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1.
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   

2.
Earlier studies have shown that herpes simplex viruses adsorb to but do not penetrate permissive baby hamster kidney clonal cell lines designated the BJ series and constitutively expressing the herpes simplex virus 1 (HSV-1) glycoprotein D (gD). To investigate the mechanism of the restriction, the following steps were done. First, wild-type HSV-1 strain F [HSV-1(F)] virus was passaged blindly serially on clonal line BJ-1 and mutant viruses [HSV-1(F)U] capable of penetration were selected. The DNA fragment capable of transferring the capacity to infect BJ cells by marker transfer contains the gD gene. The mutant gD, designated gDU, differed from wild-type gD only in the substitution of Leu-25 by proline. gDU reacted with monoclonal antibodies which neutralize virus and whose epitopes encompass known functional domains involved in virus entry into cells. It did not react with the monoclonal antibody AP7 previously shown to react with an epitope which includes Leu-25. Second, cell lines expressing gDU constitutively were constructed and cloned. Unlike the clonal cell lines constitutively expressing gD (e.g., the BJ cell line), those expressing gDU were infectable by both HSV-1(F) and HSV-1(F)U. Lastly, exposure of BJ cells to monoclonal antibody AP7 rendered the cells capable of being infected with HSV-1(F). The results indicate that (i) gD expresses a specific function, determined by sequences at or around Leu-25, which blocks entry of virus into cells synthesizing gD, (ii) the gD which blocks penetration by superinfecting virus is located in the plasma membrane, (iii) the target of the restriction to penetration is the identical domain of the gD molecule contained in the envelope of the superinfecting virus, and (iv) the molecular basis of the restriction does not involve competition for a host protein involved in entry, as was previously thought.  相似文献   

3.
Herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) glycoprotein D (gD) is an essential component of the entry apparatus that is responsible for viral penetration and subsequent cell-cell spread. To test the hypothesis that gD may serve distinguishable functions in entry of free virus and cell-cell spread, mutants were selected for growth on U(S)11cl19.3 cells, which are resistant to both processes due to the lack of a functional gD receptor, and then tested for their ability to enter as free virus and to spread from cell to cell. Unlike their wild-type parent, HSV-1(F), the variants that emerged from this selection, which were named SP mutants, are all capable of forming macroscopic plaques on the resistant cells. This ability is caused by a marked increase in cell-cell spread without a concomitant increase in efficiency of entry of free virus. gD substitutions that arose within these mutants are sufficient to mediate cell-cell spread in U(S)11cl19.3 cells but are insufficient to overcome the restriction to entry of free virions. These results suggest that mutations in gD (i) are sufficient but not necessary to overcome the block to cell-cell spread exhibited by U(S)11cl19.3 cells and (ii) are insufficient to mediate entry of free virus in the same cells.  相似文献   

4.
We report on the replication of herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) and viral glycoprotein processing in RicR14 cells, a mutant ricin-resistant cell line defective in N-acetylglucosaminyl transferase I activity. In these cells HSV-1(MP) and (F) replicated to yields very similar to those in parental BHK cells. The kinetics of HSV-1 adsorption in mutant and in parent cells was also essentially identical. Progeny virions from ricin-resistant and wild-type cells displayed comparable specific infectivities. However, in the mutant cells the efficiency of plating of progeny virus from both RicR14 and BHK cells was reduced. HSV-1(MP) failed to induce syncytia in RicR14 cells either in a plaque assay or after a high-multiplicity infection. Moreover, the fully glycosylated forms of glycoproteins (gB, gC, and gD) were totally absent, and only the partially glycosylated precursors (pgC, pgD. and a triplet in the gB-gA region) accumulated in HSV-1-infected ricin-resistant cells and in herpesvirions made in these cells. Consistent with these results analysis of pronase glycopeptides from cells labeled with [14C]glucosamine showed a strong decrease of sialylated complex-type oligosaccharides and a dramatic accumulation of the neutral mannose-rich chains. The latter chains predominate in partially glycosylated precursors, whereas the complex acidic chains predominate in the fully processed forms of HSV glycoproteins. These results taken together indicate that (i) host-cell N-acetylglucosaminyl transferase I participates in the processing of HSV glycoproteins; and (ii) infectivity of herpesvirions does not necessarily require the mature form of gB. The absence of HSV-1(MP)-induced fusion in RicR14 cells is discussed.  相似文献   

