Herpes Virus Rearranges Telomeres to Improve Viral Replication

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A team of scientists, led by researchers at The Wistar Institute, has found that an infection with herpes simplex virus 1 (HSV-1) causes rearrangements in telomeres, small stretches of DNA that serve as protective ends to chromosomes. The findings, which will be published in the Dec. 24 edition of the journal Cell Reports, show that this manipulation of telomeres may explain how viruses like herpes are able to successfully replicate while also revealing more about the protective role that telomeres play against other viruses.

“We know that telomeres play a very important part in the lifespan of a cell,” says Paul M. Lieberman, PhD, a professor and program leader of the Gene Expression and Regulation Program at The Wistar Institute. “We wanted to know whether they also play a role in either viral replication or protection from viruses, and our findings suggest – at least in the case of the herpes simplex virus – that this may indeed be the case.”

Telomeres are often compared to the clear tips of shoelaces because they protect the end of chromosomes – the keepers of our vital genetic information – and prevent them from fraying and breaking, thus preserving their ability to pass on necessary genetic information. Previously, Lieberman’s lab at Wistar has shown that viral DNA replication and maintenance share some common features with telomeres.

“Telomeres may serve as a barrier to viral replication,” Lieberman says. “We wanted to explore whether that protection was at a physical level or a more molecular level.”

Among the viruses Lieberman and his lab have decided to study is HSV-1, a particularly aggressive virus that replicates in the nucleus of a healthy cell where chromosomes and their telomeres reside. HSV-1 is a common virus that causes cold sores but can also cause more serious diseases including blindness and encephalitis. In the United States, approximately 65 percent of the population has antibodies to this particular strain of the virus as well as latent infections that can periodically reactivate to cause clinical symptoms. There is no vaccine for preventing HSV-1 infection and reactivation, and only a few effective treatments for the virus are available.

As detailed in the study, the Lieberman lab found that HSV-1 is able to induce the transcription of telomere repeat-containing RNA (TERRA). This is followed by the virus degrading a telomere protein called TPP1 – part of a complex of proteins responsible for protection called “telomere sheltering” – which results in the loss of the telomere repeat DNA signal. When TPP1 becomes inhibited, the virus is able to increase its ability to replicate, suggesting that TPP1 normally provides some sort of protective function against this virus. HSV-1 is able to replicate more efficiently by disabling this protection. Finally, the virus uses a replication protein called ICP8 that works with the manipulated telomeric proteins to promote viral genomic replication.

“This study expands our knowledge of telomeres further in two very important ways,” Lieberman says. “First, it gives us an indication that some viruses are able to manipulate telomeres specifically in order to replicate. Second, it appears that proteins like TPP1 provide very specific protective functions. These findings allow us to ask additional questions and better understand just how telomeres may protect cells from viral infection.”

This work was supported by an American Heart Association grant (11SDG5330017) and a National Institutes of Health grant (RO1CA140652). This work was also supported by the Institute’s National Cancer Institute Cancer Center Support Grant (P30CA010815) and the Commonwealth Universal Research Enhancement Program, Pennsylvania Department of Health.

Members of the Lieberman laboratory who co-authored this study include Zhong Deng, Olga Vladimirova, Jayaraju Dheekollu, and Zhuo Wang. Other authors from The Wistar Institute included Scott E. Hensley, Susan Janicki, Jaclyn L. Myers, and Alyshia Newhart. Other authors included Eui Tae Kim and Matthew D. Weitzman from the Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine and The Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia; Dongmei Liu and Jennifer Moffat from the Department of Microbiology and Immunology at State University of New York Upstate Medical University; Nigel W. Fraser from the Department of Microbiology at the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania; and David M. Knipe from the Department of Microbiology and Immunobiology at Harvard Medical School.

Source: Wistar Institute 

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