Abstract

The Latency-Associated Nuclear Antigen (LANA), encoded by ORF73, is a conserved gene among the γ2-herpesviruses (rhadinoviruses). The Kaposi's Sarcoma-Associated Herpesvirus (KSHV) LANA is consistently expressed in KSHV-associated malignancies. In the case of the rodent γ2-herpesvirus, murine gammaherpesvirus 68 (MHV68), the LANA homolog (mLANA) is required for efficient virus replication, reactivation from latency and immortalization of murine fetal liver-derived B cells. To gain insights into mLANA function(s), knowing that KSHV LANA binds DNA and can modulate transcription of a variety of promoters, we sought out and identified a mLANA-responsive promoter which maps to the terminal repeat (TR) of MHV68. Notably, mLANA strongly repressed activity from this promoter. We extended these analyses to demonstrate direct, sequence-specific binding of recombinant mLANA to TR DNA by DNase I footprinting. To assess whether the DNA-binding and/or transcription modulating function is important in the known mLANA phenotypes, we generated an unbiased library of mLANA point mutants using error-prone PCR, and screened a large panel of mutants for repression of the mLANA-responsive promoter to identify loss of function mutants. Notably, among the mutant mLANA proteins recovered, many of the mutations are in a predicted EBNA-1-like DNA-binding domain. Consistent with this prediction, those tested displayed loss of DNA binding activity. We engineered six of these mLANA mutants into the MHV68 genome and tested the resulting mutant viruses for: (i) replication fitness; (ii) efficiency of latency establishment; and (iii) reactivation from latency. Interestingly, each of these mLANA-mutant viruses exhibited phenotypes similar to the mLANA-null mutant virus, indicating that DNA-binding is critical for mLANA function.

Highlights

  • Rhadinovirus infections are associated with a number of lymphoproliferative diseases

  • One of the murine gammaherpesvirus 68 (MHV68) encoded proteins, which is found in Kaposi’s Sarcoma-Associated Herpesvirus (KSHV), is called latency-associated nuclear antigen (LANA) and in the case of KSHV-associated diseases LANA expression is consistently detected in infected cells

  • We show that the MHV68 LANA shares a key function with the KSHV homolog—namely, modulating gene expression

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Summary

Introduction

Rhadinovirus infections are associated with a number of lymphoproliferative diseases. Herpesvirus saimiri (HVS) has been shown to induce T cell lymphomas [4] and murine gammaherpesvirus-68 (MHV68) has been shown to induce B cell lymphomas [5]. Both HVS and MHV68 can immortalize specific populations of lymphocytes in tissue culture [6,7]. KSHV LANA has been shown to bind DNA, which is hypothesized to have importance in loading of replication origins [15,16,17,18], maintaining the virus genome as an episome [14,15,19,20,21,22] and regulating gene transcription [16,23,24]. Domains of the KSHV LANA required for regulating gene transcription and DNA binding have been identified [23,25,26]

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