5.
BHK(TK-) cells selected for resistance to polyethylene glycol-mediated fusion give rise to clones that are resistant to herpes simplex virus (HSV) infection. We have characterized one such clone, designated 95-19, and found that it is resistant to entry of HSV type 1 (HSV-1), HSV-2, and the related alphaherpesvirus pseudorabies virus (PRV). Single-step growth experiments show no detectable replication of multiple strains of HSV-1 and HSV-2 on 95-19 cells. Three lines of evidence suggest that these cells are resistant to postattachment entry. (i) Measurements of binding of radiolabeled virus show that heparin-sensitive binding of HSV-1 and HSV-2 to 95-19 cells is identical to binding to BHK(TK-) cells, suggesting that the block to replication occurs after attachment to heparan sulfate proteoglycan. (ii) 95-19 cells exposed to HSV-1 or HSV-2 at high multiplicity show no detectable immediate-early (IE) mRNA expression. (iii) Exposure of attached virus and cells to polyethylene glycol results in partial recovery of both IE gene expression and virus yield in single-step growth. The degrees of recovery of single-step yield and IE gene expression are similar, suggesting that the only block to single-step replication is at the point of virus entry and that these cells are deficient in some cellular factor required for efficient postattachment entry of free virus. 95-19 cells are also highly resistant to entry by cell-to-cell spread, suggesting that the same cellular factor participates in both types of entry.  相似文献   

6.
A strain of herpes simplex type 1 (HSV-1:KOS) encoding a functional thymidine kinase (tk+) gene and a thymidine kinase deficient (tk-) mutant strain (HSV-1:PTK3B) were used as probes to examine the repair of UV-damaged viral DNA in one tk- (143) and two tk+ (R970-5 and AC4) human cell lines. UV survival for each HSV-1 strain was similar for infection of both tk- and tk+ cells suggesting that the repair of viral DNA was not dependent on the expression of a functional cellular tk gene. In contrast, UV survival of HSV-1:PTK3B was substantially reduced compared to HSV-1:KOS when infecting all 3 human cell lines, as well as Vero monkey kidney cells and LPM1A mouse cells. These results suggest that the repair of UV-irradiated HSV-1 in lytically infected mammalian cells depends, in part at least, on the expression of the viral encoded tk.  相似文献   

7.
Herpes virus entry mediator (HVEM) is one of two principal receptors mediating herpes simplex virus (HSV) entry into murine and human cells. It functions naturally as an immune signaling co-receptor, and may participate in enhancing or repressing immune responses depending on the natural ligand used. To investigate whether engagement of HVEM by HSV affects the in vivo response to HSV infection, we generated recombinants of HSV-2(333) that expressed wild-type gD (HSV-2/gD) or mutant gD able to bind to nectin-1 (the other principal entry receptor) but not HVEM. Replication kinetics and yields of the recombinant strains on Vero cells were indistinguishable from those of wild-type HSV-2(333). After intravaginal inoculation with mutant or wild-type virus, adult female C57BL/6 mice developed vaginal lesions and mortality in similar proportions, and mucosal viral titers were similar or lower for mutant strains at different times. Relative to HSV-2/gD, percentages of HSV-specific CD8(+) T-cells were similar or only slightly reduced after infection with the mutant strain HSV-2/gD-Δ7-15, in all tissues up to 9 days after infection. Levels of HSV-specific CD4(+) T-cells five days after infection also did not differ after infection with either strain. Levels of the cytokine IL-6 and of the chemokines CXCL9, CXCL10, and CCL4 were significantly lower in vaginal washes one day after infection with HSV-2/gD compared with HSV-2/gD-Δ7-15. We conclude that the interaction of HSV gD with HVEM may alter early innate events in the murine immune response to infection, without significantly affecting acute mortality, morbidity, or initial T-cell responses after lethal challenge.  相似文献   

8.
A thymidine kinase deficient (tk-) and two thymidine kinase proficient (tk+) human cell lines were compared for UV sensitivity using colony-forming ability as well as their capacity to support the plaque formation of herpes simplex type 1 (HSV-1). The tk- line (143 cells) was a derivative of one of the tk+ lines (R970-5), whereas the other tk+ line (AC4 cells) was a derivative of the 143 cells obtained by transfection with purified sheared HSV-2 DNA encoding the viral tk gene. 143, R970-5 and AC4 cells showed a similar UV sensitivity for colony-forming ability. In contrast, the capacity to support HSV-1 plaque formation immediately (within 1 h) after UV-irradiation was reduced to a greater extent in the 143 cells compared to the R970-5 and AC4 cells. Capacity curves for plaque formation of the HSV-1: KOS wild-type (tk+) strain were similar to those for the HSV-1: PTK3B mutant (tk-) strain in the 3 cell strains, indicating that the viral tk gene does not influence the ability of HSV-1 to form plaques in UV-irradiated compared to unirradiated human cells. Cellular capacity for HSV-1 plaque formation was found to recover in both tk- and tk+ cells for cultures infected 24 h after UV-irradiation. These results suggest that repair of UV-damaged DNA takes place to a similar extent in both tk- and tk+ human cells, but the kinetics of repair are initially slower in tk- compared to tk+ human cells.  相似文献   

