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1.
Cheng G  Gross M  Brett ME  He B 《Journal of virology》2001,75(8):3666-3674
The gamma(1)34.5 protein of herpes simplex virus (HSV) type 1 functions to prevent the shutoff of protein synthesis mediated by the double-stranded-RNA-dependent protein kinase PKR. This is because gamma(1)34.5 associates with protein phosphatase 1 (PP1) through its carboxyl terminus, forming a high-molecular-weight complex that dephosphorylates the alpha subunit of translation initiation factor eIF-2 (eIF-2alpha). Here we show that Val193Glu and Phe195Leu substitutions in the PP1 signature motif of the gamma(1)34.5 protein abolished its ability to redirect PP1 to dephosphorylate eIF-2alpha and replication of mutant viruses was severely impaired. The gamma(1)34.5 protein, when expressed in Sf9 cells using a recombinant baculovirus, was capable of directing specific eIF-2alpha dephosphorylation. Deletions of amino acids 258 to 263 had no effect on activity of gamma(1)34.5. However, deletions of amino acids 238 to 258 abolished eIF-2alpha phosphatase activity but not PP1 binding activity. Interestingly, deletions in the AlaArg motif of the carboxyl terminus disrupted the high-molecular-weight complex that is required for dephosphorylation of eIF-2alpha. These results demonstrate that gamma(1)34.5 is functionally active in the absence of any other HSV proteins. In addition to a PP1 binding domain, the carboxyl terminus of gamma(1)34.5 contains an effector domain that is required to form a functional complex.  相似文献   

2.
Jing X  Cerveny M  Yang K  He B 《Journal of virology》2004,78(14):7653-7666
The ability of the gamma(1)34.5 protein to suppress the PKR response plays a crucial role in herpes simplex virus pathogenesis. In this process, the gamma(1)34.5 protein associates with protein phosphatase 1 to form a large complex that dephosphorylates eIF-2alpha and thereby prevents translation shutoff mediated by PKR. Accordingly, gamma(1)34.5 null mutants are virulent in PKR-knockout mice but not in wild-type mice. However, gamma(1)34.5 deletion mutants, with an extragenic compensatory mutation, inhibit PKR activity but remain avirulent, suggesting that the gamma(1)34.5 protein has additional functions. Here, we show that a substitution of the gamma(1)34.5 gene with the NS1 gene from influenza A virus renders viral resistance to interferon involving PKR. The virus replicates as efficiently as wild-type virus in SK-N-SH and CV-1 cells. However, in mouse 3T6 cells, the virus expressing the NS1 protein grows at an intermediate level between the wild-type virus and the gamma(1)34.5 deletion mutant. This decrease in growth, compared to that of the wild-type virus, is due not to an inhibition of viral protein synthesis but rather to a block in virus release or egress. Virus particles are predominantly present in the nucleus and cytoplasm. Notably, deletions in the amino terminus of the gamma(1)34.5 protein lead to a significant decrease in virus growth in mouse 3T6 cells, which is independent of eIF-2alpha dephosphorylation. In correlation, a series of deletions in the amino-terminal domain impair nuclear as well as cytoplasmic egress. These results indicate that efficient viral replication depends on the gamma(1)34.5 functions required to prevent the PKR response and to facilitate virus egress in the different stages during virus infection.  相似文献   

3.
Earlier studies have shown that herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) activated protein kinase R (PKR) but that the product of the product of the gamma(1)34.5 gene binds and redirects the host phosphatase 1 to dephosphorylate the alpha subunit of eukaryotic translation initiation factor 2 (eIF-2alpha). In consequence, the gamma(1)34.5 gene product averts the threatened shutoff of protein synthesis caused by activated PKR. Serial passages of Deltagamma(1)34.5 mutants in human cells led to isolation of two classes of second-site, compensatory mutants. The first, reported earlier, resulted from the juxtaposition of the alpha promoter of the U(S)12 gene to the coding sequence of the U(S)11 gene. The mutant blocks the phosphorylation of eIF-2alpha but does not restore the virulence phenotype of the wild-type virus. We report another class of second-site, compensatory mutants that do not map to the U(S)10-12 domain of the HSV-1 genome. All mutants in this series exhibit sustained late protein synthesis, higher yields in human cells, and reduced phosphorylation of PKR that appears to be phosphatase dependent. Specific dephosphorylation of eIF-2alpha was not demonstrable. At least one mutant in this series exhibited a partial restoration of the virulence phenotype characteristic of the wild-type virus phenotype. The results suggest that the second-site mutations reflect activation of fossilized functions designed to block the interferon response pathways in cells infected with the progenitor of present HSV.  相似文献   

