Document Type
Article
Publication Date
2-24-2016
Publication Title
Journal of Virology
Department
Geisel School of Medicine
Abstract
Herpes simplex virus 1 (HSV-1) establishes lifelong infection in the neurons of trigeminal ganglia (TG), cycling between productive infection and latency. Neuronal antiviral responses are driven by type I interferon (IFN) and are crucial to controlling HSV-1 virulence. Autophagy also plays a role in this neuronal antiviral response, but the mechanism remains obscure. In this study, HSV-1 infection of murine TG neurons triggered unusual clusters of autophagosomes, predominantly in neurons lacking detectable HSV-1 antigen. Treatment of neurons with IFN-β induced a similar response, and cluster formation by infection or IFN treatment was dependent upon an intact IFN-signaling pathway. The autophagic clusters were decorated with both ISG15, an essential effecter of the antiviral response, and p62, a selective autophagy receptor. The autophagic clusters were not induced by rapamycin or starvation, consistent with a process of selective autophagy. While clusters were triggered by other neurotropic herpesviruses, infection with unrelated viruses failed to induce this response. Following ocular infection in vivo, clusters formed exclusively in the infected ophthalmic branch of the TG. Taken together, our results show that infection with HSV and antiviral signaling in TG neurons produce an unorthodox autophagic response. This autophagic clustering is associated with antiviral signaling, the presence of viral genome, and the absence of HSV protein expression and may therefore represent an important neuronal response to HSV infection and the establishment of latency.
DOI
10.1128/JVI.02908-15
Dartmouth Digital Commons Citation
Katzenell, Sarah and Leib, David A., "Herpes Simplex Virus and Interferon Signaling Induce Novel Autophagic Clusters in Sensory Neurons" (2016). Dartmouth Scholarship. 1347.
https://digitalcommons.dartmouth.edu/facoa/1347
Included in
Medical Immunology Commons, Medical Microbiology Commons, Virology Commons, Virus Diseases Commons