4.6 Article

An Ancestral Retrovirus Envelope Protein Regulates Persistent Gammaherpesvirus Lifecycles

Journal

FRONTIERS IN MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 12, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2021.708404

Keywords

Epstein-Barr virus; Kaposi's sarcoma associated herpes virus; latency; lytic activation; epigenetics; endogenous retrovirus; Syncytin-1

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Funding

  1. University of Florida
  2. Children's Miracle Network
  3. NIH [T32 T32AI007539, R01 AI113134, R41 AI115834]

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Research has shown a potential link between the expression of human endogenous retroviruses (HERVs) and the lytic activation of human gammaherpesviruses, with the HERV-W envelope protein Syncytin-1 playing a role in lytic activation and contributing to cell cycle progression. This suggests that EBV and KSHV have adapted a dependency on Syncytin-1 to facilitate lytic replication activation from latency, while also promoting viral persistence by contributing to B cell proliferation.
Human gammaherpesviruses Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) and Kaposi's sarcoma-associated herpesvirus (KSHV) persist as life-long infections alternating between latency and lytic replication. Human endogenous retroviruses (HERVs), via integration into the host genome, represent genetic remnants of ancient retroviral infections. Both show similar epigenetic silencing while dormant, but can reactivate in response to cell signaling cues or triggers that, for gammaherpesviruses, result in productive lytic replication. Given their co-existence with humans and shared epigenetic silencing, we asked if HERV expression might be linked to lytic activation of human gammaherpesviruses. We found ERVW-1 mRNA, encoding the functional HERV-W envelope protein Syncytin-1, along with other repeat class elements, to be elevated upon lytic activation of EBV. Knockdown/knockout of ERVW-1 reduced lytic activation of EBV and KSHV in response to various lytic cycle triggers. In this regard, reduced expression of immediate early proteins ZEBRA and RTA for EBV and KSHV, respectively, places Syncytin-1's influence on lytic activation mechanistically upstream of the latent-to-lytic switch. Conversely, overexpression of Syncytin-1 enhanced lytic activation of EBV and KSHV in response to lytic triggers, though this was not sufficient to induce lytic activation in the absence of such triggers. Syncytin-1 is expressed in replicating B cell blasts and lymphoma-derived B cell lines where it appears to contribute to cell cycle progression. Together, human gammaherpesviruses and B cells appear to have adapted a dependency on Syncytin-1 that facilitates the ability of EBV and KSHV to activate lytic replication from latency, while promoting viral persistence during latency by contributing to B cell proliferation.

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