Research Article

A murine RNA polymerase I promoter inserted into the herpes simplex virus type 1 genome is functional during lytic, but not latent, infection

Journal of General Virology 1996; 77(10):2575 · https://doi.org/10.1099/0022-1317-77-10-2575

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Abstract

The development of herpes simplex virus as a vector for neuronal gene delivery is dependent upon the identification and characterization of promoter elements capable of driving long-term expressio nduring latency. The majority of RNA polymerase II (pol II) promoters studied are active during acute infection but silenced during latency. In order to investigate the potential of a murine RNA polymerase I (pol I) promoter to drive reporter gene expressio nduring lytic and latent infection, we describe the construction and characterization of two recombinant viruses; SC16 LAT neo and SC16 US5 neo. These viruses contain a pol I-encephalomyocarditis virus internal ribosome entry site (EMCV IRES)-neomycin phosphotransferase gene (neoR) cassette inserted into the non-essential major latency associated transcript (LAT) and US5 regions respectively. Pol I promoter activity could be detected in the rodent BHK cell line, but not the primate derived Vero cell line consistent with the known species specificity of such promoters. This activity was specific to a virus containing an active pol I promoter. However, in situ hybridization analyses of latently infected cervical dorsal root ganglia failed to detect pol I mediated transcription of the reporter gene indicating that the murine pol I promoter is silenced following the establishment of latency. Insertion of the pol I-EMCV IRES-neoR cassette into the major LAT locus resulted in the production of a hybrid LAT transcript during latency which was translocated to the cytoplasm of latently infected neurones.