Publication | Open Access
During Lytic Infection Herpes Simplex Virus Type 1 Is Associated with Histones Bearing Modifications That Correlate with Active Transcription
166
Citations
34
References
2004
Year
Viral ReplicationHistones Bearing ModificationsChromatin StateImmunologyPathologyMolecular BiologyEpigeneticsActive TranscriptionVirus GeneHsv-1 GenomeViral GeneticsNeurovirologyVirologyPermissive Chromatin StateGene ExpressionChromatinMolecular VirologyChromatin StructureNatural SciencesPathogenesisHerpesvirusesSystems BiologyMedicine
Herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) is a large (150-kb) double-stranded DNA virus that forms latent infections in neuronal cells of the human peripheral nervous system. Previous work determined that the HSV-1 genome is found in an ordered nucleosomal structure during latent infection. However, during lytic infection, it was unclear whether viral DNA was in a chromatin state. We examined HSV-1 during lytic infection using micrococcal nuclease digestion and chromatin immunoprecipitation. The HSV-1 genome is at least partially nucleosomal, although apparently not in a regular repeating structure. Analysis of histones associated with HSV-1, within both the promoter and the transcribed regions, revealed covalent amino tail modifications similar to those associated with active host mammalian genes. Certain of the modifications were detected in the temporal order expected of the immediate-early, early, and late gene classes. These data suggest that productive infection may be accompanied by acquisition of a permissive chromatin state.
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