Background: Several human malignancies are associated with Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) and more than 95% of the adult human population carries this virus lifelong. EBV efficiently infects human B cells and persists in this cellular compartment latently. EBV-infected B cells become activated and growth transformed, express a characteristic set of viral latent genes, and acquire the status of proliferating lymphoblastoid cell lines in vitro. Because EBV infects only primate cells, it has not been possible to establish to establish a model of infection in immunocompetent rodents. Such a model would be most desirable in order to study EBV's pathogenesis and latency in a suitable and amenable host. Methodology/Principal Findings: We stably introduced recombinant EBV genomes into mouse embryonic stem cells and induced their differentiation to B cells in vitro to develop the desired model. In vitro differentiated murine B cells maintained the EBV genomes but expression of viral genes was restricted to the latent memberane proteins (LMPs). In contrast to human B cells, EBV's nuclear antigens (EBNAs) were not expressed detectably and growth transformed murine B cells did not human un vitro. Aberrant splicing and premature termination of EBNA mRNAs most likely prevented the expression of EBNA genes required for B-cell transformation. Conclusions/Significance: Our findings indicate that fundamental differences in gene regulation between mouse and man might block the route towards a tractable murine model for EBV. © 2008 Zychlinska et al.
CITATION STYLE
Zychlinska, M., Herrmann, H., Zimber-Strobl, U., & Hammerschmidt, W. (2008). Restricted expression of Epstein-Barr virus latent genes in murine B cells derived from embryonic stem cells. PLoS ONE, 3(4). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0001996
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