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   Reversible Silencing of Cytomegalovirus Genomes by Type I Interferon Governs Virus Latency  
   
نویسنده daǧ f. ,dölken l. ,holzki j. ,drabig a. ,weingärtner a. ,schwerk j. ,lienenklaus s. ,conte i. ,geffers r. ,davenport c. ,rand u. ,köster m. ,weiß s. ,adler b. ,wirth d. ,messerle m. ,hauser h. ,čičin-šain l.
منبع plos pathogens - 2014 - دوره : 10 - شماره : 2
چکیده    Herpesviruses establish a lifelong latent infection posing the risk for virus reactivation and disease. in cytomegalovirus infection,expression of the major immediate early (ie) genes is a critical checkpoint,driving the lytic replication cycle upon primary infection or reactivation from latency. while it is known that type i interferon (ifn) limits lytic cmv replication,its role in latency and reactivation has not been explored. in the model of mouse cmv infection,we show here that ifnβ blocks mouse cmv replication at the level of ie transcription in ifn-responding endothelial cells and fibroblasts. the ifn-mediated inhibition of ie genes was entirely reversible,arguing that the ifn-effect may be consistent with viral latency. importantly,the response to ifnβ is stochastic,and mcmv ie transcription and replication were repressed only in ifn-responsive cells,while the ifn-unresponsive cells remained permissive for lytic mcmv infection. ifn blocked the viral lytic replication cycle by upregulating the nuclear domain 10 (nd10) components,pml,sp100 and daxx,and their knockdown by shrna rescued viral replication in the presence of ifnβ. finally,ifnβ prevented mcmv reactivation from endothelial cells derived from latently infected mice,validating our results in a biologically relevant setting. therefore,our data do not only define for the first time the molecular mechanism of ifn-mediated control of cmv infection,but also indicate that the reversible inhibition of the virus lytic cycle by ifnβ is consistent with the establishment of cmv latency. © 2014 dag et al.
آدرس department for vaccinology/immune aging and chronic infection,helmholtz centre for infection research,braunschweig, Germany, department of medicine,university of cambridge,cambridge, United Kingdom, department for vaccinology/immune aging and chronic infection,helmholtz centre for infection research,braunschweig, Germany, department for vaccinology/immune aging and chronic infection,helmholtz centre for infection research,braunschweig, Germany, department for vaccinology/immune aging and chronic infection,helmholtz centre for infection research,braunschweig, Germany, department of gene regulation and differentiation,helmholtz centre for infection research,braunschweig, Germany, department of molecular immunology,helmholtz centre for infection research,braunschweig, Germany, department for vaccinology/immune aging and chronic infection,helmholtz centre for infection research,braunschweig, Germany, department for genome analytics,helmholtz centre for infection research,braunschweig, Germany, department of pediatric pneumology and neonatology,medical school hannover,hannover, Germany, department of gene regulation and differentiation,helmholtz centre for infection research,braunschweig, Germany, department of gene regulation and differentiation,helmholtz centre for infection research,braunschweig, Germany, department of molecular immunology,helmholtz centre for infection research,braunschweig, Germany, department of virology,max von pettenkofer institute,ludwig maximillian university,munich, Germany, department of gene regulation and differentiation,helmholtz centre for infection research,braunschweig, Germany, department for virology,medical school hannover,hannover, Germany, department of gene regulation and differentiation,helmholtz centre for infection research,braunschweig, Germany, department for vaccinology/immune aging and chronic infection,helmholtz centre for infection research,braunschweig,germany,department for virology,medical school hannover,hannover, Germany
 
     
   
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