4.4 Article

A quantitative nuclear egress assay to investigate the nucleocytoplasmic capsid release of human cytomegalovirus

Journal

JOURNAL OF VIROLOGICAL METHODS
Volume 283, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jviromet.2020.113909

Keywords

Cytomegalovirus; Nuclear egress; Capsid-Release; Fractionation; genome-specific-qPCR; Quantitative assay

Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) [MA1289/11-1]
  2. Deutscher Akademischer Austauschdienst [Kicuntod/91686964, DAAD-Go8/2017-18/MM-WDR]
  3. Bayerische Forschungsstiftung [DeeP-CMV/AP-5/MM]
  4. Australian National Health and Medical Research Council [APP1127717-Hamilton]
  5. Thrasher Research Fund Early Career Award [RG181876-Hamilton]

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Nuclear egress is a rate-limiting step of herpesviral replication, restricting the nucleocytoplasmic transport of viral capsids. The process is regulated by two viral nuclear egress proteins (core NEC pUL50-pUL53), which recruit additional cellular and viral proteins. The multicomponent NEC mediates disassembly of the nuclear lamina barrier and the docking of nuclear capsids. The quantitation of nuclear egress has been accomplished by electron microscopic analysis, but is generally hampered by the low number of detectable cytoplasmic capsids. A newly established method for the quantitation of viral nuclear egress improves the characterization of viral mutants, host cell permissiveness and antiviral drug efficacy. In this study, various strains of human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) were used to measure the replication efficiencies in primary human fibroblasts, applying methods of cell fractionation, DNase digestion, sucrose cushions and quantitative PCR. Several stages of optimization led to a reliable quantitative assay that allowed the characterization of viral nuclear egress efficacy. Using this assay, recovery of the nuclear egress of a NEC-defective HCMV mutant was quantitatively assessed by applying an inducible NEC-expressing fibroblast culture for trans-complementation. This novel assay system can be further used to accurately quantitate and characterize the functionality of nuclear egress of HCMV or other herpesviruses.

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