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Now showing items 33 - 48 of 6936

  • Cyclosporine inhibits mouse cytomegalovirus infection via a cyclophilin-dependent pathway specifically in neural stem/progenitor cells

    Kawasaki, Hideya   Mocarski, Edward S.   Kosugi, Isao   Tsutsui, Yoshihiro  

    The potential of neural stem and progenitor cell (NSPC) transplantation in neurodegenerative disease raises a concern about immunosuppressive agents and opportunistic neurotropic pathogens that may interfere with engraftment. Cytomegalovirus (CMV) is an important opportunistic pathogen infecting the central nervous system, where it may remain latent for life, following transplacental transmission. Cyclosporine (Cs), an immunosuppressive drug used in organ transplantation, where its use is associated with CMV reactivation, suppressed murine CMV (MCMV) infection in cultured NSPCs but not in fibroblasts. This activity of Cs appears to be mediated via cyclophilin (CyP) rather than via calcineurin. First, the calcineurin-specific inhibitor FK506 failed to suppress replication. Second, the CyP-specific inhibitor NIM811 strongly suppressed replication in NSPC. NSPCs maintained in the presence of NIM811 retained viral genomes for several weeks without detectable viral gene expression or obvious deleterious effects. The withdrawal of NIM811 reactivated viral replication, suggesting that the inhibitory mechanism was reversible. Finally, inhibition of endogenous CyP A (CyPA) by small interfering RNA also inhibited replication in NSPCs. These results show that MCMV replication depends upon cellular CyPA pathways in NSPCs (in a specific cell type-dependent fashion), that CyPA plays an important role in viral infection in this cell type, and that inhibition of viral replication via CyP leads to persistence of the viral genome without cell damage. Further, the calcineurin-signaling pathway conferring immunosuppression in T cells does not influence viral replication in a detectable fashion.
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  • Repression of human cytomegalovirus major immediate early gene expression by the cellular transcription factor CCAAT displacement protein

    Stern, J. Lewis   Cao, John Z.   Xu, Jiake   Mocarski, Edward S.   Slobedman, Barry  

    Initiation of human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) productive infection is dependent on the major immediate early (MIE) genes ie1 and ie2. Several putative binding sites for CCAAT displacement protein (CDP or CUX1) were identified within the MIE promoter/regulatory region. Binding assays demonstrated binding of CUX1 to MIE-region oligonucleotides containing the CUX1 core binding sequence ATCGAT and mutagenesis of this sequence abrogated CUX1 binding. Furthermore, CUX1 repressed expression of a luciferase reporter construct controlled by the MIE promoter, and mutation of CUX1 binding sites within the promoter diminished this repressive function of CUX1. In the context of virus infection of HEK293 cells transfected with the CUX1 expression vector, CUX1 showed evidence of association with the HCMV MIE regulatory region and inhibited the capacity of the virus to express ie1 and ie2 transcripts, suggesting that this cellular factor regulates MIE gene expression following virus entry. These data identify a role for CUX1 in repressing HCMV gene expression essential for initiation of the replicative cycle. (C) 2008 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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  • Mouse cytomegalovirus M36 and M45 death suppressors cooperate to prevent inflammation resulting from antiviral programmed cell death pathways

    Daley-Bauer, Lisa P.   Roback, Linda   Crosby, Lynsey N.   McCormick, A. Louise   Feng, Yanjun   Kaiser, William J.   Mocarski, Edward S.  

