Publication | Closed Access
The effects of lithium and potassium on macromolecular synthesis in herpes simplex virus-infected cells
18
Citations
24
References
1993
Year
Viral ReplicationMolecular VirologyBiochemistrySynthetic VirologyPotassium StarvationNatural SciencesDna ReplicationVirologyHerpesvirusesMolecular BiologyHsv Dna SynthesisViral Structural ProteinMedicineCell BiologyMacromolecular SynthesisHsv Dna PolymeraseHerpes Simplex Virus Vaccines
All herpes simplex virus (HSV) infected cell-specific polypeptides (ICSPs) were synthesized in the presence of lithium at a concentration (60 mM) inhibitory to the production of infectious virus. Yields of certain ICSPs were increased and others, in particular glycoprotein C, decreased. HSV DNA synthesis was completely inhibited; synthesis and in vitro activities of HSV DNA polymerase and thymidine kinase were decreased but to a degree insufficient to account for the complete inhibition of HSV DNA synthesis. HSV DNA synthesis was inhibited to an equivalent degree by either incubation with 60 mM-lithium or by potassium starvation; both procedures decreased intracellular potassium by an equivalent amount as adjudged by X-ray microanalysis. We conclude that lithium inhibits HSV DNA synthesis by displacement of potassium from a potassium-dependent biochemical reaction or by other physiological changes brought about by the loss of cellular potassium. The possibility that lithium also directly inhibits a virus replicative event cannot be excluded.
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