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J. Virol., Aug 1997, 5878-5884, Vol 71, No. 8
SH Chen, MF Kramer, PA Schaffer and DM Coen
Latent infections of neurons by herpes simplex virus form reservoirs of
recurrent viral infections that resist cure. In latently infected neurons,
viral gene expression is severely repressed; only the latency- associated
transcripts (LATs) are expressed abundantly. Using sensitive reverse
transcriptase PCR assays, we analyzed the effects of a deletion mutation in
the LAT locus on viral gene expression in latently infected mouse
trigeminal ganglia. The deletion mutation, which reduced expression of the
major LATs 10(5)-fold, resulted in a approximately 5- fold increase in
accumulation of transcripts from the immediate-early gene encoding ICP4, an
essential transactivator of viral gene expression. The LAT deletion also
resulted in a >10-fold increase in the accumulation of transcripts from
the early gene encoding thymidine kinase, whose expression during
productive infection stringently depends on ICP4, and positively affected
the correlation of the levels of these transcripts with the levels of ICP4
transcripts. We also detected transcripts antisense to ICP4 RNA, which were
in substantial excess to ICP4 transcripts in ganglia latently infected with
wild-type virus. In contrast to its effects on productive-cycle
transcripts, the LAT deletion reduced the accumulation of these antisense
transcripts approximately 15-fold. Thus, a viral function associated with
the LAT locus represses the accumulation of transcripts from at least two
productive-cycle genes in latently infected mouse ganglia. We discuss
possible mechanisms and consequences of this repression.
Copyright © 1997, American Society for Microbiology
A viral function represses accumulation of transcripts from productive- cycle genes in mouse ganglia latently infected with herpes simplex virus
Department of Biological Chemistry and Molecular Pharmacology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02115, USA.
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