Journal
MEDICAL MICROBIOLOGY AND IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 204, Issue 3, Pages 295-305Publisher
SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00430-015-0405-2
Keywords
Antiviral intervention; Envelope glycoproteins; Mathematical modeling of virus multiplication; Transcomplementation; Virus entry; Virus spread
Categories
Funding
- Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [AD131/3-2]
- Clinical Research Group KFO [183]
- young investigator program MAIFOR of the University Medical Center Mainz
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Initial virus entry into cells of host organs and subsequent spread of viral progeny between tissue cells are events fundamental to viral pathogenesis. Glycoprotein complexes inserted in the virion envelope are critically involved in the cell entry process. Here we review and discuss recent work that has shed light on the in vivo role of the trimeric glycoprotein complex gH/gL/gO of murine cytomegalovirus (mCMV) as a model to propose the role of the corresponding complex of human CMV, for which experimental studies in vivo are not feasible due to the host species specificity of CMVs and evident ethical constraints. A novel approach combining gO transcomplementation of a genetically gO-deficient virus and a mathematical log-linear regression analysis of the viral multiplication kinetics in host tissues revealed a critical role of mCMV gH/gL/gO only in first target cell entry of virions arriving with the circulation, whereas intra-tissue spread proceeded unaffected also in the absence of gH/gL/gO. These findings predict that targeting gO for an antiviral intervention may be of prophylactic value in preventing the seeding of virus to organs, but will likely fail to interfere with an established primary organ infection or with recurrent infection after virus reactivation from latency within tissue cells. The demonstration in the murine model of alternative gH/gL complexes gH/gL/gO and gH/gL/MCK-2, substituting one another in a redundant fashion for securing viral spread in tissues, has the medically interesting bearing that targeting the gH/gL core complex directly may be a promising approach to preventing primary, established, and recurrent CMV infections.
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