acid sequence reported by Frink et al. (J. Virol. 45:634-647, 1983). The amino-terminal region of the HSV-2 sequence, however, showed very little sequence homology to HSV-1 gC. In addition, the HSV-1 gC sequence contained 27 amino acids in the amino-terminal region which were missing from the HSV-2 protein. Computer-assisted analysis of the hydrophilic and hydrophobic properties of the derived HSV-2 sequence demonstrated that the protein contained structures characteristic of membrane-bound glycoproteins, including an amino-terminal signal sequence and carboxy-terminal hydrophobic transmembrane domain and charged cytoplasmic anchor. The HSV-2 protein sequence also contained seven putative N-linked glycosylation sites. These data, in conjunction with mapping studies of Para et al. (J. Virol. 45:1223-1227, 1983) and Zezulak and Spear (J. Virol. 49:741-747, 1984), suggest that the protein sequence derived from the HSV-2 genome corresponds to gF, the HSV-2 homolog of HSV-1 gC.  相似文献   

11.
Herpes simplex virus (HSV) glycoprotein gD is a major component of the virion envelope and is thought to play an important role in the initial stages of viral infection and stimulates the production of high titers of neutralizing antibodies. We assumed that gD plays an essential role in virus replication, and so to complement viruses with mutations in the gD gene we constructed a cell line, denoted VD60, which is capable of expressing high levels of gD after infection with HSV. A recombinant virus, designated F-gD beta, in which sequences encoding gD and a nonessential glycoprotein, gI, were replaced by Escherichia coli beta-galactosidase sequences, was selected on the basis that it produced blue plaques on VD60 cell monolayers under agarose overlays containing 5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolyl-beta-D-galactopyranoside (X-Gal). F-gD beta was able to replicate normally on complementing VD60 cells. However, F-gD beta was unable to form plaques on noncomplementing Vero cells. Virions lacking gD were produced in normal amounts by Vero cells infected with F-gD beta, and the virus particles were distributed throughout the cytoplasm and on the cell surface, suggesting that gD is not essential for HSV envelopment and egress. Virions lacking gD were able to bind to cells, but were unable to initiate synthesis of viral early polypeptides. Plaque production of F-gD beta particles lacking gD was enhanced by polyethylene glycol treatment, suggesting that gD is essential for penetration of HSV into cells. Other HSV glycoproteins have been implicated in the entry of virus into cells, and thus this process appears to involve multiple interactions at the cell surface.  相似文献   

12.
Several approaches to the production of vaccines to human herpesviruses have been proposed. Subunit vaccines, subunits delivered by live vectors, and rationally attenuated vaccines have all been shown to be efficacious in animal models but suffer from uncertainties as to the roles of individual genes involved in pathogenesis and the most relevant components of the immune response required for protection in humans and the target antigens involved. With these problems in mind, we examined the vaccine potential of a fully disabled herpes simplex virus type 1 mutant that is capable of only a single round of replication, since a virus of this type should induce the full spectrum of immune responses but has no pathogenic potential. A virus has been described which lacks essential glycoprotein H (gH) and can be propagated in a cell line which supplies gH in trans (A. Forrester, H. Farrell, G. Wilkinson, J. Kaye, N. Davis-Poynter, and T. Minson, J. Virol. 66:341-348, 1992). Infection of normal cells with this mutant is indistinguishable from a wild-type infection, except that the resulting progeny are gH negative and noninfectious: the virus is self-limiting. Infection of mice by the ear pinna route was similarly self-limiting in that input infectivity decreased rapidly at the inoculation site and no infectivity was detected in sensory ganglia. Animals given a wide range of doses of the gH-negative mutant produced both humoral and T-cell responses to herpes simplex virus type 1 and proved solidly resistant to challenge with a high dose of wild-type virus. The gH-negative mutant is presumably capable of establishing a latent infection, but since no infectious virus was detected in numerous attempts to reactivate the mutant, the risk of a pathogenic outcome is minimal.  相似文献   

