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Journal of Virology, February 2002, p. 1224-1235, Vol. 76, No. 3
0022-538X/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JVI.76.3.1224-1235.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Ophthalmology Research Laboratories, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center Burns & Allen Research Institute,1 Department of Ophthalmology, UCLA School of Medicine, Los Angeles, California 90048,2 Department of Veterinary and Biomedical Sciences, University of Nebraska at Lincoln, Lincoln, Nebraska 68583-0903
Received 18 September 2001/ Accepted 29 October 2001
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During neuronal latency, LAT (latency-associated transcript) is the only abundantly transcribed viral gene (30, 37). The primary LAT transcript is ca. 8.3 kb long (7, 45) and overlaps two viral genes, ICP0 and ICP34.5, in an antisense direction (30, 37). A very stable intron, the 2-kb LAT is spliced from the primary transcript (9) and is the major LAT RNA detected during latency (7, 33, 36, 4244).
LAT enhances the induced and spontaneous reactivation phenotypes in the rabbit ocular model (12, 21) and the induced reactivation phenotype in mice (1a, 6, 19, 26, 31, 35). The reduced reactivation phenotypes of LAT- mutants does not necessarily imply that LAT is directly involved in the molecular mechanism of HSV-1 reactivation from latency. LAT might enhance reactivation by increasing the initial amount of latency established and/or by maintaining a high level of latently infected neurons. The larger pool of latently infected neurons and/or the larger pool of neurons containing high copy numbers of the HSV-1 genome would be expected to increase reactivation. Several reports have, in fact, shown that in experimentally infected animals more neurons become latently infected with LAT+ viruses compared to LAT- viruses (29, 31, 40). In addition, we have recently shown that LAT has antiapoptosis activity that could protect acutely infected neurons from virus-induced programmed cell death and result in increased establishment of latency (15, 20).
Because of LATs antisense orientation to ICP0, it was originally proposed that LAT might function in the latency-reactivation cycle by regulating ICP0 expression via an antisense mechanism (30, 37). In addition, an apparent readthrough LAT transcript extends well into the region of another important immediate-early gene, ICP4, also in an antisense orientation. Thus, it has been proposed that LAT may suppress these immediate-early genes via an antisense mechanism and that this in turn results in virus shutdown and increased establishment of latency, subsequently resulting in increased reactivation (3, 10). However, the LAT function that enhances reactivation maps to within the first 1.5 kb of the primary LAT transcript (2, 24). This 1.5-kb region does not overlap ICP0 or ICP4, encompasses only the first 837 nucleotides of the stable 2-kb LAT, and does not retain the 2-kb LAT stability (24). Thus, LAT must enhance reactivation in the rabbit by a mechanism that does not involve antisense regulation of ICP0, does not require production of the entire 2-kb LAT, does not require splicing of the 2-kb LAT, and does not require the presence of a stable LAT RNA.
We recently showed that LAT has antiapoptosis activity in the absence of other viral genes, which correlates well with a LAT null mutant inducing high levels of virus-induced programmed cell death (apoptosis) in neurons of HSV-1-infected rabbit TG (20). LATs antiapoptosis activity has been independently confirmed in tissue culture and in the mouse model of ocular HSV-1 (1). Moreover, we have shown that this antiapoptosis activity maps to within the same 1.5-kb region to which enhancement of the spontaneous reactivation phenotype maps (15). This further suggests that LATs antiapoptosis activity is important in the latency-reactivation cycle.
To investigate this further, we constructed an HSV-1 mutant in which both copies of the region of LAT that enhances the reactivation phenotype were removed and replaced by a different antiapoptosis gene. If a recombinant virus containing an alternative antiapoptosis gene in place of LAT had a LAT null mutant-like reactivation rate, it would suggest that interfering with apoptosis is not the primary LAT function responsible for enhancing reactivation. In contrast, if an alternative antiapoptosis gene could effectively replace LAT and produce a virus with wild type-like reactivation, it would suggest that LATs antiapoptosis activity was key to LATs ability to enhance reactivation.
We report here on the construction of a chimeric recombinant HSV-1 virus, CJLAT, in which both copies of LAT were replaced with the bovine herpesvirus type 1 (BHV-1) latency-related (LR) gene. Like LAT, the LR gene can block apoptosis in transient-transfection assays in tissue culture (4). We show here that, compared to the LAT- mutant dLAT2903, CJLAT had significantly higher in vivo spontaneous reactivation in the rabbit (P = 0.0003 and P < 0.0001 in two independent experiments) and significantly higher in vitro-induced reactivation in the mouse (P = 0.001). These results support the hypothesis that LATs antiapoptosis activity is important for LATs ability to enhance reactivation.
