binding of herpes simplex virus type-1 virions leads to the induction of intracellular signalling in the absence of virus entry绑定的单纯疱疹病毒1型病毒导致细胞内信号的感应没有病毒的条目.pdf
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Binding of Herpes Simplex Virus Type-1 Virions Leads to
the Induction of Intracellular Signalling in the Absence of
Virus Entry
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Iain J. MacLeod* , Tony Minson
Division of Virology, Department of Pathology, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, United Kingdom
Abstract
The envelope of HSV-1 contains a number of glycoproteins, four of which are essential for virus entry. Virus particles lacking gB,
gD, gH or gL are entry-defective, although these viruses retain the ability to bind to the plasma membrane via the remaining
glycoproteins. Soluble forms of gD have been shown to trigger the nuclear translocation of the NF-kB transcriptional complex in
addition to stimulating the production of Type I interferon. By taking advantage of the entry-defective phenotype of
glycoprotein-deficient HSV-1 virus particles, the results presented here show that binding of virions to cellular receptors on the
plasma membrane is sufficient to stimulate a change in cellular gene expression. Preliminary microarray studies, validated by
quantitative real-time PCR, identified the differential expression of cellular genes associated with the NF-kB, PI3K/Akt, Jak/Stat
and related Jak/Src pathways by virions lacking gB or gH but not gD. Gene induction occurred at a few particles per cell,
corresponding to physiological conditions during primary infection. Reporter assay studies determined that NF-kB transcriptional
activity is stimulated within an hour of HSV-1 binding, peaks between two and three hours post-binding and declines to
background levels by five hours after induction. The immediate, transient nature of these signalling events suggests that HSV-1
glycoproteins, particularly gD, may alter the cellular environment pre-entry so as to condition the cell for viral replication.
Citation: MacLeod IJ, Minso
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