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Primary sympathetic neuronal cultures were maintained for up to 5 weeks after inoculation with herpes simplex virus (HSV) without evidence of viral infection. Upon deprivation of nerve growth factor, the cultures produced infectious HSV, indicating that the cultures harbored latent HSV. This study demonstrates a function of nerve growth factor in the maintenance of HSV latency.  相似文献   

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A neonatal rat dorsal root ganglion-derived neuronal culture system has been utilized to study herpes simplex virus (HSV) latency establishment, maintenance, and reactivation. We present our initial characterization of viral gene expression in neurons following infection with replication-defective HSV recombinants carrying beta-galactosidase and/or green fluorescent protein reporter genes under the control of lytic cycle- or latency-associated promoters. In this system lytic virus reporter promoter activity was detected in up to 58% of neurons 24 h after infection. Lytic cycle reporter promoters were shut down over time, and long-term survival of neurons harboring latent virus genomes was demonstrated. Latency-associated promoter-driven reporter gene expression was detected in neurons from early times postinfection and was stably maintained in up to 83% of neurons for at least 3 weeks. In latently infected cultures, silent lytic cycle promoters could be activated in up to 53% of neurons by nerve growth factor withdrawal or through inhibition of histone deacetylases by trichostatin A. We conclude that the use of recombinant viruses containing reporter genes, under the regulation of lytic and latency promoter control in neuronal cultures in which latency can be established and reactivation can be induced, is a potentially powerful system in which to study the molecular events that occur during HSV infection of neurons.  相似文献   

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Herpes simplex virus (HSV) is one of the best studied examples of viral ability to remain latent in the human nervous system and to cause recurrent disease by reactivation. Intensive effort was directed in recent years to unveil the molecular viral mechanisms and the virus-host interactions associated with latent HSV infection. The discovery of the state of the latent viral DNA in nervous tissues and of the presence of latency-associated gene expression during latent infection, both differing from the situation during viral replication, provided important clues relevant to the pathogenesis of latent HSV infection. This review summarizes the current state of knowledge on the site of latent infection, the molecular phenomena of latency, and the mechanisms of the various stages of latency: acute infection, establishment and maintenance of latency, and reactivation. This information paved the way to recent trials aiming to use herpes viruses as vectors to deliver genes into the nervous system, an issue that is also addressed in this review.  相似文献   

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Herpes simplex virus (HSV) establishes latent infection in long‐lived neurons. During initial infection, neurons are exposed to multiple inflammatory cytokines but the effects of immune signaling on the nature of HSV latency are unknown. We show that initial infection of primary murine neurons in the presence of type I interferon (IFN) results in a form of latency that is restricted for reactivation. We also find that the subnuclear condensates, promyelocytic leukemia nuclear bodies (PML‐NBs), are absent from primary sympathetic and sensory neurons but form with type I IFN treatment and persist even when IFN signaling resolves. HSV‐1 genomes colocalize with PML‐NBs throughout a latent infection of neurons only when type I IFN is present during initial infection. Depletion of PML prior to or following infection does not impact the establishment latency; however, it does rescue the ability of HSV to reactivate from IFN‐treated neurons. This study demonstrates that viral genomes possess a memory of the IFN response during de novo infection, which results in differential subnuclear positioning and ultimately restricts the ability of genomes to reactivate.  相似文献   

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The establishment of latent infections in sensory neurons is a remarkably effective immune evasion strategy that accounts for the widespread dissemination of life long Herpes Simplex Virus type 1 (HSV1) infections in humans. Periodic reactivation of latent virus results in asymptomatic shedding and transmission of HSV1 or recurrent disease that is usually mild but can be severe. An in-depth understanding of the mechanisms regulating the maintenance of latency and reactivation are essential for developing new approaches to block reactivation. However, the lack of a reliable mouse model that supports efficient in vivo reactivation (IVR) resulting in production of infectious HSV1 and/or disease has hampered progress. Since HSV1 reactivation is enhanced in immunosuppressed hosts, we exploited the antiviral and immunomodulatory activities of IVIG (intravenous immunoglobulins) to promote survival of latently infected immunodeficient Rag mice. Latently infected Rag mice derived by high dose (HD), but not low dose (LD), HSV1 inoculation exhibited spontaneous reactivation. Following hyperthermia stress (HS), the majority of HD inoculated mice developed HSV1 encephalitis (HSE) rapidly and synchronously, whereas for LD inoculated mice reactivated HSV1 persisted only transiently in trigeminal ganglia (Tg). T cells, but not B cells, were required to suppress spontaneous reactivation in HD inoculated latently infected mice. Transfer of HSV1 memory but not OVA specific or naïve T cells prior to HS blocked IVR, revealing the utility of this powerful Rag latency model for studying immune mechanisms involved in control of reactivation. Crossing Rag mice to various knockout strains and infecting them with wild type or mutant HSV1 strains is expected to provide novel insights into the role of specific cellular and viral genes in reactivation, thereby facilitating identification of new targets with the potential to block reactivation.  相似文献   