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Construction of CJLAT. The plasmid p1658 contains two HSV-1 DNA restriction fragments. One restriction fragment (HpaI-EcoRV) corresponds to the region from 1800 to 161 nucleotides upstream of the LAT start site (LAT nucleotides -1800 to -161). The other restriction fragment (HpaI-MluI) corresponds to LAT nucleotides 1667 to 2850. A unique PacI restriction site was cloned between these restriction fragments (i.e., between LAT nucleotides -161 and +1667). PacI linkers were added to the complete BHV-1 LR gene DNA, which was then cloned into the above unique PacI restriction site of p1658. The LR gene was a 1.9-kb HindIII-SalI fragment derived from the HindIIID fragment of BHV-1 strain Cooper (BHV-1 nucleotides 1 to 1941) that contains the LR promoter and the known coding sequences (18). The resulting plasmid, CJLATP1658, was cotransfected with infectious dLAT2903 genomic DNA into RS cells as we previously described for construction of other HSV-1 mutants (21, 25). After homologous recombination between the HSV-1 DNA flanking the BHV-LR DNA in the plasmid and the genomic DNA flanking the LAT deletion in dLAT2903, the cotransfection mix was plated on RS cells, and viral plaques were isolated. Individual plaques were analyzed by restriction digestion and Southern analysis. In the final chimeric virus, CJLAT, the core LAT promoter and the region of the LAT gene corresponding to the first 1.7-kb of the primary LAT transcript of HSV-1 McKrae has been replaced by the BHV-1 LAT gene. CJLAT was triple plaque purified and its genomic structure was confirmed by additional restriction digestion-Southern analysis.
Rabbits. Eight- to ten-week-old New Zealand White male rabbits (Irish Farms) were used. Rabbits were treated in accordance with ARVO (Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology), AALAC (American Association for Laboratory Animal Care), and National Institutes of Health guidelines. Rabbits were bilaterally infected without scarification or anesthesia by placing, as eye drops, 2 x 105 PFU of virus into the conjunctival cul-de-sac, closing the eye, and rubbing the lid gently against the eye for 30 s as we previously described (30). Analysis of virus replication in eyes was done as previously described (21)
Mice. Swiss-Webster mice were used. Mice were ocularly infected as for rabbits except that the infectious dose was 2 x 106 PFU/eye. Analysis of virus replication in the eyes and TG was done as previously described (26).
Neutralization assay. Serum-neutralizing antibody titers were determined by standard plaque reduction assays as previously described (28).
Northern blot hybridization. Subconfluent cell monolayers were infected at a multiplicity of infection (MOI) of 5 PFU/cell, total RNA was isolated, and Northern blot analysis was performed according to standard protocols by using a 32P-labeled cloned restriction fragment specific for the detection of BHV LR-RNA or specific for the detection of HSV-1 LAT and ICP0.
RT-PCR. For the reverse transcription (RT) step, 1 µg of total cell RNA (DNase treated) was mixed with 1 µg of random hexamer primers in a total volume of 4 µl, incubated at 65°C for 7.5 min, and chilled on ice (denaturation). Then, 16 µl of ice-cold RT mix (20 mM Tris-HCl [pH 8.3]), 50 mM KCl, 2.5 mM MgCl2, 100 µg of bovine serum albumin/ml, 1 mM dithiothreitol, a 0.5 mM concentration of each deoxynucleoside triphosphate, 10 U of RNasin, and 100 U of RNase H- reverse transcriptase [Stratagene]) was added. The reaction mixture was incubated for 10 min at 20.5°C and then for 90 min at 45°C. RT was terminated by incubation at 95°C for 5 min. As a control for DNA contamination in the RNA samples, 0.5 µg of RNA (DNase treated) was mixed with ice-cold RT mix lacking reverse transcriptase in a final volume of 10 µl.