9.
Herpes simplex virus 1 (HSV-1) viral glycoproteins gD (carboxyl terminus), gE, gK, and gM, the membrane protein UL20, and membrane-associated protein UL11 play important roles in cytoplasmic virion envelopment and egress from infected cells. We showed previously that a recombinant virus carrying a deletion of the carboxyl-terminal 29 amino acids of gD (gDΔct) and the entire gE gene (ΔgE) did not exhibit substantial defects in cytoplasmic virion envelopment and egress (H. C. Lee et al., J. Virol. 83:6115-6124, 2009). The recombinant virus ΔgM2, engineered not to express gM, produced a 3- to 4-fold decrease in viral titers and a 50% reduction in average plaque sizes in comparison to the HSV-1(F) parental virus. The recombinant virus containing all three mutations, gDΔct-ΔgM2-ΔgE, replicated approximately 1 log unit less efficiently than the HSV-1(F) parental virus and produced viral plaques which were on average one-third the size of those of HSV-1(F). The recombinant virus ΔUL11-ΔgM2, engineered not to express either UL11 or gM, replicated more than 1 log unit less efficiently and produced significantly smaller plaques than UL11-null or gM-null viruses alone, in agreement with the results of Leege et al. (T. Leege et al., J. Virol. 83:896-907, 2009). Analyses of particle-to-PFU ratios, relative plaque size, and kinetics of virus growth and ultrastructural visualization of glycoprotein-deficient mutant and wild-type virions indicate that gDΔct, gE, and gM function in a cooperative but not redundant manner in infectious virion morphogenesis. Overall, comparisons of single, double, and triple mutant viruses generated in the same HSV-1(F) genetic background indicated that lack of either UL20 or gK expression caused the most severe defects in cytoplasmic envelopment, egress, and infectious virus production, followed by the double deletion of UL11 and gM.  相似文献   

10.
Glycoprotein D (gD) of herpes simplex virus (HSV) is essential for virus entry. Truncated forms of gD lacking the transmembrane and cytoplasmic tail regions have been shown to bind to cells and block plaque formation. Using complementation analysis and a panel of gD mutants, we previously identified four regions of gD (regions I to IV) which are important for virus entry. Here, we used baculovirus vectors to overexpress truncated forms of wild-type gD from HSV type 1 (HSV-1) [gD-1(306t)] and HSV-2 [gD-2(306t)] and four mutants, gD-1(inverted delta 34t), gD-1(inverted delta 126t), gD-1(inverted delta 243t), and gD-1(delta 290-299t), each having a mutation in one of the four functional regions. We used an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay and circular dichroism to analyze the structure of these proteins, and we used functional assays to study the role of gD in binding, penetration, and cell-to-cell spread. gD-1 and gD-2 are similar in antigenic structure and thermal stability but vary in secondary structure. Mutant proteins with insertions in region I or II were most altered in structure and stability, while mutants with insertions in region III or IV were less altered. gD-1(306t) and gD-2(306t) inhibited both plaque formation and cell-to-cell transmission of HSV-1. In spite of obvious structural differences, all of the mutant proteins bound to cells, confirming that binding is not the only function of gD. The region I mutant did not inhibit HSV plaque formation or cell-to-cell spread, suggesting that this region is necessary for the function of gD in these processes. Surprisingly, the other three mutant proteins functioned in all of the in vitro assays, indicating that the ability of gD to bind to cells and inhibit infection does not correlate with its ability to initiate infection as measured by the complementation assay. The region IV mutant, gD-1(delta 290-299t), had an unexpected enhanced inhibitory effect on HSV infection. Taken together, the results argue against a single functional domain in gD. It is likely that different gD structural elements are involved in successive steps of infection.  相似文献   