13.
The DNA region encoding the complete herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) glycoprotein K (gK) was inserted into a baculovirus transfer vector, and recombinant viruses expressing gK were isolated. Four gK-related recombinant baculovirus-expressed peptides of 29, 35, 38, and 40 kDa were detected with polyclonal antibody to gK. The 35-, 38-, and 40-kDa species were susceptible to tunicamycin treatment, suggesting that they were glycosylated. The 38- and 40-kDa species corresponded to partially glycosylated precursor gK (pgK) and mature gK, respectively. The 29-kDa peptide probably represented a cleaved, unglycosylated peptide. The 35-kDa peptide probably represented a cleaved, glycosylated peptide that may be a precursor to pgK. Indirect immunofluorescence with polyclonal antibody to gK peptides indicated that the recombinant baculovirus-expressed gK was abundant on the surface of the insect cells in which it was expressed. Mice vaccinated with the baculovirus-expressed gK produced very low levels (< 1:10) of HSV-1 neutralizing antibody. Nonetheless, these mice were partially protected from lethal challenge with HSV-1 (75% survival). This protection was significant (P = 0.02). Despite some protection against death, gK-vaccinated mice showed no protection against the establishment of latency. Surprisingly, gK-vaccinated mice that were challenged ocularly with a stromal disease-producing strain of HSV-1 had significantly higher levels of ocular disease (herpes stromal keratitis) than did mock-vaccinated mice. In summary, this is the first report to show that vaccination with HSV-1 gK can provide protection against lethal HSV-1 challenge and that vaccination with an HSV-1 glycoprotein can significantly increase the severity of HSV-1-induced ocular disease.  相似文献   

14.
HEp-2 cells, which were infected with HSV-1, excrete besides other proteins a soluble glycoprotein (Mr 125000–130000) related to the virus protein gC. The excretion of the glycoprotein and the production of extracellular virus particles is reduced to a similar extent when the cells were treated with monensin. Possible consequences of the excretion of soluble viral proteins to a modulation of the immune response are discussed.Abbreviations HSV-1 Herpes simplex virus type 1 - PAGE Polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis - SDS Sodium dodecylsulfate  相似文献   

15.
The use of herpes simplex virus (HSV) vectors for in vivo gene therapy will require the targeting of vector infection to specific cell types in certain in vivo applications. Because HSV glycoprotein D (gD) imparts a broad host range for viral infection through recognition of ubiquitous host cell receptors, vector targeting will require the manipulation of gD to provide new cell recognition specificities in a manner designed to preserve gD's essential role in virus entry. In this study, we have determined whether an entry-incompetent HSV mutant with deletions of all Us glycoproteins, including gD, can be complemented by a foreign attachment/entry protein with a different receptor-binding specificity, the vesicular stomatitis virus glycoprotein G (VSV-G). The results showed that transiently expressed VSV-G was incorporated into gD-deficient HSV envelopes and that the resulting pseudotyped virus formed plaques on gD-expressing VD60 cells, albeit at a 50-fold-reduced level compared to that of wild-type gD. This reduction may be related to differences in the entry pathways used by VSV and HSV or to the observed lower rate of incorporation of VSV-G into virus envelopes than that of gD. The rate of VSV-G incorporation was greatly improved by using recombinant molecules in which the transmembrane domain of HSV glycoprotein B or D was substituted for that of VSV-G, but these recombinant molecules failed to promote virus entry. These results show that foreign glycoproteins can be incorporated into the HSV envelope during replication and that gD can be dispensed with on the condition that a suitable attachment/entry function is provided.  相似文献   

16.
17.
Herpes simplex virus 1 (HSV‐1) envelope glycoprotein H (gH) is important for viral entry into cells and nuclear egress of nucleocapsids. To clarify additional novel roles of gH during HSV‐1 replication, host cell proteins that interact with gH were screened for by tandem affinity purification coupled with mass spectrometry‐based proteomics in 293T cells transiently expressing gH. This screen identified 123 host cell proteins as potential gH interactors. Of these proteins, general control nonderepressive‐1 (GCN1), a trans‐acting positive effector of GCN2 kinase that regulates phosphorylation of the α subunit of translation initiation factor 2 (eIF2α), was subsequently confirmed to interact with gH in HSV‐1‐infected cells. eIF2α phosphorylation is known to downregulate protein synthesis, and various viruses have evolved mechanisms to prevent the accumulation of phosphorylated eIF2α in infected cells. Here, it was shown that GCN1 knockdown reduces phosphorylation of eIF2α in HSV‐1‐infected cells and that the gH‐null mutation increases eIF2α in HSV‐1‐infected cells, whereas gH overexpression in the absence of other HSV‐1 proteins reduces eIF2α phosphorylation. These findings suggest that GCN1 can regulate eIF2α phosphorylation in HSV‐1‐infected cells and that the GCN1‐binding viral partner gH is necessary and sufficient to prevent the accumulation of phosphorylated eIF2α. Our database of 123 host cell proteins potentially interacting with gH will be useful for future studies aimed at unveiling further novel functions of gH and the roles of cellular proteins in HSV‐1‐infected cells.  相似文献   

