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Dr. Fouad Fouad Saad Elmayet :: Publications:

Title:
Combinatorial Effects of the Glucocorticoid Receptor and Krüppel-Like Transcription Factor 15 on Bovine Herpesvirus 1 Transcription and Productive Infection
Authors: Fouad S. El-mayet, Laximan Sawant, Prasanth Thunuguntla, Clinton Jones
Year: 2017
Keywords: bovine herpesvirus 1, KLF15, gene regulation, glucocorticoids, latency, stress response
Journal: Journal of virology
Volume: 91
Issue: 21
Pages: e00904-17
Publisher: American Society for Microbiology Journals
Local/International: International
Paper Link:
Full paper Fouad Fouad Saad Elmayt_EL-mayet et al 2017.pdf
Supplementary materials Not Available
Abstract:

Bovine herpesvirus 1 (BoHV-1), an important bovine pathogen, establishes lifelong latency in sensory neurons. Latently infected calves consistently reactivate from latency following a single intravenous injection of the synthetic corticosteroid dexamethasone. The immediate early transcription unit 1 (IEtu1) promoter, which drives bovine ICP0 (bICP0) and bICP4 expression, is stimulated by dexamethasone because it contains two glucocorticoid receptor (GR) response elements (GREs). Several Krüppel-like transcription factors (KLF), including KLF15, are induced during reactivation from latency, and they stimulate certain viral promoters and productive infection. In this study, we demonstrate that the GR and KLF15 were frequently expressed in the same trigeminal ganglion (TG) neuron during reactivation and cooperatively stimulated productive infection and IEtu1 GREs in mouse neuroblastoma cells (Neuro-2A). We further hypothesized that additional regions in the BoHV-1 genome are transactivated by the GR or stress-induced transcription factors. To test this hypothesis, BoHV-1 DNA fragments (less than 400 bp) containing potential GR and KLF binding sites were identified and examined for transcriptional activation by stress-induced transcription factors. Intergenic regions within the unique long 52 gene (UL52; a component of the DNA primase/helicase complex), bICP4, IEtu2, and the unique short region were stimulated by KLF15 and the GR. Chromatin immunoprecipitation studies revealed that the GR and KLF15 interacted with sequences within IEtu1 GREs and the UL52 fragment. Coimmunoprecipitation studies demonstrated that KLF15 and the GR were associated with each other in transfected cells. Since the GR stimulates KLF15 expression, we suggest that these two transcription factors form a feed-forward loop that stimulates viral gene expression and productive infection following stressful stimuli.

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