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1.
Clin Vaccine Immunol ; 20(4): 540-50, 2013 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23389931

ABSTRACT

Infection by human cytomegalovirus (CMV) elicits a strong humoral immune response and robust anti-CMV antibody production. Diagnosis of virus infection can be carried out by using a variety of serological assays; however, quantification of serum antibodies against CMV may not present an accurate measure of a patient's ability to control a virus infection. CMV strains that express green fluorescent protein (GFP) fusion proteins can be used as screening tools for evaluating characteristics of CMV infection in vitro. In this study, we employed a CMV virus strain, AD169, that ectopically expresses a yellow fluorescent protein (YFP) fused to the immediate-early 2 (IE2) protein product (AD169IE2-YFP) to quantify a CMV infection in human cells. We created a high-throughput cell-based assay that requires minimal amounts of material and provides a platform for rapid analysis of the initial phase of virus infection, including virus attachment, fusion, and immediate-early viral gene expression. The AD169IE2-YFP cell infection system was utilized to develop a neutralization assay with a monoclonal antibody against the viral surface glycoprotein gH. The high-throughput assay was extended to measure the neutralization capacity of serum from CMV-positive subjects. These findings describe a sensitive and specific assay for the quantification of a key immunological response that plays a role in limiting CMV dissemination and transmission. Collectively, we have demonstrated that a robust high-throughput infection assay can analyze the early steps of the CMV life cycle and quantify the potency of biological reagents to attenuate a virus infection.


Subject(s)
Antibodies, Neutralizing/immunology , Antibodies, Viral/immunology , Cytomegalovirus Infections/diagnosis , Cytomegalovirus Infections/immunology , Cytomegalovirus/immunology , High-Throughput Screening Assays , Bacterial Proteins/analysis , Bacterial Proteins/genetics , Cytomegalovirus/genetics , Female , Genes, Reporter , Humans , Luminescent Proteins/analysis , Luminescent Proteins/genetics , Neutralization Tests/methods , Pregnancy , Sensitivity and Specificity , Staining and Labeling/methods
2.
Cell ; 151(7): 1569-80, 2012 Dec 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23260143

ABSTRACT

Many signaling circuits face a fundamental tradeoff between accelerating their response speed while maintaining final levels below a cytotoxic threshold. Here, we describe a transcriptional circuitry that dynamically converts signaling inputs into faster rates without amplifying final equilibrium levels. Using time-lapse microscopy, we find that transcriptional activators accelerate human cytomegalovirus (CMV) gene expression in single cells without amplifying steady-state expression levels, and this acceleration generates a significant replication advantage. We map the accelerator to a highly self-cooperative transcriptional negative-feedback loop (Hill coefficient ∼7) generated by homomultimerization of the virus's essential transactivator protein IE2 at nuclear PML bodies. Eliminating the IE2-accelerator circuit reduces transcriptional strength through mislocalization of incoming viral genomes away from PML bodies and carries a heavy fitness cost. In general, accelerators may provide a mechanism for signal-transduction circuits to respond quickly to external signals without increasing steady-state levels of potentially cytotoxic molecules.


Subject(s)
Cytomegalovirus Infections/virology , Cytomegalovirus/genetics , Gene Regulatory Networks , Genetic Fitness , Cytomegalovirus/physiology , Feedback, Physiological , Fibroblasts/virology , Gene Expression Regulation, Viral , Humans , Immediate-Early Proteins/metabolism , Inclusion Bodies, Viral/metabolism , Time-Lapse Imaging , Trans-Activators/metabolism , Transcriptional Activation , Virus Replication
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