AP-1 homolog BZLF1 of Epstein–Barr virus has two essential functions dependent on the epigenetic state of the viral genome
0301 basic medicine
B-Lymphocytes
Epstein-Barr Virus Infections
Herpesvirus 4, Human
Genes, Essential
Genes, Viral
Virion
Genome, Viral
DNA Methylation
Transfection
Virus Replication
Epigenesis, Genetic
3. Good health
Transcription Factor AP-1
03 medical and health sciences
DNA, Viral
Trans-Activators
Humans
Lymphocytes
Genes, Immediate-Early
Cell Division
DOI:
10.1073/pnas.0911948107
Publication Date:
2009-12-23T02:09:29Z
AUTHORS (5)
ABSTRACT
EBV, a member of the herpes virus family, is a paradigm for human tumor viruses and a model of viral latency amenable for study in vitro. It induces resting human B lymphocytes to proliferate indefinitely in vitro and initially establishes a strictly latent infection in these cells.
BZLF1
, related to the cellular activating protein 1 (AP-1) family of transcription factors, is the viral master gene essential and sufficient to mediate the switch to induce the EBV lytic phase in latently infected B cells. Enigmatically, after infection
BZLF1
is expressed very early in the majority of primary B cells, but its early expression fails to induce the EBV lytic phase. We show that the early expression of
BZLF1
has a critical role in driving the proliferation of quiescent naïve and memory B cells but not of activated germinal center B cells.
BZLF1’s
initial failure to induce the EBV lytic phase relies on the viral DNA at first being unmethylated. We have found that the eventual and inevitable methylation of viral DNA is a prerequisite for productive infection in stably, latently infected B cells which then yield progeny virus lacking cytosine-phosphatidyl-guanosine (CpG) methylation. This progeny virus then can repeat EBV’s epigenetically regulated, biphasic life cycle. Our data indicate that the viral BZLF1 protein is crucial both to establish latency and to escape from it. Our data also indicate that EBV has evolved to appropriate its host’s mode of methylating DNA for its own epigenetic regulation.
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