4.
Cheng G  Brett ME  He B 《Journal of virology》2002,76(18):9434-9445
The gamma(1)34.5 protein of herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) is required for viral neurovirulence in vivo. In infected cells, this viral protein prevents the shutoff of protein synthesis mediated by double-stranded-RNA-dependent protein kinase PKR. This is accomplished by recruiting protein phosphatase 1 to dephosphorylate the alpha subunit of translation initiation factor eIF-2 (eIF-2 alpha). Moreover, the gamma(1)34.5 protein is implicated in viral egress and interacts with proliferating cell nuclear antigen. In this report, we show that the gamma(1)34.5 protein encoded by HSV-1(F) is distributed in the nucleus, nucleolus, and cytoplasm in transfected or superinfected cells. Deletion analysis revealed that the Arg-rich cluster from amino acids 1 to 16 in the gamma(1)34.5 protein functions as a nucleolar localization signal. The region from amino acids 208 to 236, containing a bipartite basic amino acid cluster, is able to mediate nuclear localization. R(215)A and R(216)A substitutions in the bipartite motif disrupt this activity. Intriguingly, leptomycin B, an inhibitor of nuclear export, blocks the cytoplasmic accumulation of the gamma(1)34.5 protein. L(134)A and L(136)A substitutions in the leucine-rich motif completely excluded the gamma(1)34.5 protein from the cytoplasm. These results suggest that the gamma(1)34.5 protein continuously shuttles between the nucleus, nucleolus, and cytoplasm, which may be a requirement for the different activities of the gamma(1)34.5 protein in virus-infected cells.  相似文献   

5.
Mulvey M  Camarena V  Mohr I 《Journal of virology》2004,78(18):10193-10196
The gamma(1)34.5 gene product is important for the resistance of herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) to interferon. However, since the inhibition of protein synthesis observed in cells infected with a gamma(1)34.5 mutant virus results from the combined loss of the gamma(1)34.5 gene product and the failure to translate the late Us11 mRNA, we sought to characterize the relative interferon sensitivity of mutants unable to produce either the Us11 or the gamma(1)34.5 polypeptide. We now demonstrate that primary human cells infected with a Us11 mutant virus are hypersensitive to alpha interferon, arresting translation upon entry into the late phase of the viral life cycle. Furthermore, immediate-early expression of Us11 by a gamma(1)34.5 deletion mutant is sufficient to render translation resistant to alpha interferon. Finally, we establish that the Us11 gene product is required for wild-type levels of replication in alpha interferon-treated cells and, along with the gamma(1)34.5 gene, is an HSV-1-encoded interferon resistance determinant.  相似文献   

6.
Earlier studies have shown that infection of human cells by herpes simplex virus 1 (HSV-1) results in the activation of RNA-dependent protein kinase (PKR) but that the alpha subunit of eIF-2 is not phosphorylated and that protein synthesis is unaffected. In the absence of the viral gamma(1)34.5 gene, eIF-2alpha is phosphorylated and protein synthesis is prematurely shut off (J. Chou, J. J. Chen, M. Gross, and B. Roizman, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 92:10516-10520, 1995). A second recent paper reported the selection of second-site suppressor mutants characterized by near-wild-type protein synthesis in cells infected with gamma(1)34.5- mutants (I. Mohr and Y. Gluzman, EMBO J. 15:4759-4766, 1996). Here, we report the properties of the spontaneous HSV-1 suppressor mutant Sup-1, which is characterized by spontaneous deletion of 503 bp encompassing the domain of the alpha47 gene and junction with the inverted repeats flanking the unique short (U(S)) sequence of the HSV-1 DNA resulting in the juxtaposition of the alpha47 promoter to the coding domain of the U(S)11 gene. This mutant does not exhibit the shutoff of protein synthesis characteristic of the gamma(1)34.5- virus. Specifically, Sup-1 in SK-N-SH human neuroblastoma cells (i) did not exhibit the function of the alpha47 gene characterized by a reduction in the transport of peptides across the endoplasmic reticulum of permealized cells consistent with the absence of alpha47 gene sequences, (ii) accumulated U(S)11 protein at levels analogous to those of the wild-type parent but the protein was made at earlier times after infection, as would be expected from a change in the promoter, and (iii) activated PKR like that of the parent, gamma(1)34.5- virus, but (iv) did not cause premature shutoff of protein synthesis and therefore was similar to the wild-type parent virus rather than the gamma(1)34.5- virus from which it was derived. We conclude that the mechanism by which Sup-1 blocks the shutoff of protein synthesis associated with phosphorylation of eIF-2alpha by the activated PKR is not readily explainable by a secondary mutation characterized by a deletion.  相似文献   

