Cell cycle modulation by Marek's disease virus: the tegument protein VP22 triggers S-phase arrest and DNA damage in proliferating cells.
Laëtitia Trapp-Fragnet,Djihad Bencherit,Danièle Chabanne-Vautherot,Yves Le Vern,Sylvie Rémy,Elisa Boutet-Robinet,Gladys Mirey,Jean-François Vautherot,Caroline Denesvre +8 more
TL;DR: The results provide the first evidence for a hitherto unknown function of the VP22 tegument protein in herpesviral reprogramming of the cell cycle of the host cell and its potential implication in the generation of DNA damages.
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Abstract: Marek’s disease is one of the most common viral diseases of poultry affecting chicken flocks worldwide. The disease is caused by an alphaherpesvirus, the Marek’s disease virus (MDV), and is characterized by the rapid onset of multifocal aggressive T-cell lymphoma in the chicken host. Although several viral oncogenes have been identified, the detailed mechanisms underlying MDV-induced lymphomagenesis are still poorly understood. Many viruses modulate cell cycle progression to enhance their replication and persistence in the host cell, in the case of some oncogenic viruses ultimately leading to cellular transformation and oncogenesis. In the present study, we found that MDV, like other viruses, is able to subvert the cell cycle progression by triggering the proliferation of low proliferating chicken cells and a subsequent delay of the cell cycle progression into S-phase. We further identified the tegument protein VP22 (pUL49) as a major MDV-encoded cell cycle regulator, as its vector-driven overexpression in cells lead to a dramatic cell cycle arrest in S-phase. This striking functional feature of VP22 appears to depend on its ability to associate with histones in the nucleus. Finally, we established that VP22 expression triggers the induction of massive and severe DNA damages in cells, which might cause the observed intra S-phase arrest. Taken together, our results provide the first evidence for a hitherto unknown function of the VP22 tegument protein in herpesviral reprogramming of the cell cycle of the host cell and its potential implication in the generation of DNA damages.
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Citations
Marek's Disease Virus Disables the ATR-Chk1 Pathway by Activating STAT3.
TL;DR: This study identified a mechanism used by MDV to inhibit ATR-Chk1 pathways and observed that MDV infection causes DNA strand breakage in chicken fibroblast cells along with an increase in the DNA damage markers p53 and p21.
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Identification of Marek's Disease Virus VP22 Tegument Protein Domains Essential for Virus Cell-to-Cell Spread, Nuclear Localization, Histone Association and Cell-Cycle Arrest.
Laëtitia Trapp-Fragnet,Katia Courvoisier,Sylvie Rémy,G. Le Pape,Fabien Loustalot,Caroline Denesvre +5 more
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that the N-terminus of VP22 associated with its central domain is essential for virus spread and cell cycle modulation, and that AAs 174-190 of MDV VP22 containing the end of a putative extended alpha-3 helix are essential for both functions and that the 59 C-terminal AAs play a role in virus spread efficiency.
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Role of the DNA Binding Activity of Herpes Simplex Virus 1 VP22 in Evading AIM2-Dependent Inflammasome Activation Induced by the Virus.
TL;DR: This is the first report to show a role for the DNA binding activity of VP22 in the HSV-1 life cycle, allowing the virus to evade AIM2 inflammasome activation, which is critical for its replication in vivo.
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Marek's disease virus prolongs survival of primary chicken B-cells by inducing a senescence-like phenotype.
Laëtitia Trapp-Fragnet,Julia Schermuly,Marina Kohn,Luca D. Bertzbach,Luca D. Bertzbach,Florian Pfaff,Caroline Denesvre,Benedikt B. Kaufer,Sonja Härtle +8 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the cellular responses of bursal B-cells to infection with a very virulent MDV strain and showed that MDV infection extends the survival of B-cell in culture.
Mechanism of herpesvirus UL24 protein regulating viral immune escape and virulence
Peiling Ruan,Anchun Cheng,Xinxin Zhao,Qiaojia Yang,Ying Wu,Bin Tian,Juan Huang,Xumin Ou,Yu-Ting He,Renyong Jia,Shulin Chen,Mafeng Liu +11 more
TL;DR: The mechanism by which the UL24 protein mediates herpesvirus immune escape and its effects on viral proliferation and virulence by influencing syncytial formation, DNA damage and the cell cycle is reviewed.
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