Antibody to human cell lines with and without ultrastructural evidence for epstein-barr virus (ebv) infection in sera from patients with diverse viral illnesses

1971 ◽  
Vol 7 (3) ◽  
pp. 375-379 ◽  
Author(s):  
German Beltran ◽  
James W. Northington ◽  
Eduardo Leiderman ◽  
William J. Mogabgab ◽  
Walter J. Stuckey
Blood ◽  
1978 ◽  
Vol 51 (6) ◽  
pp. 1073-1085 ◽  
Author(s):  
JS Greenberger ◽  
A Karpas ◽  
PJ Gans ◽  
H Neumann ◽  
WC Moloney

BMC Genomics ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 17 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Marjolein J. G. Hooykaas ◽  
Elisabeth Kruse ◽  
Emmanuel J. H. J. Wiertz ◽  
Robert Jan Lebbink

ORL ◽  
1990 ◽  
Vol 52 (1) ◽  
pp. 40-46 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. Takimoto ◽  
J. Iwawaki ◽  
S. Tanaka ◽  
R. Umeda

Author(s):  
Miguel Vidal ◽  
Christopher Wrighton ◽  
Sarah Eccles ◽  
Julian Burke ◽  
Frank Grosveld

mSphere ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 2 (6) ◽  
Author(s):  
Lisa Grossman ◽  
Chris Chang ◽  
Joanne Dai ◽  
Pavel A. Nikitin ◽  
Dereje D. Jima ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) is a common human herpesvirus that establishes latency in B cells. While EBV infection is asymptomatic for most individuals, immune-suppressed individuals are at significantly higher risk of a form of EBV latent infection in which infected B cells are reactivated, grow unchecked, and generate lymphomas. This form of latency is modeled in the laboratory by infecting B cells from the blood of normal human donors in vitro. In this model, we identified a protein called CD226 that is induced by EBV but is not normally expressed on B cells. Rather, it is known to play a role in aggregation and survival signaling of non-B cells in the immune system. Cultures of EBV-infected cells adhere to one another in “clumps,” and while the proteins that are responsible for this cellular aggregation are not fully understood, we hypothesized that this form of cellular aggregation may provide a survival advantage. In this article, we characterize the mechanism by which EBV induces this protein and its expression on lymphoma tissue and cell lines and characterize EBV-infected cell lines in which CD226 has been knocked out. Epstein-Barr virus (EBV), an oncogenic herpesvirus, infects and transforms primary B cells into immortal lymphoblastoid cell lines (LCLs), providing a model for EBV-mediated tumorigenesis. EBV transformation stimulates robust homotypic aggregation, indicating that EBV induces molecules that mediate cell-cell adhesion. We report that EBV potently induced expression of the adhesion molecule CD226, which is not normally expressed on B cells. We found that early after infection of primary B cells, EBV promoted an increase in CD226 mRNA and protein expression. CD226 levels increased further from early proliferating EBV-positive B cells to LCLs. We found that CD226 expression on B cells was independent of B-cell activation as CpG DNA failed to induce CD226 to the extent of EBV infection. CD226 expression was high in EBV-infected B cells expressing the latency III growth program, but low in EBV-negative and EBV latency I-infected B-lymphoma cell lines. We validated this correlation by demonstrating that the latency III characteristic EBV NF-κB activator, latent membrane protein 1 (LMP1), was sufficient for CD226 upregulation and that CD226 was more highly expressed in lymphomas with increased NF-κB activity. Finally, we found that CD226 was not important for LCL steady-state growth, survival in response to apoptotic stress, homotypic aggregation, or adhesion to activated endothelial cells. These findings collectively suggest that EBV induces expression of a cell adhesion molecule on primary B cells that may play a role in the tumor microenvironment of EBV-associated B-cell malignancies or facilitate adhesion in the establishment of latency in vivo. IMPORTANCE Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) is a common human herpesvirus that establishes latency in B cells. While EBV infection is asymptomatic for most individuals, immune-suppressed individuals are at significantly higher risk of a form of EBV latent infection in which infected B cells are reactivated, grow unchecked, and generate lymphomas. This form of latency is modeled in the laboratory by infecting B cells from the blood of normal human donors in vitro. In this model, we identified a protein called CD226 that is induced by EBV but is not normally expressed on B cells. Rather, it is known to play a role in aggregation and survival signaling of non-B cells in the immune system. Cultures of EBV-infected cells adhere to one another in “clumps,” and while the proteins that are responsible for this cellular aggregation are not fully understood, we hypothesized that this form of cellular aggregation may provide a survival advantage. In this article, we characterize the mechanism by which EBV induces this protein and its expression on lymphoma tissue and cell lines and characterize EBV-infected cell lines in which CD226 has been knocked out.


2003 ◽  
Vol 77 (7) ◽  
pp. 4139-4148 ◽  
Author(s):  
Honglin Chen ◽  
Lindsey Hutt-Fletcher ◽  
Liang Cao ◽  
S. Diane Hayward

ABSTRACT STAT3 and STAT5 are constitutively activated and nuclear in nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC) cells. In normal signaling, STATs are only transiently activated. To investigate whether Epstein-Barr virus (EBV), and in particular the protein LMP1, contributes to sustained STAT phosphorylation and activation in epithelial cells, we examined STAT activity in two sets of paired cell lines, HeLa, an EBV-converted HeLa cell line, HeLa-Bx1, the NPC-derived cell line CNE2-LNSX, and an LMP1-expressing derivative, CNE2-LMP1. EBV infection was associated with a significant increase in the tyrosine-phosphorylated forms of STAT3 and STAT5 in HeLa-Bx1 cells. This effect correlated with LMP1 expression, since phosphorylated STAT3 and STAT5 levels were also increased in CNE2-LMP1 cells relative to the control CNE2-LNSX cells. No change was observed in STAT1 or STAT6 phosphorylation in these cell lines, nor was there a significant change in the levels of total STAT3, STAT5, STAT1, or STAT6 protein. Tyrosine phosphorylation allows the normally cytoplasmic STAT proteins to enter the nucleus and bind to their recognition sequences in responsive promoters. The ability of LMP1 to activate STAT3 was further established by immunofluorescence assays in which coexpression of LMP1 in transfected cells was sufficient to mediate nuclear relocalization of Flag-STAT3 and by an electrophoretic mobility shift assay which showed that LMP1 expression in CNE2-LNSX cells was associated with increased endogenous STAT3 DNA binding activity. In addition, the activity of a downstream target of STAT3, c-Myc, was upregulated in HeLa-Bx1 and CNE2-LMP1 cells. A linkage was established between interleukin-6 (IL-6)- and LMP1-mediated STAT3 activation. Treatment with IL-6 increased phosphorylated STAT3 levels in CNE2-LNSX cells, and conversely, treatment of CNE2-LMP1 cells with IL-6 neutralizing antibody ablated STAT3 activation and c-Myc upregulation. The previous observation that STAT3 activated the LMP1 terminal repeat promoter in reporter assays was extended to show upregulated expression of endogenous LMP1 mRNA and protein in HeLa-Bx1 cells transfected with a constitutively activated STAT3. A model is proposed in which EBV infection of an epithelial cell containing activated STATs would permit LMP1 expression. This in turn would establish a positive feedback loop of IL-6-induced STAT activation, LMP1 and Qp-EBNA1 expression, and viral genome persistence.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document