7.
Cheng G  Feng Z  He B 《Journal of virology》2005,79(3):1379-1388
The gamma(1)34.5 protein of herpes simplex virus (HSV) plays a crucial role in virus infection. Although the double-stranded RNA-dependent protein kinase (PKR) is activated during HSV infection, the gamma(1)34.5 protein inhibits the activity of PKR by mediating dephosphorylation of the translation initiation factor eIF-2alpha. Here we show that HSV infection also induces phosphorylation of an endoplasmic reticulum (ER) resident kinase PERK, a hallmark of ER stress response. The virus-induced phosphorylation of PERK is blocked by cycloheximide but not by phosphonoacetic acid, suggesting that the accumulation of viral proteins in the ER is essential. Notably, the maximal phosphorylation of PERK is delayed in PKR+/+ cells compared to that seen in PKR-/- cells. Further analysis indicates that hyperphosphorylation of eIF-2alpha caused by HSV is greater in PKR+/+ cells than in PKR-/- cells. However, expression of the gamma(1)34.5 protein suppresses the ER stress response caused by virus, dithiothreitol, and thapsigargin as measured by global protein synthesis. Interestingly, the expression of GADD34 stimulated by HSV infection parallels the status of eIF-2alpha phosphorylation. Together, these observations suggest that regulation of eIF-2alpha phosphorylation by the gamma(1)34.5 protein is an efficient way to antagonize the inhibitory activity of PKR as well as PERK during productive infection.  相似文献   

8.
9.
10.
Multiple herpes simplex virus type 1 functions control translation by regulating phosphorylation of the initiation factor eIF2 on its alpha subunit. Both of the two known regulators, the gamma(1)34.5 and Us11 gene products, are produced late in the viral life cycle, although the gamma(1)34.5 gene is expressed prior to the gamma(2) Us11 gene, as gamma(2) genes require viral DNA replication for their expression while gamma(1) genes do not. The gamma(1)34.5 protein, through a GADD34-related domain, binds a cellular phosphatase (PP1alpha), maintaining pools of active, unphosphorylated eIF2. Infection of a variety of cultured cells with a gamma(1)34.5 mutant virus results in the accumulation of phosphorylated eIF2alpha and the inhibition of translation prior to the completion of the viral lytic program. Ectopic, immediate-early Us11 expression prevents eIF2alpha phosphorylation and the inhibition of translation observed in cells infected with a gamma(1)34.5 mutant by inhibiting activation of the cellular kinase PKR and the subsequent phosphorylation of eIF2alpha; however, a requirement for the Us11 protein, produced in its natural context as a gamma(2) polypeptide, remains to be demonstrated. To determine if Us11 regulates late translation, we generated two Us11 null viruses. In cells infected with a Us11 mutant, elevated levels of activated PKR and phosphorylated eIF2alpha were detected, viral translation rates were reduced 6- to 7-fold, and viral replication was reduced 13-fold compared to replication in cells infected with either wild-type virus or a virus in which the Us11 mutation was repaired. This establishes that the Us11 protein is critical for proper late translation rates. Moreover, it demonstrates that the shutoff of protein synthesis observed in cells infected with a gamma(1)34.5 mutant virus, previously ascribed solely to the gamma(1)34.5 mutation, actually results from the combined loss of gamma(1)34.5 and Us11 functions, as the gamma(2) Us11 mRNA is not translated in cells infected with a gamma(1)34.5 mutant.  相似文献   

