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Immediate Early Proteins of Herpes Simplex Virus Transiently Repress Viral Transcription before Subsequent Activation

Laura Dunn, Claire Birkenheuer, Rachel Dufour, Joel D. Baines

2022Journal of Virology15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

HSV-1 transcription during productive replication is believed to comprise a series of activation steps leading to a specific sequence of gene expression. Here, we show that virion components and IE gene products ICP0, ICP4, and ICP22 first repress viral gene transcription to various degrees before subsequently activating specific gene subsets. It follows that the entire HSV transcriptional program involves a series of steps to sequentially reverse this repression. This previously uncharacterized repressive activity of IE genes very early in infection may represent an important checkpoint allowing HSV-1 to orchestrate either the robust lytic transcriptional cascade or the more restricted transcriptional program during latency.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyLytic cycleTranscription (linguistics)Herpes simplex virusGeneViral replicationVirologyTranscriptional regulationVirusGene expressionMolecular biologyGeneticsLinguisticsPhilosophyHerpesvirus Infections and TreatmentsPoxvirus research and outbreaksVirus-based gene therapy research