Impaired transporter associated with antigen processing-dependent peptide transport during productive EBV infection

ME Ressing, SE Keating, D van Leeuwen, D Koppers-Lalic, IY Pappworth, EJHJ Wiertz, Martin Rowe

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55 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Human herpesviruses, including EBV, persist for life in infected individuals. During the lytic replicative cycle that is required for the production of infectious virus and transmission to another host, many viral Ags are expressed. Especially at this stage, immune evasion strategies are likely to be advantageous to avoid elimination of virus-producing cells. However, little is known about immune escape during productive EBV infection because no fully permissive infection model is available. In this study, we have developed a novel strategy to isolate populations of cells in an EBV lytic cycle based on the expression of a reporter gene under the control of an EBV early lytic cycle promoter. Thus, induction of the viral lytic cycle in transfected EBV(+) B lymphoma cells resulted in concomitant reporter expression, allowing us, for the first time, to isolate highly purified cell populations in lytic cycle for biochemical and functional studies. Compared with latently infected B cells, cells supporting EBV lytic cycle displayed down-regulation of surface HLA class I, class II, and CD20, whereas expression levels of other surface markers remained unaffected. Moreover, during lytic cycle peptide transport into the endoplasmic reticulum, was reduced to
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)6829-6838
Number of pages10
JournalJournal of Immunology
Volume174
Publication statusPublished - 1 Jan 2005

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