11.
Baby hamster kidney (BHK tk-) cells infected with herpes simplex virus-1 (HSV-1) showed a large number of virus particles isolated in vesicles characterized by the presence or the absence of ribosomes or inside cisternae of the rough endoplasmic reticulum or the nuclear envelope. The isolation of the virions by intracellular membranes appeared shortly after infection of the cells by HSV-1. These structures persisted for longer periods where no morphological alterations in the infected cells were noted as well as at periods where expression of the late viral genes and the presence of empty capsids or DNA-containing new capsids in the nucleoplasm of BHK tk- cells were detected. The results suggest that the presence of virions in membranic formations of the infected cells may be an indication of permanent isolation and subsequent deactivation of the viruses rather than an intermediate stage during their transport from the plasma membrane to the nucleus. The possible mechanisms by which the virions are isolated by the intracellular membranes of BHK tk- cells are discussed.  相似文献   

12.
The alpha 22 protein is one of five proteins synthesized immediately after infection of permissive cells with herpes simplex virus 1 and 2 (HSV-1 and HSV-2). On the basis of the reported nucleotide sequence of the HSV-1 gene, we synthesized two peptides containing the predicted amino acids 12 through 23 (12 residues) and 21 through 36 (16 residues) in two hydrophilic domains near the N terminus of the protein. Rabbit antisera made against these peptides were then used to characterize the alpha 22 protein made by wild-type HSV-1(F) strain and by an HSV-1 mutant, R325, carrying a 500-base-pair deletion within the coding domain of the gene. The results were as follows. (i) Both antisera reacted with HSV-1(F) alpha 22 protein in lysates electrophoretically separated in denaturing polyacrylamide gels and electrically transferred to a nitrocellulose sheet; neither antiserum reacted with the corresponding HSV-2 protein. The protein accumulated at 34 and 39 degrees C in the nucleus of infected permissive HEp-2 and baby hamster kidney (BHK) cells. The protein formed at least five spots differing in charge, mobility, and extent of phosphorylation on two-dimensional electrophoretic separation. (ii) The antisera reacted with a truncated nuclear protein (33,700 apparent molecular weight) in permissive HEp-2 and restrictive BHK cells infected with R325 and incubated at 39 degrees C but not at 34 degrees C. The truncated protein represents, therefore, the product of the undeleted 5' domain of the alpha 22 gene in R325. (iii) The presence of identical as well as slower migrating, reactive proteins in infected BHK cell lysates indicated that wild-type and truncated alpha 22 proteins are processed differently in BHK and HEp-2 cells.  相似文献   

13.
The most potent antigen among HSV-1 proteins are glycoproteins gB(UL27) and gD(US6). Multiple amino acid sequence alignment of these proteins shows that gD protein is the most specific for HSV-1. Analysis of gD protein epitopes detected the main antigenic determinants not cross-reactive with antigens of other viruses. Virus was isolated and genome DNA was prepared from morphological elements of a patient with herpes simplex infection. US6 gene fragment was cloned in pUC19 vector. Cloning in bacterial expression vectors helped obtain beta-galactosidase-fused recombinant HSV-1 gD protein with 6-histidines affine target for high-performance chromatography purification. ELISA with a set of HSV-1-positive and negative donor sera and a commercial panel of HSV-1 sera (Vektor-Best) showed that recombinant gD can be used as an antigen to HSV-1-specific IgG.  相似文献   

14.
The receptors for entry of herpes simplex viruses 1 and 2 (HSV-1 and -2), widely expressed in human cell lines, are members of a subset of the immunoglobulin superfamily exemplified by herpesvirus entry mediator C (HveC) and the herpesvirus immunoglobulin-like receptor (HIgR). This report focuses on two members of this subset, herpesvirus entry mediator B (HveB), recently designated nectin2/PRR2alpha, and its splice variant isoform, nectin2/PRR2delta. Nectin2alpha and -delta share the ectodomain but differ in the transmembrane and cytoplasmic regions. HveB was reported to enable entry of HSV-1 carrying mutations in glycoprotein D (gD) and of HSV-2, but not of wild-type (wt) HSV-1. We report that (i) both nectin2alpha and -delta served as receptors for the entry of HSV-1 mutant viruses HSV-1(U10) and -(U21) and AP7(r) that carry the Leu25Pro substitution in gD but not for HSV-1 mutants U30 and R5000 that carry the Ser140 or Ala185 substitution in gD. All of these mutants were able to overcome the block to entry mediated by expression of wt gD. (ii) Infection of cells expressing nectin2alpha or -delta required exposure to multiplicities of infection about 100-fold higher than those required to infect cells expressing HveC or HIgR. (iii) gD from HSV-1(U21) bound in vitro soluble forms of nectin2. The association was weaker than that to the soluble form of HveC/HIgR. Binding of wt HSV-1 gD to soluble nectin2 was not detectable. (iv) A major region of nectin2 functional in virus entry mapped to the V domain, located at the N terminus.  相似文献   

