Abstract
Pseudorabies virus is a swine alpha-herpesvirus. We demonstrated that alpha-herpesvirus infection downregulates HSF1, a master transcription factor in the heat shock response. The serine/threonine protein kinase activity of late viral protein UL13 is indispensable for HSF1 depletion and phosphorylation, and UL13 does not degrade HSF1 posttranslationally but inhibits the HSF1 mRNA level. Importantly, UL13 increased HSF1 activity even though it reduced HSF1 mRNA. Furthermore, viral replication markedly decreased in the HSF1 knockout cell line or in the presence of an HSF1-specific inhibitor. Interestingly, HSF1 knockout accelerated the activation of NF-κB and p38MAPK. The K96 loci of UL13 are important to induce high levels of IL-6, TNF-α, and IL-β cytokines while playing a crucial role in promoting mild interstitial pneumonia, liver necrosis, and severe inflammatory cell infiltration in the footpad. Thus, UL13 steers the heat shock response to promote viral replication and the inflammatory response. IMPORTANCE: PRV is a ubiquitous pathogen that infects a variety of mammals, such as pigs, ruminants, carnivores, and rodents as well as human beings, causing enormous economic losses in the swine industry. Here, we employed PRV as a model to determine the relationship between α-herpesvirus and the inflammatory response. Overall, our findings indicated that PRV infection inhibits the level of HSF1 mRNA via the serine/threonine protein kinase activity of UL13. Additionally, we discovered that HSF1 was involved in NF-κB activation upon PRV infection. PRV UL13 orchestrates the level of HSF1 mRNA, HSF1 protein phosphorylation, and priming of the inflammatory response. Our study reveals a novel mechanism employed by UL13 serine/threonine protein kinase activity to promote the inflammatory response, providing novel clues for therapy against alpha-herpesvirus infection.
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