Litcius/Paper detail

Hsv-1 Endocytic Entry into a Human Oligodendrocytic Cell Line Is Mediated by Clathrin and Dynamin but Not Caveolin

Beatriz Praena, Raquel Bello‐Morales, José Antonio López‐Guerrero

2020Viruses37 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Endocytosis is a pathway used by viruses to enter cells that can be classified based on the proteins involved, such as dynamin, clathrin or caveolin. Although the entry of herpes simplex type 1 (HSV-1) by endocytosis has been documented in different cell types, its dependence on clathrin has not been described whereas its dependence on dynamin has been shown according to the cell line used. The present work shows how clathrin-mediated endocytosis (CME) is one way that HSV-1 infects the human oligodendroglial (HOG) cell line. Partial dynamin inhibition using dynasore revealed a relationship between decrease of infection and dynamin inhibition, measured by viral titration and immunoblot. Co-localization between dynamin and HSV-1 was verified by immunofluorescence at the moment of viral entry into the cell. Inhibition by chlorpromazine revealed that viral progeny also decreased when clathrin was partially inhibited in our cell line. RT-qPCR of immediately early viral genes, specific entry assays and electron microscopy all confirmed clathrin's participation in HSV-1 entry into HOG cells. In contrast, caveolin entry assays showed no effect on the entry of this virus. Therefore, our results suggest the participation of dynamin and clathrin during endocytosis of HSV-1 in HOG cells.

Topics & Concepts

DynaminEndocytosisClathrinEndocytic cycleCaveolaeCell biologyBiologyReceptor-mediated endocytosisViral entryCell cultureCaveolinCellVirologyVirusViral replicationSignal transductionBiochemistryGeneticsHerpesvirus Infections and TreatmentsLipid Membrane Structure and BehaviorCytomegalovirus and herpesvirus research