Abstract

The Varicella Zoster Virus (VZV) is a ubiquitous human alpha-herpesvirus that is the causative agent of chicken pox and shingles. Although an attenuated VZV vaccine (v-Oka) has been widely used in children in the United States, chicken pox outbreaks are still seen, and the shingles vaccine only reduces the risk of shingles by 50%. Therefore, VZV still remains an important public health concern. Knowledge of VZV replication and pathogenesis remains limited due to its highly cell-associated nature in cultured cells, the difficulty of generating recombinant viruses, and VZV's almost exclusive tropism for human cells and tissues. In order to circumvent these hurdles, we cloned the entire VZV (p-Oka) genome into a bacterial artificial chromosome that included a dual-reporter system (GFP and luciferase reporter genes). We used PCR-based mutagenesis and the homologous recombination system in the E. coli to individually delete each of the genome's 70 unique ORFs. The collection of viral mutants obtained was systematically examined both in MeWo cells and in cultured human fetal skin organ samples. We use our genome-wide deletion library to provide novel functional annotations to 51% of the VZV proteome. We found 44 out of 70 VZV ORFs to be essential for viral replication. Among the 26 non-essential ORF deletion mutants, eight have discernable growth defects in MeWo. Interestingly, four ORFs were found to be required for viral replication in skin organ cultures, but not in MeWo cells, suggesting their potential roles as skin tropism factors. One of the genes (ORF7) has never been described as a skin tropic factor. The global profiling of the VZV genome gives further insights into the replication and pathogenesis of this virus, which can lead to improved prevention and therapy of chicken pox and shingles.

Highlights

  • Human varicella-zoster virus (VZV) is a widespread human alphaherpesvirus, and the majority of the US population has been previously exposed [1]

  • Varicella Zoster Virus (VZV) is the causative agent of chicken pox and shingles, the latter of which is associated with a significant incidence of post-herpetic neuralgia [2,3]

  • Each mutant DNA obtained from E. coli was transfected into human melanoma (MeWo) cells, and the results provide direct evidence of that 44 ORFs are essential for viral replication in cultured MeWo cells and 26 are non-essential

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Summary

Introduction

Human varicella-zoster virus (VZV) is a widespread human alphaherpesvirus, and the majority of the US population has been previously exposed [1]. The majority of VZV’s 70 unique ORFs have not been studied, and their roles in viral replication and cell-/ tissue-specific pathogenesis remain unclear. This is partly due to the absence of an efficient genetic tool to quickly isolate a large number of mutants and a true animal model to screen for in vivo virulence factors on a large scale [2]. The luciferase VZV BAC (VZVLuc) was used to individually delete and/or mutate each of the 70 unique ORFs by employing the E. coli DY380 strain recombination system [22]. We provide 51% novel functional annotations to the VZV proteome (36 ORFs)

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