Dingwell K S, Doering L C, Johnson D C
Cancer Research Group, Institute of Molecular Biology and Biotechnology, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada.
J Virol. 1995 Nov;69(11):7087-98. doi: 10.1128/JVI.69.11.7087-7098.1995.
Two herpes simplex virus (HSV) glycoproteins E and I (gE and gI) form a heterooligomer which acts as an Fc receptor and also facilitates cell-to-cell spread of virus in epithelial tissues and between certain cultured cells. By contrast, gE-gI is not required for infection of cells by extracellular virus. HSV glycoproteins gD and gJ are encoded by neighboring genes, and gD is required for both virus entry into cells and cell-to-cell spread, whereas gJ has not been shown to influence these processes. Since HSV infects neurons and apparently spreads across synaptic junctions, it was of interest to determine whether gD, gE, gI and gJ are also important for interneuronal transfer of virus. We tested the roles of these glycoproteins in neuron-to-neuron transmission of HSV type 1 (HSV-1) by injecting mutant viruses unable to express these glycoproteins into the vitreous body of the rat eye. The spread of virus infection was measured in neuron-rich layers of the retina and in the major retinorecipient areas of the brain. Wild-type HSV-1 and a gJ- mutant spread rapidly between synaptically linked retinal neurons and efficiently infected major retinorecipient areas of the brain. gD mutants, derived from complementing cells, infected only a few neurons and did not spread in the retina or brain. Mutants unable to express gE or gI were markedly restricted in their ability to spread within the retina, produced 10-fold-less virus in the retina, and spread inefficiently to the brain. Furthermore, when compared with wild-type HSV-1, gE- and gI- mutants spread inefficiently from cell to cell in cultures of neurons derived from rat trigeminal ganglia. Together, our results suggest that the gE-gI heterooligomer is required for efficient neuron-to-neuron transmission through synaptically linked neuronal pathways.
两种单纯疱疹病毒(HSV)糖蛋白E和I(gE和gI)形成一种异源寡聚体,它作为一种Fc受体,还促进病毒在上皮组织以及某些培养细胞之间进行细胞间传播。相比之下,细胞外病毒感染细胞并不需要gE-gI。HSV糖蛋白gD和gJ由相邻基因编码,病毒进入细胞以及细胞间传播都需要gD,而gJ尚未显示会影响这些过程。由于HSV感染神经元且显然会跨越突触连接进行传播,因此确定gD、gE、gI和gJ对于病毒在神经元间的传递是否也很重要就很有意义。我们通过将无法表达这些糖蛋白的突变病毒注射到大鼠眼的玻璃体中,测试了这些糖蛋白在1型单纯疱疹病毒(HSV-1)神经元到神经元传播中的作用。在视网膜富含神经元的层以及大脑主要的视网膜接受区域中测量病毒感染的传播情况。野生型HSV-1和gJ突变体在突触连接的视网膜神经元之间迅速传播,并有效感染大脑的主要视网膜接受区域。源自互补细胞的gD突变体仅感染少数神经元,且不在视网膜或大脑中传播。无法表达gE或gI的突变体在视网膜内传播的能力受到明显限制,在视网膜中产生的病毒量减少10倍,并且向大脑的传播效率低下。此外,与野生型HSV-1相比,gE和gI突变体在源自大鼠三叉神经节的神经元培养物中细胞间传播效率低下。总之,我们的结果表明,gE-gI异源寡聚体是通过突触连接的神经元途径进行高效神经元到神经元传递所必需的。