4.6 Article

Marek's Disease Virus Requires Both Copies of the Inverted Repeat Regions for Efficient In Vivo Replication and Pathogenesis

Journal

JOURNAL OF VIROLOGY
Volume 95, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/JVI.01256-20

Keywords

Marek's disease virus; alphaherpesvirus; repeat regions; diploid genes; replication; class E genome; recombination; genome restoration; cancer; inverted repeat regions; pathogenesis

Categories

Funding

  1. Volkswagen Foundation Lichtenberg grant [A112662]

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Marek's disease virus (MDV) requires both copies of the repeats for efficient replication and pathogenesis in chickens, while replication is not affected in cell culture. This highlights the importance of repeat regions in MDV genome biology and pathogenesis.
Marek's disease virus (MDV) is an oncogenic alphaherpesvirus of chickens. The MDV genome consists of two unique regions that are both flanked by inverted repeat regions. These repeats harbor several genes involved in virus replication and pathogenesis, but it remains unclear why MDV and other herpesviruses harbor these large sequence duplications. In this study, we set to determine if both copies of these repeat regions are required for MDV replication and pathogenesis. Our results demonstrate that MDV mutants lacking the entire internal repeat region (Delta IRLS) efficiently replicate and spread from cell-to-cell in vitro. However, Delta IRLS replication was severely impaired in infected chickens and the virus caused significantly less frequent disease and tumors compared to the controls. In addition, we also generated recombinant viruses that harbor a deletion of most of the internal repeat region, leaving only short terminal sequences behind (Delta IRLS-HR). These remaining homologous sequences facilitated rapid restoration of the deleted repeat region, resulting in a virus that caused disease and tumors comparable to the wild type. Therefore, Delta IR(LS-)(HR )represents an excellent platform for rapid genetic manipulation of the virus genome in the repeat regions. Taken together, our study demonstrates that MDV requires both copies of the repeats for efficient replication and pathogenesis in its natural host. IMPORTANCE Marek's disease virus (MDV) is a highly oncogenic alphaherpesvirus that infects chickens and causes losses in the poultry industry of up to $2 billion per year. The virus is also widely used as a model to study alphaherpesvirus pathogenesis and virus-induced tumor development in a natural host. MDV and most other herpesviruses harbor direct or inverted repeats regions in their genome. However, the role of these sequence duplications in MDV remains elusive and has never been investigated in a natural virus-host model for any herpesvirus. Here, we demonstrate that both copies of the repeats are needed for efficient MDV replication and pathogenesis in vivo, while replication was not affected in cell culture. With this, we further dissect herpesvirus genome biology and the role of repeat regions in Marek's disease virus replication and pathogenesis.

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