An aliquot (1.5 µl) of RT reaction mixtures was used for each PCR. PCRs were carried out in 50 µl of a mixture containing 1x commercial PCR buffer, a 200 µM concentration of each deoxynucleoside triphosphate, 1.0 mM MgCl2, a 1 µM concentration of each LR primer, 10% glycerol, and 1 U of Taq polymerase. Amplification was carried out for 40 cycles of denaturing at 95°C for 1 min, annealing at 65°C for 1 min, and extending at 72°C for 2 min. After completion of the last cycle, reaction mixtures were further incubated at 72°C for 7 min to ensure complete extension of the amplified products. All PCRs were "hot started." The use of RNase H- reverse transcriptase, a high temperature for RT, 10% glycerol, and a "hot start" in the PCRs allow amplification through RNA regions of complex secondary structure. Amplified products were visualized on agarose gels. The LR primers usedL3B upstream (nucleotides 1755 to 1775; 5'-TTCTCTGGGCTCGGGGCTGC-3') and L3B downstream (nucleotides 1924 to 1947; 5'-AGAGGTCGACAAACACCCGCGGT-3')were described previously (13).
Statistical analysis. Analyses were performed by using the personal computer program Prizm GraphPad, version 3.02.
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FIG. 1. Schematic representation of mutant viruses. (A) Genomic structure of wild-type HSV-1 strain McKrae. TRL and IRL indicate the viral long repeats (terminal and internal, respectively). IRS and TRS indicate the viral short repeats. UL and US indicate the long and short unique regions. The dashed lines indicate that the region of the TRL and IRL are expanded below with the TRL inverted relative to the IRL so that both identical regions can be represented by a single image. (B) The LAT region of wild-type and marker-rescued dLAT2903R. The LAT promoter is represented by the open rectangle. The primary 8.3-kb LAT transcript is indicated by the large arrow. The solid rectangle indicates the stable 2-kb LAT intron. The start of LAT transcription is indicated by the arrow at +1 (LAT nucleotide 1). The relative locations of the ICP0 and ICP34.5 RNAs are shown for reference. (C) The deletion from LAT nucleotide -161 to +1667 in dLAT2903 is indicated by "XXXXXXX." dLAT2903 is a true LAT null mutant that is missing primary LAT promoter elements between positions -161 and +1. dLAT2903 is also lacking a putative secondary LAT promoter, LAP2, located within the 5' end of the primary LAT transcript prior to the start of the 2-kb LAT (11). This mutant therefore is not capable of expressing any LAT RNA (21). (D) The LAT region of CJLAT. The complete LR gene of BHV-1, including the promoter (a 1,941-bp HindIII-SalI fragment), was inserted into the deletion in dLAT2903. The resulting virus expresses the LR-RNA from the HSV-1 LAT region.
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CJLAT expresses BHV LR-RNA but no HSV-1-LAT. CV-1 cells were infected with CJLAT, dLAT2903, or wild-type McKrae at an MOI of 5. Total RNA was isolated at various times postinfection (p.i.). RT-PCR was performed by using the L3B primers specific for BHV-1 LR-RNA, and the RT-PCR products were analyzed by agarose gel electrophoresis as described in Materials and Methods (Fig. 2A). Lane 13 shows the PCR product generated from cloned LR DNA and acts as a size marker. An RT-PCR product of the same size was seen with RNA from cells infected with CJLAT. The amount of the RT-PCR product appeared to increase from 6 to 12 to 24 h p.i. (lanes 5, 6, and 7, respectively) and then remained constant from 24 to 48 h p.i. (compare lanes 7 and 10). This is consistent with expression of LR-RNA in BHV-1-infected cells (18) and for LAT in HSV-1-infected cells (34). As expected, no RT-PCR product was seen at any time p.i. with RNA from wild-type HSV-1 McKrae-infected cells (lanes 1, 2, and 8) or dLAT2903-infected cells (lanes 3, 4, and 9). Also, as expected, no RT-PCR product was seen with RNA from mock-infected cells (lane 11) or when RNA (lane 12) was left out of the reaction mix. In addition, no RT-PCR product was seen when reverse transcriptase was left out of the reaction mix (Fig. 2B, lanes 1 to 10).