11.
In cells infected with the herpes simplex virus 1 (HSV-1) recombinant R3616 lacking both copies of the γ134.5 gene, the double-stranded protein kinase R (PKR) is activated, eIF-2α is phosphorylated, and protein synthesis is shut off. Although PKR is also activated in cells infected with the wild-type virus, the product of the γ134.5 gene, infected-cell protein 34.5 (ICP34.5), binds protein phosphatase 1α and redirects it to dephosphorylate eIF-2α, thus enabling sustained protein synthesis. Serial passage in human cells of a mutant lacking the γ134.5 gene yields second-site, compensatory mutants lacking various domains of the α47 gene situated next to the US11 gene (I. Mohr and Y. Gluzman, EMBO J. 15:4759–4766, 1996). We report the construction of two recombinant viruses: R5103, lacking the γ134.5, US8, -9, -10, and -11, and α47 (US12) genes; and R5104, derived from R5103 and carrying a chimeric DNA fragment containing the US10 gene and the promoter of the α47 gene fused to the coding domain of the US11 gene. R5104 exhibited a protein synthesis profile similar to that of wild-type virus, whereas protein synthesis was shut off in cells infected with R5103 virus. Studies on the wild-type parent and mutant viruses showed the following: (i) PKR was activated in cells infected with parent or mutant virus but not in mock-infected cells, consistent with earlier studies; (ii) lysates of R3616, R5103, and R5104 virus-infected cells lacked the phosphatase activity specific for eIF-2α characteristic of wild-type virus-infected cells; and (iii) lysates of R3616 and R5103, which lacked the second-site compensatory mutation, contained an activity which phosphorylated eIF-2α in vitro, whereas lysates of mock-infected cells or cells infected with HSV-1(F) or R5104 did not phosphorylate eIF-2α. We conclude that in contrast to wild-type virus-infected cells, which preclude the shutoff of protein synthesis by causing rapid dephosphorylation of eIF-2α, in cells infected with γ134.5 virus carrying the compensatory mutation, eIF-2α is not phosphorylated. The activity made apparent by the second-site mutation may represent a more ancient mechanism evolved to preclude the shutoff of protein synthesis.  相似文献   

12.
The herpes simplex virus type 1 gamma(1)34.5 gene product precludes the host-mediated protein shutoff response induced by activated protein kinase R (PKR). Earlier studies demonstrated that recombinant viruses lacking the gamma(1)34.5 gene (Deltagamma(1)34.5) developed secondary mutations that allowed earlier U(S)11 expression and enabled continued protein synthesis. Further, in vitro studies demonstrated that a recombinant expressed U(S)11 protein binds PKR, blocks the phosphorylation of the alpha subunit of eukaryotic initiation factor 2 (eIF-2alpha) by activated PKR, and, if provided prior to PKR activation, precluded PKR autophosphorylation. The present study furthers the hypothesis that early U(S)11 production precludes PKR-mediated host protein shutoff by demonstrating that (i) U(S)11 and PKR interact in the context of viral infection, (ii) this interaction is RNA dependent and requires a 30-amino-acid domain (amino acids 91 to 121) in the carboxyl domain of the U(S)11 protein, (iii) the proteins biochemically colocalize in the S100 ribosomal fraction, and (iv) there is a PKR substrate domain immediately adjacent to the binding domain. The results suggest that the U(S)11 interaction with PKR at the ribosome is RNA dependent and that the U(S)11 protein contains a substrate domain with homology to eIF-2alpha in close proximity to an essential binding domain.  相似文献   

13.
I Mohr  Y Gluzman 《The EMBO journal》1996,15(17):4759-4766
Novel suppressor variants of conditionally lethal HSV-1 gamma34.5 deletion mutants have been isolated which exhibit restored ability to grow on neoplastic neuronal cells. Deletion of the viral gamma34.5 genes, whose products share functional similarity with the cellular GADD34 gene, renders the virus non-neurovirulent and imposes a block to viral replication in neuronal cells. Protein synthesis ceases at late times post-infection and the translation initiation factor eIF2alpha is phosphorylated by the cellular PKR kinase [Chou et al. (1990) Science, 252, 1262-1266; (1995) Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA, 92, 10516-10520]. The suppressor mutants have overcome the translational block imposed by PKR. Multiple, independent isolates all contain rearrangements within a 595 bp element in the HSV-1 genome where the unique short component joins the terminal repeats. This alteration, which affects the production of the viral mRNA and protein from the Us11 and Us12 genes, is both necessary and sufficient to confer the suppressor phenotype on gamma34.5 mutant viruses. HSV-1 thus encodes a specific element which inhibits ongoing protein synthesis in the absence of the viral GADD34-like function. Since this inhibition involves the accumulation of phosphorylated eIF2alpha, the element identified by the suppressor mutations may be a discrete PKR activator. Activation of the PKR kinase thus does not proceed through a general, cellular 'antiviral' sensing mechanism. Instead, the virus deliberately activates PKR and encodes a separate function which selectively prevents the phosphorylation of at least one PKR target, eIF2alpha. The nature of this potential activator element, and how analogous cellular elements could affect PKR pathways which affect growth arrest and differentiation are discussed.  相似文献   

