|
 |
 |

NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2004
April
Gene that plays key
role in replicating viruses also halts inflammation
Jim Barlow, Life Sciences Editor
217-333-5802; jebarlow@uiuc.edu
4/6/04
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. —
Scientists at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign studying
vaccinia virus, a close relative of smallpox, have determined that a
gene necessary for virus replication also has a key role in turning
off inflammation, a crucial anti-viral immune response of host cells.
The discovery, reported this month in the Journal of Virology, potentially
broadens the knowledge base of how all poxviruses cause disease and
how they may be outwitted by improvements in vaccines against them,
said Joanna L. Shisler, a professor of microbiology
in the College of Medicine at
Urbana-Champaign.
“If we can find out how the virus evades immune responses and
learn more about the signals the virus sees as necessary for replicating
within the host cell, then we can figure out how to inhibit them and
halt the viral replication,” she said.
Post 9-11 fears of bioterrorism by means of the deliberate introduction
of smallpox have spawned renewed interest in new, safer vaccines against
the deadly disease, which was eradicated as a naturally occurring danger
in 1977. Some U.S. medical workers and military personnel have received
vaccinations made of the live vaccinia virus, but while this tamer relative
of smallpox normally doesn’t cause disease, complications, including
death, are possible especially among immune-compromised individuals.
The vaccinia virus genome is 97 percent genetically identical to the
smallpox genome, making it an ideal model virus to use in the laboratory
to understand how smallpox and other dangerous poxviruses function,
Shisler said.
In their research, Shisler and Xiao-Lu Jin, a research specialist in
microbiology, found that a 5.2 kb segment of vaccinia virus DNA containing
six genes was responsible for inhibiting a key cellular transcription
factor called NF kappa B (NF-kB).
NF-kB serves to turn on other host cell genes involved in anti-viral
immune responses and inflammation.
The researchers then sought to determine what specific genes in the
segment inhibit NF-kB activation. To carry out the study, they introduced
individual genes from the 5.2kb segment into a mutant poxvirus vector
that activates NF-kB.
They infected human and rabbit cell lines with the new recombinant viruses
and detected NF-kB activity levels. They found that the recombinant
virus containing the introduced K1L gene prevented degradation of the
cellular inhibitor of NF-kB, therefore inhibiting NF-kB’s ability
to ignite immune responses.
Since the 1980s it was known that K1L was necessary for vaccinia virus
replication. The additional function of K1L, as determined in the new
study, suggests that poxviruses may need to turn NF-kB on and off at
crucial times to regulate replication.
Understanding the molecular machinery involved may make it possible
to eventually manufacture safer vaccines for smallpox and vaccinia-based
vaccines for HIV by specifically manipulating genes, Shisler said.
Because the K1L gene inhibited NF-kB activation in numerous cell lines
tested, it suggests that its activity is global. Since this study was
completed, the researchers subsequently have found a second protein
that inhibits NF-kB, suggesting there may be multiple genes at work,
Shisler said.
“These viral proteins are present in smallpox, monkey pox and
many other poxes, and they are very homologous,” she said. “If
we know how these proteins function, we can start figuring out why smallpox
and monkey pox cause disease.”
The Roy J. Carver Charitable Trust of Muscatine, Iowa, funded the research.
|
 |
 |
|