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Sophia Pavlova Regina Feederle Kathrin G?rtner Walter Fuchs Harald Granzow Henri-Jacques Delecluse 《Journal of virology》2013,87(4):2011-2022
Virus-like particles (VLPs) from hepatitis B and human papillomaviruses have been successfully used as preventative vaccines against these infectious agents. These VLPs consist of a self-associating capsid polymer formed from a single structure protein and are devoid of viral DNA. Since virions from herpesviruses consist of a large number of molecules of viral and cellular origin, generating VLPs from a subset of these would be a particularly arduous task. Therefore, we have adopted an alternative strategy that consists of producing DNA-free defective virus particles in a cell line infected by a herpesvirus mutant incapable of packaging DNA. We previously reported that an Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) mutant devoid of the terminal repeats (ΔTR) that act as packaging signals in herpesviruses produces substantial amounts of VLPs and of light particles (LPs). However, ΔTR virions retained some infectious genomes, and although these mutants had lost their transforming abilities, this poses potential concerns for clinical applications. Therefore, we have constructed a series of mutants that lack proteins involved in maturation and assessed their ability to produce viral DNA-free VLP/LPs. Some of the introduced mutations were deleterious for capsid maturation and virus production. However, deletion of BFLF1/BFRF1A or of BBRF1 resulted in the production of DNA-free VLPs/LPs. The ΔBFLF1/BFRF1A viruses elicited a potent CD4+ T-cell response that was indistinguishable from the one obtained with wild-type controls. In summary, the defective particles produced by the ΔBFLF1/BFRF1A mutant fulfill the criteria of efficacy and safety expected from a preventative vaccine. 相似文献
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Reassociation Kinetics for Epstein-Barr Virus DNA: Nonhomology to Mammalian DNA and Homology of Viral DNA in Various Diseases 总被引:22,自引:11,他引:11 下载免费PDF全文
The number of Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) genomes per cell in established leukocytic lines and tissue specimens has been evaluated by measuring DNA-DNA reassociation kinetics with hydroxyapatite chromatography. Under the proper conditions, this method is sufficiently sensitive to detect EBV DNA in the amount of 0.1 genome per cell. All the samples tested that have been suspected to be without EBV DNA by cRNA hybridization proved negative by this more sensitive specific analysis. These included Hela and Hep2 cells, a negative case of Burkitt's lymphoma, two negative cases of nasopharyngeal carcinoma, and two established human leukocytic lines. Homology tests conducted with single-strand-specific nuclease S1 indicated that the viral DNA from a nasopharyngeal carcinoma and infectious mononucleosis were more than 90% homologous to EBV DNA. 相似文献
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Yohei Narita Takayuki Murata Akihide Ryo Daisuke Kawashima Atsuko Sugimoto Teru Kanda Hiroshi Kimura Tatsuya Tsurumi 《Journal of virology》2013,87(4):2120-2127
Peptidyl-prolyl cis-trans isomerase NIMA-interacting 1 (Pin1) protein is known as a regulator which recognizes phosphorylated Ser/Thr-Pro motifs and increases the rate of cis and trans amide isomer interconversion, thereby altering the conformation of its substrates. We found that Pin1 knockdown using short hairpin RNA (shRNA) technology resulted in strong suppression of productive Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) DNA replication. We further identified the EBV DNA polymerase catalytic subunit, BALF5, as a Pin1 substrate in glutathione S-transferase (GST) pulldown and immunoprecipitation assays. Lambda protein phosphatase treatment abolished the binding of BALF5 to Pin1, and mutation analysis of BALF5 revealed that replacement of the Thr178 residue by Ala (BALF5 T178A) disrupted the interaction with Pin1. To further test the effects of Pin1 in the context of virus infection, we constructed a BALF5-deficient recombinant virus. Exogenous supply of wild-type BALF5 in HEK293 cells with knockout recombinant EBV allowed efficient synthesis of viral genome DNA, but BALF5 T178A could not provide support as efficiently as wild-type BALF5. In conclusion, we found that EBV DNA polymerase BALF5 subunit interacts with Pin1 through BALF5 Thr178 in a phosphorylation-dependent manner. Pin1 might modulate EBV DNA polymerase conformation for efficient, productive viral DNA replication. 相似文献
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Teru Kanda Naoki Horikoshi Takayuki Murata Daisuke Kawashima Atsuko Sugimoto Yohei Narita Hitoshi Kurumizaka Tatsuya Tsurumi 《The Journal of biological chemistry》2013,288(33):24189-24199
The Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) genome is episomally maintained in latently infected cells. The viral protein EBNA1 is a bridging molecule that tethers EBV episomes to host mitotic chromosomes as well as to interphase chromatin. EBNA1 localizes to cellular chromosomes (chromatin) via its chromosome binding domains (CBDs), which are rich in glycine and arginine residues. However, the molecular mechanism by which the CBDs of EBNA1 attach to cellular chromatin is still under debate. Mutation analyses revealed that stepwise substitution of arginine residues within the CBD1 (amino acids 40–54) and CBD2 (amino acids 328–377) regions with alanines progressively impaired chromosome binding activity of EBNA1. The complete arginine-to-alanine substitutions within the CBD1 and -2 regions abolished the ability of EBNA1 to stably maintain EBV-derived oriP plasmids in dividing cells. Importantly, replacing the same arginines with lysines had minimal effect, if any, on chromosome binding of EBNA1 as well as on its ability to stably maintain oriP plasmids. Furthermore, a glycine-arginine-rich peptide derived from the CBD1 region bound to reconstituted nucleosome core particles in vitro, as did a glycine-lysine rich peptide, whereas a glycine-alanine rich peptide did not. These results support the idea that the chromosome binding of EBNA1 is mediated by electrostatic interactions between the basic amino acids within the CBDs and negatively charged cellular chromatin. 相似文献
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Austin L. Hughes 《Journal of molecular evolution》2002,54(1):90-101
Phylogenies of gene families including members in both vertebrates and DNA viruses of the poxvirus and/or herpesvirus families
showed that the viral genes originated at widely different times over the history of life. Certain of these viral genes (for
example, the genes encoding the large and small subunits of ribonucleoside–diphosphate reductase) originated before animals
diverged from fungi, while others originated much more recently. The most striking examples of recent origin involved viral
genes encoding the cytokine interleukin-10 (IL-10), which originated independently in viruses at least three times since the
divergence of the orders of eutherian mammals, presumably by viral capture of host genes. In certain domains, viral IL-10
genes showed significantly higher rates of nonsynonymous substitution than their nearest mammalian homologues. Though the
mutation rate in these viral genes is up to 20 times that of the corresponding mammalian genes, a high mutation rate alone
did not account for these differences because they were not seen in all domains. Rather, in certain domains it appears that
functional constraints present in the case of mammalian IL-10 are relaxed in the case of the viral homologues. Furthermore,
a nonrandom pattern of change with respect to amino acid residue charge in the N-terminal portion of the mature protein has
occurred repeatedly in independently derived viral IL-10 genes, strongly suggesting that positive selection has led to divergence
of this functionally important domain in viral IL-10.
Received: 11 January 2001 / Accepted: 23 May 2001 相似文献
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Peter Tegtmeyer 《Journal of virology》1972,10(4):591-598
Three temperature-sensitive (ts) mutants of simian virus 40 (SV40) in complementation group A (tsA7, tsA28, tsA30) have been isolated and characterized in permissive and restrictive host cells. At 41 C in the AH line of African green monkey kidney cells, the mutants are deficient in an early function required to produce infectious viral deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA). Temperature-shift experiments and analysis of SV40 viral DNA replication by gel electrophoresis have provided strong evidence that the ts gene product of the three mutants is directly required to initiate each new round of viral DNA replication but is not required to complete a cycle which has already begun. The synthesis of mutant DNA molecules themselves can be initiated by a nonmutant gene product in viral complementation studies at 41 C. The cell, however, cannot substitute a host function to provide the initiator required for the replication of free viral DNA. The viral initiator is also required to establish the stable transformation of 3T3 cells. 相似文献
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Ayumi Kudoh Satoko Iwahori Yoshitaka Sato Sanae Nakayama Hiroki Isomura Takayuki Murata Tatsuya Tsurumi 《Journal of virology》2009,83(13):6641-6651