14.
The growth arrest and DNA damage-inducible protein, GADD34, was identified by its interaction with human inhibitor 1 (I-1), a protein kinase A (PKA)-activated inhibitor of type 1 protein serine/threonine phosphatase (PP1), in a yeast two-hybrid screen of a human brain cDNA library. Recombinant GADD34 (amino acids 233 to 674) bound both PKA-phosphorylated and unphosphorylated I-1(1-171). Serial truncations mapped the C terminus of I-1 (amino acids 142 to 171) as essential for GADD34 binding. In contrast, PKA phosphorylation was required for PP1 binding and inhibition by the N-terminal I-1(1-80) fragment. Pulldowns of GADD34 proteins expressed in HEK293T cells showed that I-1 bound the central domain of GADD34 (amino acids 180 to 483). By comparison, affinity isolation of cellular GADD34/PP1 complexes showed that PP1 bound near the C terminus of GADD34 (amino acids 483 to 619), a region that shows sequence homology with the virulence factors ICP34.5 of herpes simplex virus and NL-S of avian sarcoma virus. While GADD34 inhibited PP1-catalyzed dephosphorylation of phosphorylase a, the GADD34-bound PP1 was an active eIF-2alpha phosphatase. In brain extracts from active ground squirrels, GADD34 bound both I-1 and PP1 and eIF-2alpha was largely dephosphorylated. In contrast, the I-1/GADD34 and PP1/GADD34 interactions were disrupted in brain from hibernating animals, in which eIF-2alpha was highly phosphorylated at serine-51 and protein synthesis was inhibited. These studies suggested that modification of the I-1/GADD34/PP1 signaling complex regulates the initiation of protein translation in mammalian tissues.  相似文献   

15.
16.
The virion host shutoff (vhs) protein of herpes simplex virus (HSV) has endoribonuclease activity and rapidly reduces protein synthesis in infected cells through mRNA degradation. Herpes simplex virus 1 (HSV-1) and HSV-2 vhs mutants are highly attenuated in vivo, but replication and virulence are largely restored to HSV-2 vhs mutants in the absence of a type I interferon (IFN) response. The role of vhs in pathogenesis and the hindrance of the type I IFN response have classically been examined with viruses that completely lack vhs or express a truncated vhs protein. To determine whether RNase activity is the principal mechanism of vhs-mediated type I IFN resistance and virulence, we constructed a HSV-2 point mutant that synthesizes full-length vhs protein lacking RNase activity (RNase(-) virus). Wild-type and mutant HSV-2 vhs proteins coimmunoprecipitated with VP16 and VP22. vhs protein bearing the point mutation was packaged into the virion as efficiently as the wild-type vhs protein. Like a mutant encoding truncated vhs, the RNase(-) virus showed IFN-dependent replication that was restricted compared with that of the wild-type virus. The RNase(-) virus was highly attenuated in wild-type mice infected intravaginally, with reduced mucosal replication, disease severity, and spread to the nervous system comparable to those of the vhs truncation mutant. Surprisingly, in alpha/beta interferon (IFN-alpha/beta) receptor knockout mice, the vhs RNase mutant was more attenuated than the vhs truncation mutant in terms of disease severity and virus titer in vaginal swabs and central nervous system samples, suggesting that non-enzymatically active vhs protein interferes with efficient virus replication. Our results indicate that vhs enzymatic activity plays a complex role in vhs-mediated type I IFN resistance during HSV-2 infection.  相似文献   

