Co-option of mitochondrial nucleic acid–sensing pathways by HSV-1 UL12.5 for reactivation from latent infection

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Abstract

Although viruses subvert innate immune pathways for their replication, there is evidence they can also co-opt antiviral responses for their benefit. The ubiquitous human pathogen, Herpes simplex virus-1 (HSV-1), encodes a protein (UL12.5) that induces the release of mitochondrial nucleic acid into the cytosol, which activates immune-sensing pathways and reduces productive replication in nonneuronal cells. HSV-1 establishes latency in neurons and can reactivate to cause disease. We found that UL12.5 is required for HSV-1 reactivation in neurons and acts to directly promote viral lytic gene expression during initial exit from latency. Further, the direct activation of innate immune-sensing pathways triggered HSV-1 reactivation and compensated for a lack of UL12.5. Finally, we found that the induction of HSV-1 lytic genes during reactivation required intact RNA- and DNA-sensing pathways, demonstrating that HSV-1 can respond to and active antiviral nucleic acid–sensing pathways to reactivate from a latent infection.

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Krakowiak, P. A., Flores, M. E., Cuddy, S. R., Whitford, A. L., Dochnal, S. A., Babnis, A., … Cliffe, A. R. (2025). Co-option of mitochondrial nucleic acid–sensing pathways by HSV-1 UL12.5 for reactivation from latent infection. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 122(4). https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2413965122

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