Homologous recombination is an important biological process that facilitates genome rearrangement and repair of DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs). The induction of Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) lytic replication induces ataxia telangiectasia-mutated (ATM)-dependent DNA damage checkpoint signaling, leading to the clustering of phosphorylated ATM and Mre11/Rad50/Nbs1 (MRN) complexes to sites of viral genome synthesis in nuclei. Here we report that homologous recombinational repair (HRR) factors such as replication protein A (RPA), Rad51, and Rad52 as well as MRN complexes are recruited and loaded onto the newly synthesized viral genome in replication compartments. The 32-kDa subunit of RPA is extensively phosphorylated at sites in accordance with those with ATM. The hyperphosphorylation of RPA32 causes a change in RPA conformation, resulting in a switch from the catalysis of DNA replication to the participation in DNA repair. The levels of Rad51 and phosphorylated RPA were found to increase with the progression of viral productive replication, while that of Rad52 proved constant. Furthermore, biochemical fractionation revealed increases in levels of DNA-bound forms of these HRRs. Bromodeoxyuridine-labeled chromatin immunoprecipitation and PCR analyses confirmed the loading of RPA, Rad 51, Rad52, and Mre11 onto newly synthesized viral DNA, and terminal deoxynucleotidyltransferase-mediated dUTP nick end labeling analysis demonstrated DSBs in the EBV replication compartments. HRR factors might be recruited to repair DSBs on the viral genome in viral replication compartments. RNA interference knockdown of RPA32 and Rad51 prevented viral DNA synthesis remarkably, suggesting that homologous recombination and/or repair of viral DNA genome might occur, coupled with DNA replication to facilitate viral genome synthesis.Replication protein A (RPA), the eukaryotic single-stranded DNA (ssDNA)-binding protein, is a heterotrimeric complex composed of three tightly associated subunits of 70, 32, and 14 kDa (referred as to RPA70, RPA32, and RPA14, respectively) that is essential for DNA replication, recombination, and all major types of DNA repair (4). RPA participates in such diverse pathways through its ability to interact with DNA and numerous proteins involved in its processing. During DNA replication, RPA associates with ssDNA at forks and facilitates nascent-strand DNA synthesis by replicative DNA polymerases localized at replication foci during S phase. Under DNA-damaging conditions, RPA binds to ssDNA at damaged sites and interacts with repair and recombination components to process double-strand DNA breaks (DSBs) and other lesions (6, 14, 21, 32, 38, 41).RPA undergoes both DNA damage-independent and -dependent phosphorylation on the N-terminal 33 residues of RPA32. Unstressed cell cycle-dependent phosphorylation occurs during the G1/S-phase transition and in M phase, primarily at the conserved cyclin-CDK phosphorylation sites of Ser-23 and Ser-29 in the N terminus of the RPA32 subunit (13, 15). In contrast, stress-induced hyperphosphorylation of RPA is much more extensive. Nine potential phosphorylation sites within the N-terminal domain of RPA32, Ser-4, Ser-8, Ser-11/Ser-12/Ser-13, Thr-21, Ser-23, Ser-29, and Ser-33, in response to DNA-damaging agents, have been suggested (33, 54). Although this region of RPA32 is not required for the ssDNA-binding activity of RPA (5, 22), a phosphorylation-induced subtle conformation change in RPA, resulting from altered intersubunit interactions, regulates the interaction of RPA with both interacting proteins and DNA (30). The hyperphosphorylated form of RPA32 is unable to localize to replication centers in normal cells, while binding to DNA damage foci is unaffected (46). Therefore, RPA phosphorylation following damage is thought to both prevent RPA from catalyzing DNA replication and potentially serve as a marker to recruit repair factors to sites of DNA damage. RPA localizes to nuclear foci where DNA repair is occurring after DNA damage and is essential for multiple DNA repair pathways, participating in damage recognition, excision, and resynthesis reactions (4, 56).Mammalian cells can repair DSBs by homologous recombination (HR) or by nonhomologous end joining. HR is an accurate repair process, the first step of which is the resection of the 5′ ends of the DSB to generate 3′ ssDNA overhangs. This reaction is carried out by the Mre11/Rad50/Nbs1 (MRN) complex, which not only functions as a damage sensor upstream of ataxia telangiectasia-mutated (ATM)/ATM-Rad3-related (ATR) activation but also plays a role in DSB repair (4). RPA and members of the RAD52 epistasis group of gene products, such as Rad51, Rad52, and Rad54, bind to the resulting 3′ ssDNA strands and form a helical, nucleoprotein filament that facilitates the invasion of a damaged DNA strand into the homologous double-stranded DNA partner. The human Rad51 protein is a structural and functional homolog of the Escherichia coli RecA protein, which promotes homologous pairing and strand transfer reactions in vitro. Both Rad51 and Rad52 bind specifically to the terminal regions of tailed duplex DNA, the substrate thought to initiate recombination in vivo. Furthermore, nucleoprotein filaments of Rad51, formed on tailed DNA, catalyze strand invasion of homologous duplex DNA in a reaction that is stimulated by Rad52 and RPA (3).Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) is a human herpesvirus that infects B lymphocytes, inducing their continuous proliferation. In B-lymphoblastoid cell lines, there is no production of virus particles, which is termed latent infection (52). Reactivation from latency is characterized by the expression of lytic genes, and one of the first detectable changes is the expression of the BZLF1 immediate-early gene product, which trans-activates viral promoters (16), leading to an ordered cascade of viral early and late gene expression. This lytic EBV DNA replication occurs in discrete sites in nuclei, called replication compartments, in which seven viral replication proteins are assembled (44). The viral genome is amplified several hundredfold by the viral replication machinery and is thought to generate highly branched replication intermediates through HR coupled with viral DNA replication (48). With the progression of lytic replication, the replication compartments become larger and appeared to fuse to form large globular structures that eventually filled the nucleus at late stages of infection (8, 45).We previously isolated latently EBV-infected Tet-BZLF1/B95-8 cells in which the exogenous BZLF1 protein is conditionally expressed under the control of a tetracycline-regulated promoter, leading to a highly efficient induction of lytic replication (28). Using this system, we have demonstrated that the induction of the EBV lytic program results in the inhibition of replication of cellular DNA in spite of the replication of viral DNA (28) and elicits a cellular DNA damage response, with the activation of the ATM-Chk2-p53 DNA damage transduction pathway (29). The DNA damage sensor MRN complex and phosphorylated ATM are recruited and retained in viral replication compartments (29).Here we report that RPA32 is extensively phosphorylated after EBV lytic replication is induced, with the phosphorylation sites in accordance with those for ATM. Phosphorylated RPA, Rad51, and Rad52, which are involved in HR repair (HRR), are recruited and retained in viral replication compartments as well as the MRN complex. Furthermore, DSBs could be demonstrated to occur during viral genome synthesis in the EBV replication compartments. HRR factors might be recruited to repair DSBs on the viral genome in viral replication compartments. RNA interference (RNAi) knockdown of RPA32 and Rad51 prevented viral DNA synthesis remarkably, suggesting that HR and/or repair of viral DNA genome might occur, coupled with DNA replication, to facilitate viral genome synthesis. 相似文献
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Viral DNA Synthesis in Cells Infected by Temperature-Sensitive Mutants of Simian Virus 40 总被引:25,自引:45,他引:25 下载免费PDF全文
Temperature-sensitive mutants of simian virus 40 (SV40) have been classified as those that are blocked prior to viral DNA synthesis at the restrictive temperature, "early" mutants, and those harboring a defect later in the replication cycle, "late" mutants. Mutants of the A and D complementation groups are early, those of the B, C, and BC groups are late. Our results confirm earlier reports that A mutants are defective in a function required for the initiation of each round of viral DNA synthesis. D mutants, on the other hand, continue viral DNA replication at the restrictive temperature after preincubation at the permissive temperature. The length of time required for D function to be expressed at the permissive temperature-after which infection proceeds unabated on shifting of the cultures to the restrictive temperature-is 10 to 20 h. The viral DNA synthesized in D mutants under these conditions progresses in normal fashion through replicative intermediate molecules to mature component I and II DNA molecules. 相似文献
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Two Regions of Simian Virus 40 T Antigen Determine Cooperativity of Double-Hexamer Assembly on the Viral Origin of DNA Replication and Promote Hexamer Interactions during Bidirectional Origin DNA Unwinding 下载免费PDF全文
Klaus Weisshart Poonam Taneja Andreas Jenne Utz Herbig Daniel T. Simmons Ellen Fanning 《Journal of virology》1999,73(3):2201
Phosphorylation of simian virus 40 large tumor (T) antigen on threonine 124 is essential for viral DNA replication. A mutant T antigen (T124A), in which this threonine was replaced by alanine, has helicase activity, assembles double hexamers on viral-origin DNA, and locally distorts the origin DNA structure, but it cannot catalyze origin DNA unwinding. A class of T-antigen mutants with single-amino-acid substitutions in the DNA binding domain (class 4) has remarkably similar properties, although these proteins are phosphorylated on threonine 124, as we show here. By comparing the DNA binding properties of the T124A and class 4 mutant proteins with those of the wild type, we demonstrate that mutant double hexamers bind to viral origin DNA with reduced cooperativity. We report that T124A T-antigen subunits impair the ability