Department of Molecular Genetics and Microbiology, Center for Virology, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina, 27710 USA.
Department of Molecular Genetics and Microbiology, Center for Virology, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina, 27710 USA.
Adv Virus Res. 2014;88:279-313. doi: 10.1016/B978-0-12-800098-4.00006-4.
Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) is an oncogenic human herpesvirus in the γ-herpesvirinae subfamily that contains a 170-180kb double-stranded DNA genome. In vivo, EBV commonly infects B and epithelial cells and persists for the life of the host in a latent state in the memory B-cell compartment of the peripheral blood. EBV can be reactivated from its latent state, leading to increased expression of lytic genes that primarily encode for enzymes necessary to replicate the viral genome and structural components of the virion. Lytic cycle proteins also aid in immune evasion, inhibition of apoptosis, and the modulation of other host responses to infection. In vitro, EBV has the potential to infect primary human B cells and induce cellular proliferation to yield effectively immortalized lymphoblastoid cell lines, or LCLs. EBV immortalization of B cells in vitro serves as a model system for studying EBV-mediated lymphomagenesis. While much is known about the steady-state viral gene expression within EBV-immortalized LCLs and other EBV-positive cell lines, relatively little is known about the early events after primary B-cell infection. It was previously thought that upon latent infection, EBV only expressed the well-characterized latency-associated transcripts found in LCLs. However, recent work has characterized the early, but transient, expression of lytic genes necessary for efficient transformation and delayed responses in the known latency genes. This chapter summarizes these recent findings that show how dynamic and controlled expression of multiple EBV genes can control the activation of B cells, entry into the cell cycle, the inhibition of apoptosis, and innate and adaptive immune responses.
EB 病毒(EBV)是γ疱疹病毒亚科中的一种致癌人类疱疹病毒,包含一个 170-180kb 的双链 DNA 基因组。在体内,EBV 通常感染 B 细胞和上皮细胞,并以潜伏状态在宿主的外周血记忆 B 细胞区室中持续存在。EBV 可以从潜伏状态中重新激活,导致裂解基因的表达增加,这些基因主要编码复制病毒基因组和病毒粒子结构成分所必需的酶。裂解周期蛋白还有助于免疫逃避、抑制细胞凋亡和调节宿主对感染的其他反应。在体外,EBV 有可能感染原代人类 B 细胞并诱导细胞增殖,从而有效地产生永生化淋巴母细胞系或 LCL。体外 EBV 对 B 细胞的永生化是研究 EBV 介导的淋巴瘤发生的模型系统。尽管人们对 EBV 永生化 LCL 和其他 EBV 阳性细胞系中的稳定状态病毒基因表达有了很多了解,但对原发性 B 细胞感染后的早期事件相对了解较少。以前认为,在潜伏感染时,EBV 仅表达在 LCL 中发现的特征明确的潜伏相关转录物。然而,最近的工作已经描述了裂解基因的早期但短暂表达,这些基因对于有效的转化和潜伏基因的延迟反应是必要的。本章总结了这些最近的发现,这些发现表明多个 EBV 基因的动态和受控表达如何控制 B 细胞的激活、进入细胞周期、细胞凋亡的抑制以及先天和适应性免疫反应。