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FIG. 2. RT-PCR and Northern blot analysis of LR-RNA expressed in CJLAT. (A) CV-1 cells were infected with CJLAT, dLAT2903, or wild-type McKrae at an MOI of 5. Total RNA was isolated at various times p.i., and RT-PCR was performed as described in Materials and Methods. Lanes: 1, McKrae (6 h pi); 2, McKrae (24 h p.i.); 3, dLAT2903 (6 h p.i.); 4, dLAT2903 (24 h p.i.); 5, CJLAT (6 h p.i.); 6, CJLAT (12 h p.i.); 7, CJLAT (24 h p.i.); 8, McKrae (48 h p.i.); 9, dLAT2903 (48 h p.i.); 10, CJLAT (48 h p.i.); 11, mock infected; 12, no RNA; 13, plasmid containing LR gene; M, 100-bp marker ladder (the fastest-migrating band is 100 bp). The expected size of the RT-PCR product is 192 bp. (B) No-RT controls. Lanes: 1 to 10 are the same as in panel A, except that no reverse transcriptase was added to the reactions. (C) Total RNA from CV-1 cells infected as described above was isolated 12 h p.i. and analyzed by Northern blot with a HindIII-SalI restriction fragment probe corresponding to the entire BHV-1 LR gene as described in Materials and Methods. The arrow points to the LR-RNA band. (D) The membrane from panel C was stripped and reprobed with an HSV-1 HpaI-MluI DNA restriction fragment (LAT nucleotides 1667 to 2850) capable of hybridizing to both LAT and ICP0 (arrows). CJLAT, CJLAT-infected CV-1 cells; wt, wild-type McKrae-infected CV-1 cells; dLAT2903, dLAT2903-infected CV-1 cells; CV-1, uninfected CV-1 cells.
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Replication of CJLAT in tissue culture. CV-1 cells were infected at an MOI of 0.01 with CJLAT, dLAT2903 (the immediate parental virus), or wild-type McKrae (the parental virus for dLAT2903). Replication appeared similar for all three viruses (Fig. 3). Thus, insertion and expression of the BHV-1 LR gene in place of the HSV-1 LAT gene did not noticeably alter virus replication in tissue culture. This also supports the conclusion that the ICP0 gene is functioning correctly.
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FIG. 3. Replication of CJLAT in tissue culture. CV-1 cells were infected at an MOI of 0.01. The infected monolayers were harvested by freeze-thawing at the indicated times, and the amounts of infectious virus were determined by plaque assays as described in Materials and Methods.
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FIG. 4. Replication of CJLAT in rabbit eyes. Rabbits were infected as described in Materials and Methods. Tears were collected from 10 eyes/group on the days indicated and the amount of infectious virus was determined as described above. Panels A and B are from two independent experiments.
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FIG. 5. Rabbit survival. The numbers above each bar indicate the number of surviving rabbits on day 21 p.i. over the number of rabbits initially infected. P values were determined by chi-square analysis. Bars: wt, wild-type McKrae; dLAT, dLAT2903; CJLAT, CJLAT.
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In rabbits infected with viruses showing efficient (LAT+ and wild type) or inefficient (LAT-) spontaneous reactivation, neutralizing antibody titers increase and are similar throughout the first 45 days p.i. (28). However, by day 59 p.i. (ca. 31 to 45 days after latency is established), the continued restimulation of the immune system in rabbits latently infected with efficiently reactivating viruses results in increased neutralizing antibody titers compared to rabbits infected with poorly reactivating viruses (28). This difference has been used to determine whether mutant viruses show wild-type LAT+-like or LAT--like spontaneous reactivation (29). An increase in neutralizing antibody titers is also a sensitive measure of detecting dexamethasone-induced reactivation of calves latently infected with BHV-1 (17), demonstrating that an increase in virus-specific antibodies normally occurs after alphaherpesvirus reactivation. Thus, this approach was used to examine spontaneous reactivation of CJLAT.
Sera were collected on day 59 p.i. from each of the surviving rabbits shown in Fig. 5A (experiment 1) or from the 8 wild-type-infected surviving rabbits or the 10 dLAT2903- and CJLAT-infected surviving rabbits shown in Fig. 5B (experiment 2). Neutralizing antibody titers were determined on each serum, and the results were plotted as scattergrams (Fig. 6A and B). As expected, in both experiments the wild-type-infected rabbits had significantly higher neutralizing antibody titers than the dLAT2903-infected rabbits, a finding indicative of higher spontaneous reactivation with the wild-type virus. The CJLAT-infected rabbits also had significant higher average neutralizing antibody titers than the dLAT2903-infected rabbits in both experiments (Fig. 6A and B). Interestingly, the neutralizing antibody titers in CJLAT-infected rabbits were also significantly higher than in wild-type-infected rabbits. This suggests that CJLAT not only reactivated more efficiently than dLAT2903 but may also have reactivated more efficiently than wild-type McKrae.
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FIG. 6. Spontaneous reactivation. Rabbits were infected as described above, and individual sera were collected on day 59 p.i. (A), day 60 p.i. (B), or on the days indicated (C). In panels A and B, each datum point indicates the neutralizing antibody titer of one sera. In panel C, each datum point is the average of between 5 and 10 sera. Panels A and B are from separate experiments. Panels B and C represent sera from the same set of rabbits. wt, wild-type McKrae; dLAT, dLAT2903.
