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Journal of Virology, July 2005, p. 8835-8846, Vol. 79, No. 14
0022-538X/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JVI.79.14.8835-8846.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Department of Molecular Biology, Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey 08544
Received 21 February 2005/ Accepted 30 March 2005
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To study the mechanisms of directional spread of alphaherpesviruses in neurons, we focused our attention on an attenuated PRV strain called Bartha (24). PRV Bartha is selectively neuroinvasive. It is unable to invade the CNS by sensory (efferent) routes, and once in the CNS, it spreads only from postsynaptic to presynaptic neurons in a circuit-specific manner (4). This discriminatory neuroinvasiveness is due largely to a deletion in the Bartha genome, which removes the coding sequences of three PRV membrane proteins: glycoprotein E (gE), gI, and Us9. Deletion of any one of these three genes results in the selective neuroinvasive phenotype as well as a lower virulence (2, 6, 40). Since PRV Bartha replicates like wild-type virus in cell lines and primary cultured neurons, gE, gI, and Us9 most likely function specifically in regulating the directional spread of PRV infection from presynaptic to postsynaptic neurons (anterograde spread of infection). In animal models tested, all three viral mutants are also attenuated compared to a wild-type infection (2, 22, 38, 40).
The PRV gE and gI membrane proteins have distinct topologies. PRV gE is a type I transmembrane glycoprotein and is known to interact with gI, also a type I transmembrane protein, to form a heterodimer via ectodomain interactions (44). Current thinking is that the gE/gI proteins are multifunctional and appear to play a role in efficient cell-to-cell spread in nonneuronal cells, anterograde spread in synaptically connected neurons, species-specific binding of immunoglobulin G as Fc receptors, and mediators of full virulence in animal infections (17).
PRV gE is required for efficient cell-cell spread of infection but does not affect production of infectious extracellular virions, since replication and single-step growth of gE null mutants is normal (29). Indeed, gE and gI proteins are considered nonessential for replication in cell culture. Work from several laboratories indicates that the gE/gI complex plays distinct roles in secondary envelopment (31) and targeting and/or release of virions at cell-cell junctions (20). In HSV-1, the cytoplasmic domain of gE targets mature virions to basolateral junctions where spread to a neighboring cell occurs. In addition, expression of a truncated gE and gI at cell junctions decrease the spread of HSV between keratinocytes (9). Taken together, all these results indicate that gE protein is essential in promoting efficient targeting of virions and subsequent spread of infection at the basolateral cell-cell junctions.
A prevailing hypothesis states that gE is required at cell-cell junctions, e.g., synaptic junctions, to promote trans-neuronal spread of infection from presynaptic to postsynaptic neurons (13, 28). In this hypothesis, the absence of gE would result in accumulation of virions at the axon terminals on the presynaptic side of the terminal. An alternative hypothesis is that the defect in gE-null infections occurs in the neuron cell body rather than at axon terminals. Since gE has been shown to target mature virions to the cell-cell junction in epithelial cells, it is conceivable that a sorting or axonal entry defect would prevent the virion from being transported to the axon terminal and subsequently infect the postsynaptic neuron. In either model, the gE-null defect affects only the anterograde spread of virions from pre- to postsynaptic neurons and not the production of virions in the neuron soma or the retrograde spread of infection from post- to presynaptic neurons. To test the hypotheses, we cultured sympathetic neurons and infected them with PRV. In the absence of gE, we show a dramatic reduction of viral glycoproteins (gB, gD, and gC) in axons. Furthermore, viral capsid (VP5, VP26) and tegument (VP22) proteins also fail to enter axons efficiently. This surprising result suggests that gE plays a central role in entry of and/or targeting a subset of viral proteins to axons and explains why anterograde spread of infection via axons is compromised in gE-null mutant infections of animal models.
