Department of Microbiology and Immunology and Baker Institute for Animal Health, College of Veterinary Medicine, Cornell University. 235 Hungerford Hill Road, Ithaca, NY, 14850, USA.
Department of Microbiology and Immunology and Baker Institute for Animal Health, College of Veterinary Medicine, Cornell University. 235 Hungerford Hill Road, Ithaca, NY, 14850, USA; Departments of Biochemistry and Medical Microbiology and Immunology, University of Alberta. 470 MSB, Edmonton, AB, T6G 2H7, Canada.
Antiviral Res. 2021 Aug;192:105103. doi: 10.1016/j.antiviral.2021.105103. Epub 2021 Jun 1.
The ability to establish, and reactivate from, latent infections is central to the biology and pathogenesis of HSV-1. It also poses a strong challenge to antiviral therapy, as latent HSV-1 genomes do not replicate or express any protein to be targeted. Although the processes regulating the establishment and maintenance of, and reactivation from, latency are not fully elucidated, the current general consensus is that epigenetics play a major role. A unifying model postulates that whereas HSV-1 avoids or counteracts chromatin silencing in lytic infections, it becomes silenced during latency, silencing which is somewhat disrupted during reactivation. Many years of work by different groups using a variety of approaches have also shown that the lytic HSV-1 chromatin is distinct and has unique biophysical properties not shared with most cellular chromatin. Nonetheless, the lytic and latent viral chromatins are typically enriched in post translational modifications or histone variants characteristic of active or repressed transcription, respectively. Moreover, a variety of small molecule epigenetic modulators inhibit viral replication and reactivation from latency. Despite these successes in culture and animal models, it is not obvious how epigenetic modulation would be used in antiviral therapy if the same epigenetic mechanisms governed viral and cellular gene expression. Recent work has highlighted several important differences between the viral and cellular chromatins, which appear to be of consequence to their respective epigenetic regulations. In this review, we will discuss the distinctiveness of the viral chromatin, and explore whether it is regulated by mechanisms unique enough to be exploited in antiviral therapy.
潜伏感染的建立和重新激活能力是 HSV-1 生物学和发病机制的核心。它也对抗病毒治疗构成了巨大挑战,因为潜伏的 HSV-1 基因组不会复制或表达任何可靶向的蛋白质。尽管调节潜伏、维持和重新激活的过程尚未完全阐明,但目前的普遍共识是表观遗传学起着重要作用。一个统一的模型假设,HSV-1 在裂解感染中避免或对抗染色质沉默,而在潜伏期间被沉默,在重新激活期间这种沉默会受到一定程度的破坏。不同小组多年来使用各种方法进行的工作也表明,裂解的 HSV-1 染色质是独特的,具有与大多数细胞染色质不同的独特的生物物理特性。尽管如此,裂解和潜伏的病毒染色质通常富含分别代表活跃或抑制转录的翻译后修饰或组蛋白变体。此外,各种小分子表观遗传调节剂可抑制病毒复制和从潜伏状态重新激活。尽管在培养物和动物模型中取得了这些成功,但如果相同的表观遗传机制控制病毒和细胞基因表达,那么在抗病毒治疗中如何使用表观遗传调节仍然不清楚。最近的工作强调了病毒染色质和细胞染色质之间的几个重要差异,这些差异似乎对它们各自的表观遗传调控具有重要意义。在这篇综述中,我们将讨论病毒染色质的独特性,并探讨其是否受到足够独特的机制调节,以用于抗病毒治疗。