Affiliation:
1. Institute
for Virology, Johannes Gutenberg-University, Mainz,
Germany
2. I. Department of
Internal Medicine, Medical Centre Mainz, Mainz,
Germany
Abstract
ABSTRACT
During
murine cytomegalovirus (mCMV) latency in the lungs, most of the viral
genomes are transcriptionally silent at the major immediate-early
locus, but rare and stochastic episodes of desilencing lead to the
expression of IE1 transcripts. This low-frequency but perpetual
expression is accompanied by an activation of lung-resident
effector-memory CD8 T cells specific for the antigenic peptide
168-YPHFMPTNL-176, which is derivedfrom the IE1 protein. These molecular and immunological findings were
combined in the “silencing/desilencing and immune sensing
hypothesis” of cytomegalovirus latency and reactivation. This
hypothesis proposes that IE1 gene expression proceeds to cell surface
presentation of the IE1 peptide by the major histocompatibility complex
(MHC) class I molecule L
d
and that its recognition by CD8 T
cells terminates virus reactivation. Here we provide experimental
evidence in support of this hypothesis. We generated mutant virus
mCMV-IE1-L176A, in which the antigenic IE1 peptide is functionally
deleted by a point mutation of the C-terminal MHC class I anchor
residue Leu into Ala. Two revertant viruses, mCMV-IE1-A176L and the
wobble nucleotide-marked mCMV-IE1-A176L*, in which Leu is restored by
back-mutation of Ala codon GCA into Leu codons CTA and CTT,
respectively, were constructed. Pulmonary latency of the mutant virus
was found to be associated with an increased prevalence of IE1
transcription and with events of IE3 transactivator splicing. In
conclusion, IE1-specific CD8 T cells recognize and terminate virus
reactivation in vivo at the first opportunity in the reactivated gene
expression program. The perpetual gene expression and antigen
presentation might represent the driving molecular force in
CMV-associated
immunosenescence.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Virology,Insect Science,Immunology,Microbiology
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