Abstract

Early events of apoptosis following HSV-1 infection were investigated at the single-cell level using intensified fluorescence digital-imaging microscopy. The results provide evidence that infection of differentiated ND7 neuronlike cells by HSV-1 triggers detectable alterations indicative of physiological changes associated with the early stages of apoptosis. Less than 1 h after infection with HSV-1 (KOS strain) or K26GFP (GFP being fused to HSV-1 capsid protein VP26) we observed (i) moderate decrease in mitochondrial membrane potential (about 20%), (ii) exposure of phosphatidyl serine, (iii) morphological change in the mitochondria that became spherical instead of filamentous, and (iv) activation of caspase-8. Within 3 h changes reverted to normal, which indicated that apoptosis was counteracted very early following HSV-1 infection. Similar results were obtained with KOS-TK 27GFP, lacking TK and UL24 proteins, suggesting that TK and UL24 play no role in apoptosis. In Vero cells mitochondrial changes characteristic of the apoptotic process were not observed following HSV-1 infection. The UV-inactivated K26GFP had the capacity to induce apoptosis in neuronlike cells. This real-time multiparametric analysis, in combination with relevant viral mutants, could be a useful approach for dissecting the roles of various viral genes in modulating apoptotic pathways during infection.

Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call