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Neuronal cultures. Sympathetic neurons from rat superior cervical ganglia were harvested from embryonic day 15.5 to 16.5 rat embryos (Hilltop Labs, Inc.). Culture conditions and dissection methods were previously described by Ch'ng et al. 2005 (7), modified from Tomishima and Enquist (42). Delta TPG glass-bottom dishes (Bioptechs, Inc.) were coated with 100 µg/ml poly-DL-ornithine (Sigma-Aldrich) and 10 µg/ml of natural mouse laminin (Invitrogen). The neuron cultures were maintained in Dulbecco's modified Eagle (Gibco) and Ham's F-12 (Gibco) in a 1:1 ratio and supplemented with 10 mg/ml of bovine serum albumin (BSA; Sigma-Aldrich), 4.6 mg/ml glucose (J. T. Baker), 100 µg/ml of holo-transferrin (Sigma-Aldrich), 16 µg/ml of putrescine (Sigma-Aldrich), 10 µg/ml of insulin (Sigma-Aldrich), 2 mM L-glutamine (Gibco), 50 µg/ml or units of penicillin and streptomycin (Gibco), 30 nM selenium (Sigma-Aldrich), 20 nM progesterone (Sigma-Aldrich), and 100 ng/µm of nerve growth factor 2.5S (Invitrogen). Nonneuronal cells were eliminated with 1 µM/ml of cytosine-ß-D-arabinofuranoside. All experimental protocols related to animal use have been approved by The Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee (IACUC) of the Princeton University Research Board under IACUC protocol number 1453-AR2.
Antibodies. Mouse monoclonal antibody (MAb) specific for SV2 and cNgCAM (8D9) were purchased from the Developmental Studies Hybridoma Bank at the University of Iowa. The mouse MAb against actin (AC-40) was purchased from Sigma (A-4990), and the antibodies that recognize mannosidase II were purchased from Covance (53FC3). Mouse MAbs that recognize PRV-specific proteins, gB (M2) and gC (M1), were described in a previous study (14). The rabbit polyclonal antiserum specific for gE was also described in a previous study (40). IN-13 mouse MAb that recognizes VP5 was a gift from H. Rhiza (Federal Research Center for Viruses Diseases for Animals, Tubingen, Germany). The pooled gD mouse MAb was a kind gift from G. Cohen (Department of Microbiology, University of Pennsylvania). The Us9-specific rabbit polyclonal antiserum was generated by A. Brideau and was previously described (3). The goat polyclonal antiserum raised against Us2 was a gift from B. Banfield (Department of Microbiology, University of Colorado Health Sciences Center). The rabbit polyclonal antiserum against VP22 and the mouse MAb (3C10) that recognizes the major capsid protein VP5 were gifts from T. del Rio and A. Flood from the Enquist lab. The horseradish peroxidase-conjugated goat anti-mouse and goat anti-rabbit secondary immunoglobulin G antibodies used in the Western blots were purchased from Kierkegaard and Perry Labs, Inc. All secondary fluorophores used in immunofluorescence experiments were Alexa Fluor dyes (Molecular Probes).
Viral infections. Protocols for viral infection of neurons have been described by Ch'ng et al. (7). All PRV infections of neuron cultures were carried out under high multiplicities of infection (MOI) unless otherwise stated. Briefly, neurons were cultured on Delta TPG dishes for approximately 2 to 3 weeks prior to any experiment. The viral inoculum was diluted in 2% fetal bovine serum in Dulbecco's modified Eagle (Gibco) and overlaid on the neuronal culture for 1 h in a humidified 37°C incubator. After 1 h, the viral inoculum was removed and replaced with neuron medium. Infections usually lasted for 14 to 16 h before the samples were fixed and processed for immunofluorescence. For experiments using AdNgCAM, neuron cultures were first infected at a high MOI for 24 h with AdNgCAM using the standard infection protocols described above. At 24 h postinfection (hpi), a superinfection was carried out with either a mock sample or samples infected with PRV Becker or gE-null PRV for another 15 h. Cultures were fixed and processed for immunofluorescence.