of double hexamers containing the wild-type protein to unwind viral origin DNA, suggesting that interactions between hexamers are also required for unwinding. Moreover, the T124A and class 4 mutant T antigens display dominant-negative inhibition of the viral DNA replication activity of the wild-type protein. We propose that interactions between hexamers, mediated through the DNA binding domain and the N-terminal phosphorylated region of T antigen, play a role in double-hexamer assembly and origin DNA unwinding. We speculate that one surface of the DNA binding domain in each subunit of one hexamer may form a docking site that can interact with each subunit in the other hexamer, either directly with the N-terminal phosphorylated region or with another region that is regulated by phosphorylation.The initiation of simian virus 40 (SV40) DNA replication by the viral T antigen is a complex series of events that begins when T antigen binds specifically to a palindromic arrangement of four GAGGC pentanucleotide sequences in the minimal origin of viral DNA replication (recently reviewed in references 1, 2, 3, 22, and 48). In the presence of Mg-ATP, T antigen assembles cooperatively on the two halves of the palindrome as a double hexamer (10, 11, 13, 24, 30, 38, 51, 53). The DNA conformation flanking the T-antigen binding sites is locally distorted upon hexamer assembly (reference 7 and references therein). One pair of pentanucleotides is sufficient to direct double-hexamer assembly and local distortion of the origin DNA but not to initiate DNA replication (25). ATP hydrolysis by T-antigen hexamers then catalyzes bidirectional unwinding of the parental DNA (reference 53 and references therein). A mutant origin with a single nucleotide insertion in the center of the palindromic T-antigen binding site prevents cooperative interactions between hexamers and cannot support bidirectional origin unwinding (8, 51), suggesting that both processes require interactions between T-antigen hexamers. After assembly of the two replication forks, bidirectional replication is carried out by 10 cellular proteins and T antigen, which remains at the forks as the only essential helicase (reviewed in references 3, 22, and 48).The phosphorylation state of SV40 T antigen governs its ability to initiate viral DNA replication (reviewed in references 15 to 17 and 39). T antigen contains two clusters of phosphorylation sites located at the N and C termini (40, 41). Phosphorylation of T antigen on threonine 124 in the N-terminal cluster was shown to be essential for viral DNA replication in monkey cells and in vitro (5, 14, 32–36, 44). Efforts to define what step in viral DNA replication requires modification of threonine 124 revealed that Mg-ATP-induced hexamer formation of T antigen in solution and DNA helicase activity of T antigen did not require phosphorylation at this site (33, 36). Origin DNA binding of T antigen lacking the modification at residue 124 was weaker than that of the modified T antigen (33, 34, 36, 44), but the reduction in binding was modest under the conditions used for SV40 DNA replication in vitro (36). Moreover, a mutant T antigen containing alanine in place of the phosphorylated threonine (T124A) assembled as a double hexamer on the viral origin and altered the conformation of the early palindrome and AT-rich sequences flanking the T-antigen binding sites in the viral origin in the same manner as the wild-type protein, except that higher concentrations were required (36). However, even at an elevated concentration, these mutant double hexamers were unable to unwind closed circular duplex DNA containing the viral origin (33, 36), suggesting that the defect in unwinding was responsible for the inability of T124A T antigen to replicate SV40 DNA. One possible explanation for the unwinding defect of the mutant T antigen, despite its helicase activity, was that some essential interaction between the two hexamers during bidirectional unwinding depended upon phosphorylation of threonine 124. Electron micrographs of SV40 DNA unwinding intermediates, which showed two single-stranded DNA loops protruding between two hexamers of T antigen, provided support for this explanation, implying that a double hexamer pulled the parental duplex DNA into the protein complex and spooled the single-stranded DNA out (53). Furthermore, double-hexamer formation significantly enhanced the helicase activity of T antigen (47, 47a).Most of the T antigen isolated from mammalian cells is in a hyperphosphorylated form, containing multiple phosphoserines, as well as two phosphothreonines, and supports SV40 DNA replication in vitro poorly but can be stimulated by treatment with alkaline phosphatase or protein phosphatase 2A (19, 28, 37, 42, 49, 50). Hyperphosphorylated T antigen is unable to unwind duplex closed circular duplex DNA harboring the viral origin (4, 6, 51). Dephosphorylation of serines 120 and 123 restores its ability to unwind origin