18.
Glycoprotein D (gD) is a viron envelope component of herpes simplex virus types 1 and 2. We have previously defined seven monoclonal antibody (MAb) groups which recognize distinct epitopes on the mature gD-1 protein of 369 amino acids. MAb groups VII, II, and V recognize continuous epitopes at residues 11-19, 272-279, and 340-356, respectively. MAb groups I, III, IV, and VI recognize discontinuous epitopes. Recent studies have focused on epitopes I, III, and VI. Using truncated forms of gD generated by recombinant DNA methods and proteolysis, epitopes III, IV, and VI were located within amino acids 1-233. A portion of discontinuous epitope I was located in a region within residues 233-275. For this study, we used recombinant DNA methods to create mutations in the gD-1 gene and studied the effects of those mutations on gD as expressed in mammalian cells. Plasmid pRE4, containing the coding sequence of gD-1 and the Rous sarcoma virus long terminal repeat promoter, was transfected into mammalian cells. The expressed protein, gD-1-(pRE4), was identical in size and antigenic properties to gD-1 from infected cells. Six in-frame deletion mutations were subsequently constructed by using restriction enzymes to excise portions of the gD-1 gene. Plasmids carrying these mutated forms were transfected into cells, and the corresponding proteins were examined at 48 h posttransfection for antigenicity and glycosylation patterns. Three deletions of varying size were located downstream of residue 233. Analysis of these mutants showed that amino acids within the region 234-244 were critical for binding of DL11 (group I), but not for other MAb groups. Three other deletion mutants lost all ability to bind MAbs which recognize discontinuous epitopes. In addition, much of the gD expressed by these mutants was observed to migrate as high-molecular-weight aggregated forms in nondenaturing gels. Each of these mutations involved the loss of a cysteine residue, suggesting that disulfide linkages play an essential role in the formation of discontinuous epitopes. The extent of glycosylation of the mutant gD molecules accumulated at 48 h posttransfection suggested altered carbohydrate processing. In one case, there was evidence for increased O-linked glycosylation. Those proteins which had lost a cysteine residue as part of the deletion did not accumulate molecules processed beyond the high-mannose stage. The results suggest that carbohydrate processing during synthesis of gD is very sensitive to alterations in structure, particularly changes involving cysteine residues.  相似文献   

19.
Eukaryotic cells respond to extracellular stimuli, such as viruses, by recruiting signal transduction pathways, many of which are mediated through activation of distinct mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) cascades and activation of transductional regulation factors. The best characterized of this pathway are the extracellular signal regulated kinase (ERK), the c-Jun N-terminal kinase/stress activated protein kinase (JNK/SAPK), and the p38 MAPK cascade. Herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) encodes at least 11 envelope glycoproteins, which alone or in concert play different roles in viral adsorption, entry, cell-to-cell spread, and immune evasion. Of these proteins, three are designated glycoprotein B (gB), glycoprotein D (gD), and the gH/gL heterodimer, are clearly involved in attachment and entry, and therefore possible candidates in inducing early cellular activation.Nevertheless, the precise role of each glycoprotein and the cellular factor involved remain elusive. The signal transduction pathways involved, and the outcome of cellular activation on viral entry or postentry events, are still to be elucidated. To better understand the role of signal transduction pathways and phosphorylation events in HSV-1 entry, synthetic peptides modeled on HSV-1 gH were synthesized and tested for MEK1-MEK2/MAPK cascade activation. Our results show a major involvement of the JNK pathway in the intracellular signal transmission after stimulation with gH HSV-1 peptides.  相似文献   

20.
Herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) immediate-early (IE) regulatory protein ICP0 is required for efficient progression of infected cells into productive lytic infection, especially in low-multiplicity infections of limited-passage human fibroblasts. We have used single-cell-based assays that allow detailed analysis of the ICP0-null phenotype in low-multiplicity infections of restrictive cell types. The major conclusions are as follows: (i) there is a threshold input multiplicity above which the mutant virus replicates normally; (ii) individual cells infected below the threshold multiplicity have a high probability of establishing a nonproductive infection; (iii) such nonproductively infected cells have a high probability of expressing IE products at 6 h postinfection; (iv) even at 24 h postinfection, IE protein-positive nonproductively infected human fibroblast cells exceed the number of cells that lead to plaque formation by up to 2 orders of magnitude; (v) expression of individual IE proteins in a proportion of the nonproductively infected cells is incompletely coordinated; (vi) the nonproductive cells can also express early gene products at low frequencies and in a stochastic manner; and (vii) significant numbers of human fibroblast cells infected at low multiplicity by an ICP0-deficient virus are lost through cell death. We propose that in the absence of ICP0 expression, HSV-1 infected human fibroblasts can undergo a great variety of fates, including quiescence, stalled infection at a variety of different stages, cell death, and, for a minor population, initiation of formation of a plaque.  相似文献   

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