Fluorescence and immunofluorescence microscopy. All fluorescence experiments were carried out based on previously described protocols (7). Briefly, neuron cultures were infected for 14 to 16 hpi, washed once with phosphate-buffered saline (PBS), fixed for 10 min with 3.2% paraformaldehyde (PFA), and rinsed three times with PBS containing 3% BSA (PBS-BSA). For direct fluorescence experiments, the process was completed, a drop of Aqua Poly/Mount (Polysciences, Inc.) mounting medium was added to the floor of the dish, and a coverslip was placed on top of the drop. The samples were left overnight for the Aqua Poly/Mount to harden. For indirect immunofluorescence studies, neurons were permeabilized with 3% BSA and 0.5% saponin after 3.2% PFA fixation. The permeabilized cells were then incubated with primary antibodies for 1 h followed by the secondary antibodies for another 1 h. After each incubation, the neurons were rinsed three times with PBS-3% BSA and 0.5% saponin. After the final rinse, a drop of Aqua Poly/Mount was added to the floor of the dish and a coverslip was placed on top of the drop. Samples were allowed to dry prior to any microscopy work. For nonpermeabilized surface staining of infected cultures, detergent was omitted from each step of the protocol described above. All confocal micrographs were collected with a Zeiss LSM510 laser scanning microscope with either a 40x or 63x oil objective. The confocal sections obtained were either through the focal plane of the cell body or the focal plane of the axon, depending on experimental parameters. All images were processed with Adobe Photoshop (version 6.0) and assembled in Adobe Illustrator (version 9.0).
Kinetics of PRV infection in neuronal cultures. Neuron cultures were allowed to mature for 3 weeks before being infected at a high MOI with wild-type PRV or PRV 91 as described in the previous section with one additional step: after the neuron cultures were incubated for 1 h in viral inoculum, the inoculum was removed and incubated with a citrate wash (40 mM citrate, pH 3, 10 mM KCl, 0.135 M NaCl) for 1 min. The citrate wash inactivated the input virus. After the incubation, the citrate wash was removed and the infected cultures were rinsed twice with PBS and replaced with the original culture medium. For each virus, samples were collected at four time points, t = 0, 10, 16, and 24 hpi, with the sample collected at t = 0 being the first sample collected immediately after the citrate wash. At each time point, the medium was removed, the infected cell bodies were harvested, and titers were determined on PK15 cells. Note that while infectious particles can be detected in the medium, we did not present the extracellular titer data because the accurate PFUs cannot be determined due to the affinity of extracellular particles to the surface of the dish.
Western blot analysis of infected neuronal cultures. Neuron cultures were plated at high density (approximately one ganglion/dish) on 35-mm tissue culture dishes (Falcon). The cultures were maintained for 1 month to allow growth and expansion of the neuritic network. After 1 month, the cultures were infected with wild-type PRV, PRV gE null, and PRV gE null revertant according to the protocols described in the section above. At 16 hpi, the infected neurons were washed once with PBS and harvested. The harvested neurons were pelleted, lysed with loading buffer, boiled for 10 min, and then sheared with a 26-gauge needle before being loaded in equal volumes and subjected to sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE). The protein gel was transferred onto a nylon membrane and Western blotted for various viral structural proteins. Cellular actin served as a loading control.
Quantitation of viral glycoproteins. Neuron cultures were grown, infected, and processed for indirect immunofluorescence as described above. For quantitation purposes, all images were collected with a Nikon Eclipse TE-300 inverted epifluorescence microscope with a 20x objective lens. Ten images were collected for each viral infection, and five images were collected for each mock infection. To ensure that the axonal densities were comparable between images, each image collected contained approximately 10 neuron cell bodies. All images were converted to grayscale and inverted using Adobe Photoshop. To quantify the immunofluorescence intensity of the axonal network, software called Scion Image for Windows (version 4.0.2; Scion Corp.) was used. A density threshold was uniformly applied to all the images, and a filter was applied to block any signals coming from the neuron cell body. The average pixel density was calculated and plotted on a bar graph. Error bars reflect ±2 standard errors of the means.
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FIG. 1. Steady-state localization of gE in infected neuron cultures. Cultured neurons were infected with wild-type PRV, and at 14 hpi, neurons were labeled with various antibodies in permeabilized (A, B, C, F) or nonpermeabilized (D, E) neurons. Antibodies specific for gE were used to determine steady-state localization of gE (A, D to F), while antibodies raised against mannosidase II (Man II) were used as cis and medial Golgi markers (B). (C) Colocalization of gE (green) and mannosidase II (red) is shown in the merged image. N, nucleus.
