Tenser R B, Gaydos A, Hay K A
Division of Neurology, Pennsylvania State University College of Medicine, Hershey 17033, USA.
J Virol. 1996 Feb;70(2):1271-6. doi: 10.1128/JVI.70.2.1271-1276.1996.
Herpes simplex virus (HSV) mutants defective for thymidine kinase expression (TK-) have been reported to establish latent infection of sensory ganglia of mice, in that HSV latency-associated transcript is expressed, but to be defective for reactivation. In the present study, the mechanism of defective reactivation by TK- HSV was investigated. Latent infection established by each of three reactivation-defective HSV type 1 mutants was studied. Reactivation in explant culture was markedly enhanced by the addition of thymidine (dTdR) to the explant culture medium. Without added dTdR, reactivation occurred in 0 of 32 ganglia, while when dTdR (200 microM) was present, reactivation occurred in 32 of 37 ganglia (86%). Reactivation was minimal or did not occur after treatment with other nucleosides; specificity for dTdR would suggest the importance of dTdR nucleotide levels rather than more general nucleotide pool imbalance. Enhanced reactivation by dTdR was dose dependent and was blocked by acyclovir. While some degree of inhibition of TK- HSV by acyclovir may be expected, the complete block of dTdR-enhanced reactivation was unexpected. This result may suggest that HSV is particularly vulnerable during initial reactivation events. The mechanism of dTdR-enhanced reactivation of TK- HSV was further evaluated during in vivo infection by TK- HSV. For mice infected with TK- HSV, virus was undetectable in ganglia 3 days later. However, for mice infected with TK- HSV and treated with dTdR, virus was readily detected (2.8 x 10(3) PFU per ganglion). This result suggested that in vivo treatment with dTdR enhanced replication of TK- HSV in ganglion neurons. In turn, this suggests that in latently infected ganglia, dTdR-enhanced reactivation of TK- HSV occurred as a result of viral replication in neurons following initial reactivation events.
据报道,胸苷激酶表达缺陷的单纯疱疹病毒(HSV)突变体(TK-)可在小鼠感觉神经节中建立潜伏感染,因为会表达HSV潜伏相关转录物,但在再激活方面存在缺陷。在本研究中,对TK-HSV再激活缺陷的机制进行了研究。研究了三种1型HSV再激活缺陷突变体各自建立的潜伏感染。向器官培养物培养基中添加胸苷(dTdR)可显著增强器官培养中的再激活。不添加dTdR时,32个神经节中均未发生再激活,而当存在dTdR(200μM)时,37个神经节中有32个发生了再激活(86%)。用其他核苷处理后,再激活程度极小或未发生;对dTdR的特异性表明dTdR核苷酸水平的重要性,而非更普遍的核苷酸库失衡。dTdR增强的再激活具有剂量依赖性,并被阿昔洛韦阻断。虽然阿昔洛韦对TK-HSV有一定程度的抑制作用是可以预期的,但dTdR增强的再激活被完全阻断却出乎意料。这一结果可能表明HSV在初始再激活事件期间特别脆弱。在TK-HSV的体内感染过程中,进一步评估了dTdR增强TK-HSV再激活的机制。对于感染TK-HSV的小鼠,3天后在神经节中检测不到病毒。然而,对于感染TK-HSV并接受dTdR治疗的小鼠,很容易检测到病毒(每个神经节2.8×10³ 空斑形成单位)。这一结果表明,体内用dTdR治疗可增强TK-HSV在神经节神经元中的复制。反过来,这表明在潜伏感染的神经节中,TK-HSV的dTdR增强再激活是初始再激活事件后神经元中病毒复制的结果。