56 research outputs found

    Vaccination against a hit-and-run viral cancer

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    Cancers with viral aetiologies can potentially be prevented by antiviral vaccines. Therefore, it is important to understand how viral infections and cancers might be linked. Some cancers frequently carry gammaherpesvirus genomes. However, they generally express the same viral genes as non-transformed cells, and differ mainly in also carrying oncogenic host mutations. Infection, therefore, seems to play a triggering or accessory role in disease. The hit-and-run hypothesis proposes that cumulative host mutations can allow viral genomes to be lost entirely, such that cancers remaining virus-positive represent only a fraction of those to which infection contributes. This would have considerable implications for disease control. However, the hit-and-run hypothesis has so far lacked experimental support. Here, we tested it by using Cre–lox recombination to trigger transforming mutations in virus-infected cells. Thus, β€˜floxed’ oncogene mice were infected with Cre recombinase-positive murid herpesvirus-4 (MuHV-4). The emerging cancers showed the expected genetic changes but, by the time of presentation, almost all lacked viral genomes. Vaccination with a non-persistent MuHV-4 mutant nonetheless conferred complete protection. Equivalent human gammaherpesvirus vaccines could therefore potentially prevent not only viral genome-positive cancers, but possibly also some cancers less suspected of a viral origin because of viral genome loss

    Viral Bcl-2-Mediated Evasion of Autophagy Aids Chronic Infection of Ξ³Herpesvirus 68

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    Ξ³-herpesviruses (Ξ³HVs) have developed an interaction with their hosts wherein they establish a life-long persistent infection and are associated with the onset of various malignancies. One critical virulence factor involved in the persistency of murine Ξ³-herpesvirus 68 (Ξ³HV68) is the viral homolog of the Bcl-2 protein (vBcl-2), which has been implicated to counteract both host apoptotic responses and autophagy pathway. However, the relative significance of the two activities of vBcl-2 in viral persistent infection has yet to be elucidated. Here, by characterizing a series of loss-of-function mutants of vBcl-2, we have distinguished the vBcl-2-mediated antagonism of autophagy from the vBcl-2-mediated inhibition of apoptosis in vitro and in vivo. A mutant Ξ³HV68 virus lacking the anti-autophagic activity of vBcl-2 demonstrates an impaired ability to maintain chronic infections in mice, whereas a mutant virus lacking the anti-apoptotic activity of vBcl-2 establishes chronic infections as efficiently as the wild-type virus but displays a compromised ability for ex vivo reactivation. Thus, the vBcl-2-mediated antagonism of host autophagy constitutes a novel mechanism by which Ξ³HVs confer persistent infections, further underscoring the importance of autophagy as a critical host determinant in the in vivo latency of Ξ³-herpesviruses

    Global mRNA Degradation during Lytic Gammaherpesvirus Infection Contributes to Establishment of Viral Latency

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    During a lytic gammaherpesvirus infection, host gene expression is severely restricted by the global degradation and altered 3β€² end processing of mRNA. This host shutoff phenotype is orchestrated by the viral SOX protein, yet its functional significance to the viral lifecycle has not been elucidated, in part due to the multifunctional nature of SOX. Using an unbiased mutagenesis screen of the murine gammaherpesvirus 68 (MHV68) SOX homolog, we isolated a single amino acid point mutant that is selectively defective in host shutoff activity. Incorporation of this mutation into MHV68 yielded a virus with significantly reduced capacity for mRNA turnover. Unexpectedly, the MHV68 mutant showed little defect during the acute replication phase in the mouse lung. Instead, the virus exhibited attenuation at later stages of in vivo infections suggestive of defects in both trafficking and latency establishment. Specifically, mice intranasally infected with the host shutoff mutant accumulated to lower levels at 10 days post infection in the lymph nodes, failed to develop splenomegaly, and exhibited reduced viral DNA levels and a lower frequency of latently infected splenocytes. Decreased latency establishment was also observed upon infection via the intraperitoneal route. These results highlight for the first time the importance of global mRNA degradation during a gammaherpesvirus infection and link an exclusively lytic phenomenon with downstream latency establishment

    Land Acknowledgement

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    The statement of land acknowledgement as presented for the northwest Arkansas regio

    Northern Goshawks in the Malheur National Forest Eastern Oregon 1992 TO 2011

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    448 page report, and sound recordings of vocalizations.This report summarizes the data generated from a long-term effort to perform continued and consistent monitoring of goshawk nest sites on the Malheur National Forest in eastern Oregon from 1992 to 2010. This compilation is the product of personal field work in which data were collected in a manner that was consistent with the methods developed in 1992, the first year in which attempts to quantify variables in territory usage, habitat selection, yearly productivity, and other behavioral attributes of Northern Goshawk (Accipiter gentilis) began in the drier eastern forests of Oregon. The contents of this manuscript consist of a narrative of the history of studies and methods as envisioned by researchers from Oregon State University and various public land management agencies, and the yearly field observations subsequently carried out by the author. This information includes the tracking of movement, productivity, and yearly occurrences of goshawk in their territories, along with other observations and studies that were added by the author. Rather than viewing this as an attempt to test hypotheses, this is a presentation of a long- term monitoring project, in the mold of classic natural history observations. This manuscript contains specific data and information from insights that hopefully will be gleaned to aid further investigations in this region of eastern Oregon, and may be of interest elsewhere

    Code of conduct

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    This document of conference etiquette was made available to participants onlin
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