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Replication of CJLAT in mouse eyes and TG. To determine whether CJLAT also had LAT+ reactivation in a second animal model, studies were performed in mice. Mice were infected with 2 x 106 PFU of CJLAT, dLAT2903, or wild-type McKrae/eye without corneal scarification as described in Materials and Methods. Eye swabs were collected from 10 eyes/group at various times, and the amount of infectious virus was determined (Fig. 7A). All three viruses appeared to replicate with similar kinetics and to a similar peak titer. Mice were euthanized at various times, TG were removed and homogenized, and total infectious virus was determined for each TG. All three viruses appeared to replicate with similar kinetics and to a similar peak titer (Fig. 7B). Thus, CJLAT was not impaired for replication in mouse eyes or TG.
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FIG. 7. Replication of CJLAT in mouse eyes and TG. Mice were ocularly infected as described in Materials and Methods. (A) Tears were collected from 10 eyes/group on the indicated days, and the amounts of infectious virus were determined by plaque assay. (B) Mice were infected as in panel A. Five mice/group were euthanatized on the days indicated, and individual TG (10/group/time point) were homogenized, and the amounts of infectious virus were determined by plaque assay.
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FIG. 8. Mouse survival. Mice were ocularly infected with 2 x 106 PFU of virus/eye, and survival was determined on day 21 p.i. Panels A and B are from separate experiments. wt, wild-type McKrae; dLATR, dLAT2903R-infected mice.
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FIG. 9. Explant reactivation. Ten mice from each of the groups shown in Fig. 8 were selected randomly, and the TG were removed on day 30 p.i. and individually incubated in tissue culture media at 37°C. Aliquots of the tissue culture media were removed daily for up to 21 days and inoculated onto RS cell monolayers to look for the presence of reactivated virus.
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Mice and rabbits infected with LAT- virus have ca. 50% fewer TG neurons in which latency is established (29, 31). It has been proposed that this may completely account for the reduced reactivation phenotype of LAT- mutants. However, in LAT- mutants, reactivation is often reduced by 3- to 10-fold (21, 24, 27). This suggests that LAT also influences the reactivation stage or that a LAT null mutant does not establish latency in specific neuronal populations that are capable of supporting reactivation. In addition, in at least one report, infection of rabbits with a virus containing a mutation in an HSV-1 gene other than LAT resulted in a >5-fold reduction in the establishment of latency, yet the spontaneous reactivation phenotype was indistinguishable from that of wild-type virus (23). This suggests that LAT enhances establishment in certain neuronal populations and reactivation of latency by different mechanisms.
The primary LAT transcript overlaps the important immediate-early gene ICP0 in an antisense orientation, suggesting that repression of ICP0 expression by an antisense mechanism is crucial for regulating latency (30, 37). In this regard, LAT has been shown to down regulate immediate-early gene expression in the TG of acutely and latently infected mice (3, 10). However, it has been shown that mutants capable of expressing only the first 1.5 kb of LAT, a region that does not overlap either ICP0 or ICP4, have normal reactivation levels in the rabbit model (2, 24). Thus, if LAT antisense suppression of ICP0 and ICP4 occurs, it is not a critical factor in the reactivation phenotype as measured in rabbits. This does not rule out the possibility that LAT suppresses ICP0 and/or ICP4 by an antisense-independent mechanism and that this may play an important role in the reactivation phenotype.
We recently reported that the HSV-1 LAT can prevent neurons in the TG of infected rabbits from death by blocking virus-induced apoptosis (20). We also reported that, in a transient-expression assay in tissue culture, a plasmid expressing LAT blocks apoptosis induced by a variety of chemicals (15, 20). We proposed that this LAT antiapoptosis activity is an important factor in the ability of LAT to enhance reactivation. Our finding that LAT protects neurons of the TG from viral induced death was confirmed (39), however, because these authors could not detect TUNEL (terminal deoxynucleotidyltransferase-mediated dUTP-biotin nick end labeling) staining of neurons, they contended that LAT did not block apoptosis. Recently, our original report has been independently confirmed and extended by showing that plasmids expressing LAT can block apoptosis induced by anti-Fas antibody, and by showing that in TG of mice infected with LAT- virus TUNEL staining and staining for HSV-1 antigens colocalized, while this did not occur in TG from wild type-infected mice (1).