DNA (14, 43, 51). Studies of double-hexamer assembly on the origin indicate that phosphorylation of T antigen on serines 120 and 123 also impairs the cooperativity of double-hexamer assembly (14, 51). These results demonstrate that hyperphosphorylation of T antigen interferes with interactions between hexamers that are required for origin unwinding and raise the question of whether the phosphorylation state of threonine 124 might also affect the cooperativity of double-hexamer assembly on the viral origin.One class of T antigen mutants with single-amino-acid substitutions in the DNA binding domain (class 4) has been reported to display properties similar to those of the T124A mutant and the hyperphosphorylated form of T antigen (54). Class 4 mutant proteins are defective in viral DNA replication in vivo and in vitro, bind to the viral origin as double hexamers and alter the local DNA conformation, and have helicase activity but do not unwind closed circular duplex viral DNA. The replication and unwinding defects could be due to faulty phosphorylation patterns or to other malfunctions not dependent on phosphorylation status.The work presented here was undertaken to reevaluate the assembly of wild-type and T124A T antigen on SV40 origin DNA by using more-sensitive quantitative assays and to compare them with the class 4 mutants. We report that cooperativity of T124A T antigen in double-hexamer assembly on the viral origin is impaired. The class 4 mutant T antigens were also found to have defects in cooperativity of double-hexamer assembly. T124A T antigen inhibited the ability of the wild-type protein to unwind closed circular duplex origin DNA. Both T124A and the class 4 mutants displayed dominant-negative phenotypes in viral DNA replication in vitro. Based on these observations, we propose that the N-terminal cluster of phosphorylation sites and the DNA binding domain mediate cooperative hexamer-hexamer interactions during assembly on the viral origin and speculate that these regions of T antigen may interact during origin DNA unwinding. 相似文献
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Vaccinia Virus Replication in Enucleate BSC-1 Cells: Particle Production and Synthesis of Viral DNA and Proteins 总被引:5,自引:14,他引:5 下载免费PDF全文
The growth of vaccinia virus in monolayers of BSC-1 cells enucleated by centrifugation in the presence of cytochalasin B has been studied. No evidence for the production of infectious virus in these cells was obtained, and the production of virus particles was reduced to 8.3% compared with the yield from cytochalasin-treated, uncentrifuged cells. Virus DNA and early and late polypeptides were synthesized with normal timing in enucleate cells, but in reduced amounts; cleavage of structural polypeptide precursors P4a and Px also occurred in enucleate cells. Factories containing immature virus particles were demonstrated in enucleate cells by electron microscopy; these factories were reduced in number and size compared with those found in cytochalasin-treated, uncentrifuged cells. 相似文献
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Ewelina Grywalska Jacek Roliński Marcin Pasiarski Izabela Korona-Glowniak Maciej Maj Agata Surdacka Agnieszka Grafka Agnieszka Stelmach-Go?dy? Micha? Zgurski Stanis?aw Gó?d? Anna Malm Piotr Grabarczyk El?bieta Staros?awska 《PloS one》2015,10(10)
Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) is a ubiquitous γ-herpesvirus that infects more than 90% of the world population. The potential involvement of EBV in the clinical course of chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) remains unexplained. The aim of this study was to determine whether EBV-DNA load in the peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) of CLL patients may influence heterogeneity in the course of the disease. The study included peripheral blood samples from 115 previously untreated patients with CLL (54 women and 61 men) and 40 healthy controls (16 women and 24 men). We analyzed the association between the EBV-DNA load in PBMCs and the stage of the disease, adverse prognostic factors, and clinical outcome. Detectable numbers of EBV-DNA copies in PBMCs were found in 62 out of 115 CLL patients (53.91%). The EBV-DNA copy number/μg DNA was significantly higher in patients who required early implementation of treatment, presented with lymphocyte count doubling time <12 months, displayed CD38-positive or ZAP-70-positive phenotype, and with the del(11q22.3) cytogenetic abnormality. Furthermore, the EBV-DNA copy number/μg DNA showed significant positive correlation with the concentrations of lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) and beta-2-microglobulin. We have shown that in CLL patients, higher EBV-DNA copy number predicted shorter survival and shorter time to disease progression, and it was associated with other established unfavorable prognostic factors. This suggests that EBV may negatively affect the outcome of CLL. 相似文献