17.
In cell culture experiments, phosphorylation appears to be a critical regulator of the herpes simplex virus 1 (HSV-1) immediate-early (IE) protein, ICP0, which is an E3 ubiquitin ligase that transactivates viral gene expression. Three major regions of phosphorylation in ICP0 (amino acids 224 to 232, 365 to 371, and 508 to 518) have been identified, and mutant viruses that block phosphorylation sites within each region (termed Phos 1, 2, and 3, respectively) have been constructed. Previous studies indicated that replication of Phos 1 is significantly reduced compared to that of wild-type virus in cell culture (C. Boutell, et al., J. Virol. 82:10647-10656, 2008). To determine the effects these phosphorylation site mutations have on the viral life cycle in vivo, mice were ocularly infected with wild-type HSV-1, the Phos mutants, or their marker rescue counterparts. Subsequently, viral replication, establishment of latency, and viral explant-induced reactivation of these viruses were examined. Relative to wild-type virus, Phos 1 eye titers were reduced as much as 7- and 18-fold on days 1 and 5 postinfection, respectively. Phos 2 eye titers showed a decrease of 6-fold on day 1 postinfection. Titers of Phos 1 and 2 trigeminal ganglia were reduced as much as 16- and 20-fold, respectively, on day 5 postinfection. Additionally, the reactivation efficiencies of Phos 1 and 2 were impaired relative to wild-type HSV-1, although both viruses established wild-type levels of latency in vivo. The acute replication, latency, and reactivation phenotypes of Phos 3 were similar to those of wild-type HSV-1. We conclude from these studies that phosphorylation is likely a key modulator of ICP0's biological activities in a mouse ocular model of HSV-1 infection.  相似文献   

18.
19.
Ma Y  Jin H  Valyi-Nagy T  Cao Y  Yan Z  He B 《Journal of virology》2012,86(4):2188-2196
The γ(1)34.5 protein of herpes simplex viruses (HSV) is essential for viral pathogenesis, where it precludes translational arrest mediated by double-stranded-RNA-dependent protein kinase (PKR). Paradoxically, inhibition of PKR alone is not sufficient for HSV to exhibit viral virulence. Here we report that γ(1)34.5 inhibits TANK binding kinase 1 (TBK1) through its amino-terminal sequences, which facilitates viral replication and neuroinvasion. Compared to wild-type virus, the γ(1)34.5 mutant lacking the amino terminus induces stronger antiviral immunity. This parallels a defect of γ(1)34.5 for interacting with TBK1 and reducing phosphorylation of interferon (IFN) regulatory factor 3. This activity is independent of PKR. Although resistant to IFN treatment, the γ(1)34.5 amino-terminal deletion mutant replicates at an intermediate level between replication of wild-type virus and that of the γ(1)34.5 null mutant in TBK1(+/+) cells. However, such impaired viral growth is not observed in TBK1(-/-) cells, indicating that the interaction of γ(1)34.5 with TBK1 dictates HSV infection. Upon corneal infection, this mutant replicates transiently but barely invades the trigeminal ganglia or brain, which is a difference from wild-type virus and the γ(1)34.5 null mutant. Therefore, in addition to PKR, γ(1)34.5 negatively regulates TBK1, which contributes viral replication and spread in vivo.  相似文献   

20.
We describe here the neurovirulence properties of a herpes simplex virus type 1 gamma34.5 second-site suppressor mutant. gamma34.5 mutants are nonneurovirulent in animals and fail to grow in a variety of cultured cells due to a block at the level of protein synthesis. Extragenic suppressors with restored capacity to replicate in cells that normally do not support the growth of the parental gamma34.5 deletion mutant have been isolated. Although the suppressor virus reacquires the ability to grow in nonpermissive cultured cells, it remains severely attenuated in mice and is indistinguishable from the mutant gamma34.5 parent virus at the doses investigated. Repairing the gamma34.5 mutation in the suppressor mutant restores neurovirulence to wild-type levels. These studies illustrate that (i) the protein synthesis and neurovirulence defects observed in gamma34.5 mutant viruses can be genetically separated by an extragenic mutation at another site in the viral chromosome; (ii) the extragenic suppressor mutation does not affect neurovirulence; and (iii) the attenuated gamma34.5 mutant, which replicates poorly in many cell types, can be modified by genetic selection to generate a nonpathogenic variant that regains the ability to grow robustly in a nonpermissive glioblastoma cell line. As this gamma34.5 second-site suppressor variant is attenuated and replicates vigorously in neoplastic cells, it may have potential as a replication-competent, viral antitumor agent.  相似文献   

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