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FIG.2. gE is required for wild-type axonal localization of viral glycoproteins. (a) Cultured neurons were infected with either wild-type PRV (A, D, G, J) or gE-null PRV (B, E, H, K) or mock infected (C, F, I, L). At 14 hpi, cells were fixed, permeabilized, and labeled with antibodies specific for gE (A, B, C), gB (D, E, F), gD (G, H, I), and gC (J, K, L). -, anti-. (b) The same experiment as for panel a, but confocal images were obtained at a higher magnification. 3-D representations of the immunofluorescence signals were obtained using Zeiss LSM 510 software (E to H and M to P) to compare the intensity of axonal staining in a wild-type and gE-null infection.
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FIG. 3. Quantitation of viral glycoproteins in infected axons. Quantitation of viral glycoproteins in axons was carried out for wild-type, gE-null, gE-null revertant, and mock-infected neuron cultures. At 14 hpi, samples were fixed and processed for immunofluorescence and images were collected via epifluorescence microscopy. Using protocols described in Methods and Materials, we calculated the relative immunofluorescence intensity of the glycoproteins in axons.
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FIG. 4. gE is not required for wild-type axonal localization of viral membrane proteins. (a) Cultured neurons were infected with either wild-type PRV (A, D) or gE-null PRV (B, E) or mock infected (C, F). At 14 hpi, cells were fixed, permeabilized, and labeled with antibodies that are specific for viral membrane proteins Us9 (A, B, C) or Us2 (D, E, F). -, anti-. (b) This experiment is similar that described for panel a, except the confocal images were magnified. Both wild-type PRV (A, E) and gE-null PRV (C, G) infections were labeled with antibodies directed against Us9 (E, G) and Us2 (A, C). 3-D reconstructions of the confocal images are also shown (B, D, F, H).
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FIG. 5. gE does not affect localization of cellular proteins. (a) Cultured neurons were mock infected (A) or infected with either wild-type PRV (B) or gE-null PRV (C). At 14 hpi, cells were fixed, permeabilized, and labeled with antibodies that recognize SV2 ( -SV2). The arrows indicate the presence of individual synaptic vesicles within the neuritic network. (b) Cultured neurons were initially infected with a replication-defective adenovirus expressing a chick isoform of the neural-glia cell adhesion molecule (cNgCAM). At 24 h after the adenoviral infection, the neuron cultures were then mock infected (A, D, G) or superinfected with either wild-type PRV (B, E, H) or gE-null PRV (C, F, I). The cultures were further incubated for another 14 h before being fixed, permeabilized, and labeled with antibodies specific for cNgCAM (A, B, C) and Us9 (D, E, F) as controls for infection. Merged images (G, H, I) show localization of Us9 (green) and cNgCAM (red).
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FIG. 6. gE is required for wild-type axonal localization of viral capsid proteins and viral tegument protein VP22. (a) gE is required for wild-type axonal localization of viral capsid VP5. Cultured neurons were infected with either wild-type PRV (A) or gE-null PRV (B) or mock infected (C). At 14 hpi, cells were fixed, permeabilized, and labeled with antibodies specific for the viral capsid protein VP5 ( -VP5). (b) Cultured neurons were infected with either PRV 181 (A to E) or PRV 760 (F to J). At 14 hpi, cells were fixed and confocal images were collected for RFP-VP26 (A, F, D, I) or GFP-VP22 (B, G, E, J) either through the plane of the axon (A, C, F, H) or through the plane of the neuron cell body (D, E, I, J).
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FIG. 7. Viral structural proteins are expressed at wild-type levels in infected neurons and have wild-type localization in the neuron cell bodies. (a) Steady-state expression of viral structural proteins during infection of cultured neurons was determined via Western blots. Cultured neurons were infected at a high MOI with wild-type PRV, gE-null PRV, gE-null revertant PRV or mock infected. At 16 hpi, the infected neuron lysates were harvested, analyzed via SDS-PAGE, and Western blotted for viral glycoproteins (gE, gB, gD, and gC), membrane protein (Us9), and tegument (VP22) and capsid (VP5) proteins. The total amount of actin served as a loading control. (b) Steady-state expression of viral glycoproteins in cell bodies was determined for wild-type PRV- and gE-null PRV-infected neurons. At 14 hpi, cultures were labeled with antibodies specific for gB (A, E), gE (B, F), gC (C, G), and gD (D, G). -, anti-.