Like LAT, the BHV-1 LR gene is the only viral gene abundantly transcribed during neuronal latency. Like LAT, the LR-RNA overlaps and is antisense to the BHV-1 homologue of the HSV-1 ICP0 gene. In addition, a recent study demonstrated that a BHV-1 mutant containing stop codons near the beginning of the LR-RNA reactivates poorly compared to wild-type BHV-1 (14). Finally, both the BHV-1 LR-RNA gene (4) and the HSV-1 LAT (15, 20) have been shown to have antiapoptosis activity. Although the LR gene of BHV-1 is clearly the homologue of the HSV-1 LAT gene, there are some important differences. For example, the primary LAT transcript is 8.3 kb (45), whereas the primary LR transcript is only 1.5 kb (18), and there is no obvious sequence homology between LR-RNA and LAT. While the region of LAT to which the spontaneous reactivation phenotype maps does not appear to encode a protein involved in the latency-reactivation cycle (8), the BHV-1 LR gene does encode such a protein (16). Although an open reading frame in the stable 2-kb LAT may encode a protein (5, 38), this protein is unlikely to play an important role in reactivation since it is located outside the region of LAT to which the reactivation function maps in rabbits (2, 24) and mice (unpublished results). Expression of an LR protein appears to play a role in protecting cells from death (4). Finally, the LR gene has also been shown to inhibit cell cycle progression (32) and in the context of the viral genome plays an important role in virus shedding in the eyes of infected calves (14). Thus, structurally, the LR and LAT genes and RNAs are very different. As a first step toward testing the hypothesis that LATs antiapoptosis activity is responsible for LATs ability to increase reactivation, we therefore inserted the antiapoptosis BHV-1 LR gene into HSV-1 in place of LAT.
Replication of CJLAT in tissue culture, rabbit eyes, mouse eyes, and mouse TG was indistinguishable from that of wild-type McKrae. Surprisingly, although CJLAT appeared to have wild-type McKrae-like virulence in rabbits, as judged by survival after ocular infection, in mice CJLAT appeared to be significantly more virulent than McKrae. Although the reason for this remains unknown, we have previously shown that several mutants lacking portions of LAT have altered virulence and that with some of these mutants the virulence is asymmetric, or dissimilar, in rabbits compared to mice (22).
One unexpected result in these studies was that CJLAT caused severe corneal scarring in most of the infected rabbits. The corneal scarring was not apparent until after day 30 p.i., a time well after all primary infection had subsided and latency was established. It is unclear whether the corneal scarring represents recurrent disease or if it is an aftermath of the primary infection. We previously reported that viruses expressing enhanced green fluorescent protein driven by the LAT promoter also produced severe corneal scarring in most rabbit eyes after day 30 p.i. (29). Thus, regardless of whether the corneal scarring is due to acute or recurrent infection, we speculate that it may be due to high-level long-term expression of a foreign protein in the eye (LR protein with CJLAT). This does not occur in wild type-infected rabbits because LAT does not appear to encode a protein. Alternatively, the increased corneal scarring with CJLAT in rabbits could be the result of increased reactivation, more virus in the eye following reactivation, or infection of different cell types. Interestingly, in mice CJLAT did not cause any significant increase in corneal scarring above that seen with wild-type HSV-1 or dLAT2903. That spontaneous reactivation occurs in rabbits but not in mice suggests that the corneal scarring seen in rabbits is due to recurrent disease following spontaneous reactivation.
Our neutralizing antibody titer results in rabbits and our explant TG reactivation results in mice each strongly suggested that the BHV-1 LR gene supported HSV-1 reactivation at least as efficiently as the HSV-1 LAT gene. Thus, it appeared that the HSV-1 LAT activity responsible for enhancing reactivation in the rabbit and the mouse could be replaced by an activity supplied by the BHV-1 LR gene. Since the BHV-1 LR gene can block apoptosis (4), it is tempting to conclude that replacing the HSV-1 LAT with an antiapoptosis gene allows for efficient LAT+-like reactivation. It would then be further tempting to conclude that the CJLAT results reported here prove that LATs antiapoptosis activity is responsible for LATs ability to enhance reactivation. However, it remains possible that an as-yet-unknown additional activity common to both the BHV-1 LR gene and the HSV-1 LAT gene are responsible for enhancing reactivation. Experiments are under way to determine whether replacing LAT with other known antiapoptosis genes also produces LAT+-like reactivation.
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