Litcius/Paper detail

Identification and Cloning of a New Western Epstein-Barr Virus Strain That Efficiently Replicates in Primary B Cells

Susanne Delécluse, Rémy Poirey, Martin Zeier, Paul Schnitzler, Uta Behrends, Ming‐Han Tsai, Henri‐Jacques Delecluse

2020Journal of Virology19 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) infects the majority of the world population but causes different diseases in different countries. Evidence that lytic replication, the process that leads to new virus progeny, is linked to cancer development is accumulating. Indeed, viruses such as M81 that were isolated from Far Eastern nasopharyngeal carcinomas replicate strongly in B cells. We show here that some viruses isolated from Western patients, including the MSHJ strain, share this property. Moreover, replication of both M81 and of MSHJ was sensitive to ibrutinib, a commonly used drug, thereby opening an opportunity for therapeutic intervention. Sequencing of MSHJ showed that this virus is quite distant from M81 and is much closer to nonreplicating Western viruses. We conclude that Western EBV strains are heterogeneous, with some viruses being able to replicate more strongly and therefore being potentially more pathogenic than others, and that the virus sequence information alone cannot predict this property.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyLytic cycleVirologyVirusEpstein–Barr virusViral replicationPopulationCloning (programming)Strain (injury)GeneticsSociologyProgramming languageComputer scienceDemographyAnatomyViral-associated cancers and disordersLymphoma Diagnosis and TreatmentPolyomavirus and related diseases