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Absence of gE has no effect on attachment, entry, or replication of PRV in neurons. gE has not been reported to function during attachment, entry, or replication of PRV in epithelial cells. To confirm these results in neurons, we infected neurons at a high multiplicity of infection with the wild type or gE-null mutants and measured the amount of PFU recovered. Cultures were briefly treated with a citric acid buffer after the 1-h incubation to eliminate the infectivity of any extracellular virions. At various time points after infection, the amount of newly produced intracellular infectious particles was determined on a monolayer of PK15 cells as described in Materials and Methods. As shown in Fig. 8, both wild-type and gE-null mutant infection produce identical amounts of infectious particles.
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FIG. 8. The kinetics of infectious virus production after a gE-null infection are identical to those for a wild-type infection in cultured neurons. Cultured neurons were infected with either wild-type PRV or gE-null PRV. At 0, 10, 16, and 24 hpi, the amount of infectious intracellular virus produced by the neurons was harvested and titers were determined on PK15 cells. This experiment was done in triplicate, and the standard deviations for each time point were calculated and shown as error bars on the graph.
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FIG. 9. gE colocalizes with viral glycoproteins and capsids but not with synaptic vesicle protein. Cultured neurons were infected with wild-type PRV for 14 h, fixed, permeabilized, and labeled with antibodies that recognize gE (D to F) and either gB (A), VP5 (B), or SV2 (C). Merged images are shown in panels G to I. Arrowheads indicate colocalization of gE and VP5 in axons.
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FIG. 10. The gE ectodomain and cytoplasmic tail are required for efficient targeting of viral proteins to axons. (a) Cultured neurons were infected with wild-type PRV (A), PRV 758 (B), PRV 107 (C), and PRV 756 (D) for 14 h, fixed, permeabilized, and labeled with antibodies that recognize gB. (b) Cultured neurons were infected with PRV 181 (A, B), PRV 760 (C, D), PRV 763 (E, F), and PRV 762 (G, H) for 14 h, fixed, and mounted on glass slides. Fluorescence images for both RFP-VP26 (top row; A, C, E, and G) and GFP-VP22 (bottom row; B, D, F, and H) were captured via confocal microscopy. Bars, 20 µm.
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In this study, we show that gE is required for efficient entry of viral glycoproteins, capsids, and at least one tegument protein into axons. This defect becomes more pronounced in distal axons and growth cones. The neuronal secretory pathway remains functional in wild-type and gE-null mutant infections. Our findings for gE-null and Us9-null mutant viruses are consistent with the hypothesis that spread of infection from neurons occurs in two distinct and independent pathways in cultured neurons (12, 13, 28, 32). One pathway involves a gE-, gI-, and Us9-independent assembly and release of virions from the neuronal cell body. The other pathway involves axonal entry of viral proteins required for long-distance spread of infection via axons. The efficiency of axonal entry of these viral proteins depends on gE, gI, and Us9.
Most studies on compartmentalization of axonal proteins focus on the sorting of individual proteins. What makes viral proteins such as gE and Us9 remarkable and noteworthy is not only must they enter axons themselves but they also must direct and regulate entry of virus structural proteins into axons. So, how does gE function in localizing viral cargo to axons? Based on our current understanding of polarized trafficking of axonal proteins, we speculate that gE functions in a cell body sorting compartment that is part of the trans-Golgi network and associated with sites of viral assembly in the neuron cell body. In this specialized compartment, gE may assume several roles such as recruiting and localizing viral glycoproteins and assembled capsids to budding sites where they will exit the compartment in transport vesicles destined for the axon. Alternatively, gE might bind the cellular machinery normally required for axonal targeting, such as the fast axonal transport complex. Whether gE actively recruits viral proteins to the compartment or interacts directly with proteins involved in axonal transport, the loss of gE ultimately will block a pre- to postsynaptic transmission of infection while having no affect on the production of extracellular virions from the cell body.