    The complex interplay between caspase-8 and receptor-interacting protein (RIP) kinase RIP 3 (RIPK3) driving extrinsic apoptosis and necroptosis is not fully understood. Murine cytomegalovirus triggers both apoptosis and necroptosis in infected cells; however, encoded inhibitors of caspase-8 activity (M36) and RIP3 signaling (M45) suppress these antiviral responses. Here, we report that this virus activates caspase-8 in macrophages to trigger apoptosis that gives rise to secondary necroptosis. Infection with double-mutant Delta M36/M45mutRHIM virus reveals a signaling pattern in which caspase-8 activates caspase-3 to drive apoptosis with subsequent RIP3-dependent activation of mixed lineage kinase domain-like (MLKL) leading to necroptosis. This combined cell death signaling is highly inflammatory, greater than either apoptosis induced by Delta M36 or necroptosis induced by M45mutRHIM virus. IL-6 production by macrophages is dramatically increased during double-mutant virus infection and correlates with faster antiviral responses in the host. Collaboratively, M36 and M45 target caspase-8 and RIP3 pathways together to suppress this proinflammatory cell death. This study reveals the effect of antiviral programmed cell death pathways on inflammation, shows that caspase-8 activation may go hand-inhand with necroptosis in macrophages, and revises current understanding of independent and collaborative functions of M36 and M45 in blocking apoptotic and necroptotic cell death responses.
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  • Herpes simplex virus 1 ICP6 impedes TNF receptor 1-induced necrosome assembly during compartmentalization to detergent-resistant membrane vesicles.

    Ali, Mohammad   Roback, Linda   Mocarski, Edward S.  

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  • Human cytomegalovirus decreases constitutive transcription of MHC class II genes in mature Langerhans cells by reducing CIITA transcript levels

    Lee, Andrew W.   Wang, Nan   Hornell, Tara M. C.   Harding, James J.   Deshpande, Chetan   Hertel, Laura   Lacaille, Vashti   Pashine, Achal   Macaubas, Claudia   Mocarski, Edward S.   Mellins, Elizabeth D.  

    Human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) productively infects CD34(+) progenitor-derived, mature Langerhans-type dendritic cells (matLC) and reduces surface expression of MHC class II complexes (MHC II) by increasing intracellular retention of these molecules. To determine whether HCMV also inhibits MHC II expression by other mechanisms, we assessed mRNA levels of the class II transcriptional regulator, CIITA, and several of its target genes in infected matLC. Levels of CIITA, HLA-DRA (DRA) and DRB transcripts, and new DR protein synthesis were compared in mock-infected and HCMV-infected cells by quantitative PCR and pulse-chase immunoprecipitation analyses, respectively. CIITA mRNA levels were significantly lower in HCMV-infected matLC as compared to mock-infected cells. When assessed in the presence of Actinomycin D, the stability of CIITA transcripts was not diminished by HCMV. Analysis of promoter-specific CIITA isoforms revealed that types I. III and IV all were decreased by HCMV, a result that differs from changes after incubation of these cells with lipopolysaccharide (LPS). Exposure to UV-inactivated virus failed to reduce CIITA mRNA levels, implicating de novo viral gene expression in this effect. HCMV-infected matLC also expressed lower levels of DR transcripts and reduced DR protein synthesis rates compared to mock-infected matLC. In summary, we demonstrate that HCMV infection of a human dendritic cell subset inhibits constitutive CIITA expression, most likely at the transcriptional level, resulting in reduced MHC II biosynthesis. We suggest this represents a new mechanism of modulation of mature LC by HCMV. (C) 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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  • Edward S. Sacks

    Hallett, Judith P.  

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  • Edward S. Deevey Award

    ESA  

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  • Edward S. Deevey Award

    ESA,  

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  • Edward T. Sanford-Knoxville\"s Justice

    Scheb   John M.  

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  • A Tribute to Edward S. Shapiro

    Clemens, N. H.; DuPaul, G. J.  

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  • A Tribute to Edward S. Shapiro

    Clemens, N. H.   DuPaul, G. J.  

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  • Edward H S Miles

    Hill, G. C.   Lazell, G.  

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  • Edward H S Miles

    Hill, G. C.; Lazell, G.  

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  • Who\"s Who in Mineral Names: Edward S. Grew (b. 1944)

    Chamberlain   Steven C.  

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  • Interview with Edward S. Boyden

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  • Interview with Edward S. Boyden

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