15.
Yoon M  Zago A  Shukla D  Spear PG 《Journal of virology》2003,77(17):9221-9231
Multiple cell surface molecules (herpesvirus entry mediator [HVEM], nectin-1, nectin-2, and 3-O-sulfated heparan sulfate) can serve as entry receptors for herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) or HSV-2 and also as receptors for virus-induced cell fusion. Viral glycoprotein D (gD) is the ligand for these receptors. A previous study showed that HVEM makes contact with HSV-1 gD at regions within amino acids 7 to 15 and 24 to 32 at the N terminus of gD. In the present study, amino acid substitutions and deletions were introduced into the N termini of HSV-1 and HSV-2 gDs to determine the effects on interactions with all of the known human and mouse entry/fusion receptors, including mouse HVEM, for which data on HSV entry or cell fusion were not previously reported. A cell fusion assay was used to assess functional activity of the gD mutants with each entry/fusion receptor. Soluble gD:Fc hybrids carrying each mutation were tested for the ability to bind to cells expressing the entry/fusion receptors. We found that deletions overlapping either or both of the HVEM contact regions, in either HSV-1 or HSV-2 gD, severely reduced cell fusion and binding activity with all of the human and mouse receptors except nectin-1. Amino acid substitutions described previously for HSV-1 (L25P, Q27P, and Q27R) were individually introduced into HSV-2 gD and, for both serotypes, were found to be without effect on cell fusion and the binding activity for nectin-1. Each of these three substitutions in HSV-1 gD enhanced fusion with cells expressing human nectin-2 (ordinarily low for wild-type HSV-1 gD), but the same substitutions in HSV-2 gD were without effect on the already high level of cell fusion observed with the wild-type protein. The Q27P or Q27R substitution in either HSV-1 and HSV-2 gD, but not the L25P substitution, significantly reduced cell fusion and binding activity for both human and mouse HVEM. Each of the three substitutions in HSV-1 gD, as well as the deletions mentioned above, reduced fusion with cells bearing 3-O-sulfated heparan sulfate. Thus, the N terminus of HSV-1 or HSV-2 gD is not necessary for functional interactions with nectin-1 but is necessary for all of the other receptors tested here. The sequence of the N terminus determines whether nectin-2 or 3-O-sulfated heparan sulfate, as well as HVEM, can serve as entry/fusion receptors.  相似文献   

16.
After nitrous acid mutagenesis of herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1), a mutant, 1093, was isolated which, during productive infection, induced very low levels of thymidine kinase (tk). The mutant virus was found, after UV irradiation, to be unable to transform L cells lacking tk (Ltk-) to a tk+ phenotype as chararcterized by growth of the cells in a modified HAT-selective medium containing 1.6 X 10(-5) M thymidine. Cells transformed by wild-type virus grew vigorously under the same conditions. The mutant was able to transform Ltk- cells if the medium contained 10(-3) M thymidine. These transformed cells maintained their conditional character and would not grow in low concentrations of thymidine in selective medium. Therefore, this mutant is conditional on the thymidine concentration in the selection medium in its ability to transform Ltk- cells to a tk+ phenotype. The conditionally transformed cells could be supertransformed with wild-type UV-irradiated HSV-1 to a phenotype which would grow in low-thymidine selective medium. The frequency of supertransformation closely approximated the frequency of transformation of Ltk- cells by wild-type virus. Supertransformation at high frequency could not be effected by mutant 1093 or the tk- mutant B2006. These results indicate that the presence of HSV-1 genetic information in HSV-1-transformed cells does not preclude the acquisition by these cells of at least one additional HSV-1 gene, that for tk.  相似文献   

