Podlech Jürgen, Reddehase Matthias J, Adler Barbara, Lemmermann Niels A W
Institute for Virology, University Medical Center of the Johannes Gutenberg-University Mainz and Research Center for Immunotherapy (FZI), Obere Zahlbacher Strasse 67, Hochhaus am Augustusplatz, 55131, Mainz, Germany.
Med Microbiol Immunol. 2015 Jun;204(3):295-305. doi: 10.1007/s00430-015-0405-2. Epub 2015 Mar 18.
Initial virus entry into cells of host organs and subsequent spread of viral progeny between tissue cells are events fundamental to viral pathogenesis. Glycoprotein complexes inserted in the virion envelope are critically involved in the cell entry process. Here we review and discuss recent work that has shed light on the in vivo role of the trimeric glycoprotein complex gH/gL/gO of murine cytomegalovirus (mCMV) as a model to propose the role of the corresponding complex of human CMV, for which experimental studies in vivo are not feasible due to the host species specificity of CMVs and evident ethical constraints. A novel approach combining gO transcomplementation of a genetically gO-deficient virus and a mathematical log-linear regression analysis of the viral multiplication kinetics in host tissues revealed a critical role of mCMV gH/gL/gO only in first target cell entry of virions arriving with the circulation, whereas intra-tissue spread proceeded unaffected also in the absence of gH/gL/gO. These findings predict that targeting gO for an antiviral intervention may be of prophylactic value in preventing the seeding of virus to organs, but will likely fail to interfere with an established primary organ infection or with recurrent infection after virus reactivation from latency within tissue cells. The demonstration in the murine model of alternative gH/gL complexes gH/gL/gO and gH/gL/MCK-2, substituting one another in a redundant fashion for securing viral spread in tissues, has the medically interesting bearing that targeting the gH/gL core complex directly may be a promising approach to preventing primary, established, and recurrent CMV infections.
病毒最初进入宿主器官细胞以及随后病毒子代在组织细胞间的传播是病毒发病机制的基本事件。插入病毒粒子包膜中的糖蛋白复合物在细胞进入过程中起关键作用。在这里,我们回顾并讨论了最近的研究工作,这些工作以鼠巨细胞病毒(mCMV)的三聚体糖蛋白复合物gH/gL/gO为例,阐明了其在体内的作用,以此推断人巨细胞病毒相应复合物的作用。由于巨细胞病毒的宿主物种特异性和明显的伦理限制,人巨细胞病毒在体内的实验研究不可行。一种将基因缺失gO的病毒的gO转互补与宿主组织中病毒增殖动力学的数学对数线性回归分析相结合的新方法表明,mCMV gH/gL/gO仅在随循环到达的病毒粒子首次进入靶细胞中起关键作用,而在没有gH/gL/gO的情况下,组织内传播也不受影响。这些发现预测,针对gO进行抗病毒干预可能在预防病毒播种到器官方面具有预防价值,但可能无法干扰已建立的原发性器官感染或组织细胞内病毒从潜伏状态重新激活后的复发性感染。在鼠模型中,替代性的gH/gL复合物gH/gL/gO和gH/gL/MCK-2以冗余方式相互替代以确保病毒在组织中传播,这一发现具有医学意义,即直接靶向gH/gL核心复合物可能是预防原发性、已建立的和复发性巨细胞病毒感染的一种有前景的方法。