Our data support the proposal that viral capsids are transported in membrane vesicles rather than as unenveloped capsids. The gE protein is inserted in lipid membranes yet regulates axonal entry of viral capsids. It is hard to envision how gE could regulate capsid entry into axons if the capsids were not associated with membrane vesicles. A long-standing idea was that herpes virions might be transported in synaptic vesicles carrying neurotransmitters. This idea seems unlikely to be valid, as we have been unable to prove colocalization of synaptic vesicle proteins such as SV2 and VAMP2 with viral structural proteins. The nature of the membranes surrounding PRV virion components remains to be discovered. All of our findings are consistent with the idea that not all viral proteins or protein complexes moved into axons need be localized to the same compartment. Viral membrane proteins are often inserted into axonal membranes independently and found on the axolemma, and some tegument protein and capsid structures are often found in separate complexes in axons (11, 25).
Our initial experiments to localize the domains of the gE protein required for the axonal sorting function indicated that both the cytoplasmic tail and ectodomain are required for efficient targeting of viral cargo to axons. A loss of either domain resulted in reduced axonal localization of viral proteins, particularly to the distal regions of the axon. These data are consistent with published work using gE cytoplasmic tail mutants and our own unpublished data from rat eye infection studies indicating that both gE domains affect rate, or efficiency of spread, of infection to second-order retinorecipient neurons (38; unpublished data). The gE cytoplasmic domain encodes several sorting signals including the canonical tyrosine-based "YXX
" endocytosis motif at amino acids 478 and 517, an aspartate-rich acidic cluster domain, and dileucine motifs (41). It might be expected that loss of the cytoplasmic tail may prevent gE-mediated targeting of viral cargo to axons. Similarly, the gE ectodomain may also harbor motifs responsible for axonal targeting, as has been described for the type 1 membrane axonal protein called NgCAM. Indeed, like gE, NgCAM has axonal targeting motifs in both the cytoplasmic and ectodomains (35). Alternatively, the gE ectodomain might function indirectly by aiding the gE cytoplasmic tail in directing viral proteins into axons by forming a complex with gI (19, 40, 44). Since the cytoplasmic domains of either gE or gI are required for efficient pre- to postsynaptic spread of infection, formation of a stable complex through ectodomain interactions may facilitate wild-type spread of the virus by either cytoplasmic domain (38).
It is important to stress that absence of gE does not completely abolish localization of viral structural components in axons. The gE, gI, and Us9 proteins appear to have an additive effect in axonal targeting (unpublished data). This finding was first observed in vivo in PRV Bartha-infected neurons where the defect in axonal localization of viral proteins was markedly severe, with essentially no viral structural proteins detected in the axons (Fig. 3 and data not shown) (6). The gE-null defect in entry and transport of viral proteins is most prominent in the distal regions of the axon at varicosities and at growth cones because the phenotype is amplified by requiring that viral proteins travel the entire length of the axon. While our results indicate that gE is required for axonal targeting of viral proteins, we have not yet identified the viral proteins needed at the axon terminals to promote transmission of infection from a pre- to postsynaptic neuron. In fact, it may be that gE/gI proteins could have a role at the presynaptic terminal to promote spread to the connected neuron, but the effect in the cell body is epistatic on this putative downstream function.
The relevance of our findings must be understood in the light of neuronal cell biology. Nearly all features of neuronal specialization depend on the proper localization of membrane proteins, whether they be neurotransmitter receptors, ion channels, transporters, or adhesion molecules. Proteins must be accurately sorted to the somatodendritic or axonal compartments. One serious impediment to understanding this fundamental sorting process is that no one predominant mechanism functions across all cell types. What is true for an epithelial cell is not always true for a neuron (18). The initial idea that axonal sorting signals were identical to apical membrane sorting signals is true for some proteins but not others. Important questions remain: do herpesvirus virion proteins override intrinsic neuronal sorting machinery or do these viral proteins carry their own neuronal sorting signals? The answers will be most useful for virologists and neurobiologists alike.
This work was supported by the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NIH-NINDS; grant no. 1RO1 33506).
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