17.
The herpes simplex virus type 1(JMP) [HSV-1(JMP)] mutant was selected for its ability to grow and form plaques in receptor-negative J cells. It enters J cells through a novel gD-dependent pathway, independent of all known HSV receptors, nectin1, nectin2, and HveA. Evidence that the pathway is dependent on a nectin3 binding site on HSV-1(JMP) and requires three mutations in gD rests on the following. We derived monoclonal antibodies to nectin3 and show that J cells express nectin3. HSV-1(JMP) entry and cell-to-cell spread were inhibited by soluble nectin3-Fc, demonstrating that virions carry a binding site for nectin3. The site is either directly involved in HSV-1(JMP) entry, or nectin3 binding to its site affects the gD domains involved in entry (entry site). HSV-1(JMP) entry and cell-to-cell spread in J cells were also inhibited by soluble nectin1-Fc, showing that the nectin1 binding site on gD(JMP) overlaps with the entry site or that nectin1 binding to gD affects the entry site. gD(JMP) carries three mutations, S140N, R340H, and Q344R. The latter two lie in the C tail and are present in the parental HSV-1(MP). HSV-1 strain R5000 carrying the S140N substitution was not infectious in J cells, indicating that this substitution was not sufficient. We constructed two recombinants, one carrying the three substitutions and the other carrying the two C-tail substitutions. Only the first recombinant infected J cells with an efficiency similar to that of HSV-1(JMP), indicating that the three mutations are required for the novel entry pathway. The results highlight plasticity in gD which accounts for changes in receptor usage.  相似文献   

18.
Two herpes simplex virus (HSV) glycoproteins E and I (gE and gI) form a heterooligomer which acts as an Fc receptor and also facilitates cell-to-cell spread of virus in epithelial tissues and between certain cultured cells. By contrast, gE-gI is not required for infection of cells by extracellular virus. HSV glycoproteins gD and gJ are encoded by neighboring genes, and gD is required for both virus entry into cells and cell-to-cell spread, whereas gJ has not been shown to influence these processes. Since HSV infects neurons and apparently spreads across synaptic junctions, it was of interest to determine whether gD, gE, gI and gJ are also important for interneuronal transfer of virus. We tested the roles of these glycoproteins in neuron-to-neuron transmission of HSV type 1 (HSV-1) by injecting mutant viruses unable to express these glycoproteins into the vitreous body of the rat eye. The spread of virus infection was measured in neuron-rich layers of the retina and in the major retinorecipient areas of the brain. Wild-type HSV-1 and a gJ- mutant spread rapidly between synaptically linked retinal neurons and efficiently infected major retinorecipient areas of the brain. gD mutants, derived from complementing cells, infected only a few neurons and did not spread in the retina or brain. Mutants unable to express gE or gI were markedly restricted in their ability to spread within the retina, produced 10-fold-less virus in the retina, and spread inefficiently to the brain. Furthermore, when compared with wild-type HSV-1, gE- and gI- mutants spread inefficiently from cell to cell in cultures of neurons derived from rat trigeminal ganglia. Together, our results suggest that the gE-gI heterooligomer is required for efficient neuron-to-neuron transmission through synaptically linked neuronal pathways.  相似文献   

19.
Signals involved in protection against apoptosis by herpes simplex virus 1 (HSV-1) were investigated. Using U937 monocytoid cells as an experimental model, we have demonstrated that HSV-1 rendered these cells resistant to Fas-induced apoptosis promptly after infection. UV-inactivated virus as well as the envelope glycoprotein D (gD) of HSV-1, by itself, exerted a protective effect on Fas-induced apoptosis. NF-kappaB was activated by gD, and protection against Fas-mediated apoptosis by gD was abolished in cells stably transfected with a dominant negative mutant I-kappaBalpha, indicating that NF-kappaB activation plays a role in the antiapoptotic activity of gD in our experimental model. Moreover, NF-kappaB-dependent protection against Fas-mediated apoptosis was associated with decreased levels of caspase-8 activity and with the up-regulation of intracellular antiapoptotic proteins.  相似文献   

20.
Enveloped animal viruses enter host cells either by direct fusion at neutral pH or by endocytosis. Herpes simplex virus (HSV) is believed to fuse with the plasma membrane of cells at neutral pH, and the glycoproteins gB and gD have been implicated in virus entry and cell fusion. Using cloned gB or gD genes, we show that cells expressing HSV-1 glycoproteins gB or gD can undergo fusion to form polykaryons by exposure only to acidic pH. The low pH-induced cell fusion was blocked in the presence of monoclonal antibodies specific to the glycoproteins. Infection of cells expressing gB or gD glycoproteins with HSV-1 inhibited the low pH-induced cell fusion. The results suggest that although the glycoproteins gB and gD possess fusogenic activity at acidic pH, other HSV proteins may regulate it such that in the virus-infected cell, this fusion activity is blocked.  相似文献   

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