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We recently demonstrated that CD8(+) T cells could block herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) reactivation from latency in ex vivo trigeminal ganglion (TG) cultures without destroying the infected neurons. Here we establish that CD8(+) T-cell prevention of HSV-1 reactivation from latency is mediated at least in part by gamma interferon (IFN-gamma). We demonstrate that IFN-gamma was produced in ex vivo cultures of dissociated latently infected TG by CD8(+) T cells that were present in the TG at the time of excision. Depletion of CD8(+) T cells or neutralization of IFN-gamma significantly enhanced the rate of HSV-1 reactivation from latency in TG cultures. When TG cultures were treated with acyclovir for 4 days to insure uniform latency, supplementation with recombinant IFN-gamma blocked HSV-1 reactivation in 80% of cultures when endogenous CD8(+) T cells were present and significantly reduced and delayed HSV-1 reactivation when CD8(+) T cells or CD45(+) cells were depleted from the TG cultures. The effectiveness of recombinant IFN-gamma in blocking HSV-1 reactivation was lost when its addition to TG cultures was delayed by more than 24 h after acyclovir removal. We propose that when the intrinsic ability of neurons to inhibit HSV-1 gene expression is compromised, HSV-specific CD8(+) T cells are rapidly mobilized to produce IFN-gamma and perhaps other antiviral cytokines that block the viral replication cycle and maintain the viral genome in a latent state.  相似文献   

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To date, characterization of latently infected tissue with respect to the number of cells in the tissue harboring the viral genome and the number of viral genomes contained within individual latently infected cells has not been possible. This level of cellular quantification is a critical step in determining (i) viral or host cell factors which function in the establishment and maintenance of latency, (ii) the relationship between latency burden and reactivation, and (iii) the effectiveness of vaccines or antivirals in reducing or preventing the establishment of latent infections. Presented here is a novel approach for the quantitative analysis of nucleic acids within the individual cells comprising complex solid tissues. One unique feature is that the analysis reflects the nucleic acids within the individual cells as they were in the context of the intact tissue-hence the name CXA, for contextual analysis. Trigeminal ganglia latently infected with herpes simplex virus (HSV) were analyzed by CXA of viral DNA. Both the type and the number of cells harboring the viral genome as well as the number of viral genomes within the individual latently infected cells were determined. Here it is demonstrated that (i) the long-term repository of HSV-1 DNA in the ganglion is the neuron, (ii) the viral-genome copy number within individual latently infected neurons is variable, ranging over 3 orders of magnitude from <10 to >1,000, (iii) there is a direct correlation between increasing viral input titer and the number of neurons in which latency is established in the ganglion, (iv) increasing viral input titer results in more neurons with greater numbers of viral-genome copies, (v) treatment with acyclovir (ACV) during acute infection reduces the number of latently infected ganglionic neurons 20-fold, and (vi) ACV treatment results in uniformly low (<10)-copy-number latency. This report represents the first comprehensive quantification of HSV latency at the level of single cells. Beyond viral latency, CXA has the potential to advance many studies in which rare cellular events occur in the background of a complex solid tissue mass, including microbial pathogenesis, tumorigenesis, and analysis of gene transfer.  相似文献   

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Murine models of gamma interferon (IFN-gamma) deficiency demonstrate the role of this cytokine in attenuating acute herpes simplex virus (HSV) disease; however, the effect of IFN-gamma on the establishment and maintenance of neuronal latency and viral reactivation is not known. Using the IFN-gamma knockout (GKO) model of IFN-gamma deficiency and sensitive quantitative PCR methods, we show that IFN-gamma significantly reduces the ganglion content of latent HSV-1 in BALB/c mice, which in turn delays viral time to reactivation following UV irradiation. Similar effects were not seen in the C57BL/6 strain. These results indicate that IFN-gamma significantly attenuates latent HSV infection in the mouse model of ocular infection but has no impact on the maintenance of latency or virus reactivation.  相似文献   

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Herpes simplex virus (HSV) encephalitis was produced in mice from reactivation of latent virus. Two experimental models were used: the trigeminal model after corneal inoculation of HSV, and the hypoglossal model after tongue inoculation of HSV. In the trigeminal model, cyclophosphamide treatment induced reactivation of latent virus in ganglia but not in central nervous system tissue. Spread of the reactivated virus from ganglia to brain occurred only in mice deficient in anti-HSV antibody. In the hypoglossal model, sectioning of the hypoglossal nerve provoked chromatolysis in the corresponding central nervous system motor neurons and occasionally reactivated latent HSV in the brains of mice. These results suggest that HSV encephalitis can result from the spread of reactivated virus from ganglia to brain and also from in situ reactivation in brain.  相似文献   

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