Effects of interferon on immediate-early mRNA and protein levels in sensory neuronal cells infected with herpes simplex virus type 1 or pseudorabies virus
2011
Van Opdenbosch, Nina | De Regge, Nick | Van Poucke, Mario | Peelman, Luc | Favoreel, Herman W.
Most alphaherpesviruses are able to establish latency in sensory neurons and reactivate upon specific stimuli to cause recurrent symptoms. We have previously shown that interferon (IFN) is capable of inducing a quiescent HSV-1 and PRV infection that strongly resembles in vivo latency in primary cultures of TG neurons. This IFN-induced latency-like quiescence was found to correlate with suppression of the immediate-early protein ICP4 in HSV-1 and its ortholog IE180 in PRV. Here, we mechanistically investigated the IFN-mediated suppression of ICP4 and IE180 in sensory neuronal cells. RT-qPCR showed that mRNA levels of either HSV ICP4 or PRV IE180 at 4hpi were mildly but not significantly different in IFN-treated samples versus control samples, whereas a strong reduction was observed at 8hpi and 12hpi. However, at 4hpi, HSV ICP4 but not PRV IE180 protein expression was already markedly reduced in IFN-treated samples. In line with this difference in IFN-mediated suppression of HSV ICP4 versus PRV IE180 protein levels, we found that IFN resulted in an increase in phosphorylation of the translation initiation factor eIF2α in HSV-infected but not in PRV-infected cells. The latter finding indicates that PRV efficiently circumvents IFN-mediated translation inhibition by interfering with phosphorylation of eIF2α.
Show more [+] Less [-]AGROVOC Keywords
Bibliographic information
This bibliographic record has been provided by National Agricultural Library