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Varicella-Zoster Virus Open Reading Frame 66 Protein Kinase Is Required for Efficient Viral Growth in Primary Human Corneal Stromal Fibroblast Cells
Author(s) -
Angela Erazo,
Michael B. Yee,
Nikolaus Osterrieder,
Paul R. Kinchington
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
journal of virology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.617
H-Index - 292
eISSN - 1070-6321
pISSN - 0022-538X
DOI - 10.1128/jvi.00311-08
Subject(s) - biology , varicella zoster virus , protein kinase a , kinase , microbiology and biotechnology , virology , virus
Varicella-zoster virus (VZV) open reading frame 66 (ORF66) encodes a serine/threonine protein kinase that is not required for VZV growth in most cell types but is needed for efficient growth in T cells. The ORF66 kinase affects nuclear import and virion packaging of IE62, the major regulatory protein, and is known to regulate apoptosis in T cells. Here, we further examined the importance of ORF66 using VZV recombinants expressing green fluorescent protein (GFP)-tagged functional and kinase-negative ORF66 proteins. VZV virions with truncated or kinase-inactivated ORF66 protein were marginally reduced for growth and progeny yields in MRC-5 fibroblasts but were severely growth and replication impaired in low-passage primary human corneal stromal fibroblasts (PCF). To determine if the growth impairment was due to ORF66 kinase regulation of IE62 nuclear import, recombinant VZVs that expressed IE62 with alanine residues at S686, the suspected target by which ORF66 kinase blocks IE62 nuclear import, were made. IE62 S686A expressed by the VZV recombinant remained nuclear throughout infection and was not packaged into virions. However, the mutant virus still replicated efficiently in PCF cells. We also show that inactivation of the ORF66 kinase resulted in only marginally increased levels of apoptosis in PCF cells, which could not fully account for the cell-specific growth requirement of ORF66 kinase. Thus, the unique short region VZV kinase has important cell-type-specific functions that are separate from those affecting IE62 and apoptosis.

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