Virus Details


VHFID6678

Host Factor Information

Gene Name Cd40
HF Protein Name Tumor necrosis factor receptor superfamily member 5
HF Function Antiviral protein
Uniprot ID P27512
Protein Sequence View Fasta Sequence
NCBI Gene ID 21939
Host Factor (HF) Name in Paper CD40
Gene synonyms Tnfrsf5
Ensemble Gene ID ENSMUSG00000017652
Ensemble Transcript ENSMUST00000017799 [P27512-1];ENSMUST00000073707 [P27512-5];ENSMUST00000081310 [P27512-2];ENSMUST00000184221 [P27512-3]
KEGG ID Go to KEGG Database
Gene Ontology ID(s) GO:0001934, GO:0002768, GO:0003823, GO:0005031, GO:0005615, GO:0005737, GO:0005886, GO:0006874, GO:0006954, GO:0009897, GO:0009986, GO:0019899, GO:0019904, GO:0030890, GO:0031625, GO:0032496, GO:0032735, GO:0033590, GO:0034341, GO:0035631, GO:0036018, GO:0042113, GO:0042531, GO:0042832, GO:0042981, GO:0043025, GO:0043123, GO:0043196, GO:0043231, GO:0043406, GO:0043491, GO:0043536, GO:0043547, GO:0045766, GO:0045944, GO:0048304, GO:0050776, GO:0051023, GO:0051092, GO:0051607, GO:0071222, GO:0071260, GO:0071347, GO:0090037, GO:0097190, GO:1901652, GO:2000353,
MINT ID P27512
STRING Click to see interaction map
GWAS Analysis Click to see gwas analysis
OMIM ID N.A.
PANTHER ID N.A.
PDB ID(s) N.A.,
pfam ID PF00020,
Drug Bank ID N.A.,
ChEMBL ID N.A.
Organism Mus musculus (Mouse)

Pathogen Information

Virus Name Murine gammaherpesvirus 68
Virus Short Name MHV-68
Order Herpesvirales
Virus Family Herpesviridae
Virus Subfamily Gammaherpesvirinae
Genus Rhadinovirus
Species Murid herpesvirus 68
Host Murine,mammals
Cell Tropism B lymphocytes
Associated Disease Mononucleosis, associated with environemental diseases: burkitt?s lymphoma nasopharyngeal carcinoma (npc)
Mode of Transmission Contact, saliva
VIPR DB link http://www.viprbrc.org/brc/vipr_allSpecies_search.do?method=SubmitForm&decorator=herpes
ICTV DB link https://talk.ictvonline.org/ictv-reports/ictv_9th_report/dsdna-viruses-2011/w/dsdna_viruses/91/herpesviridae
Virus Host DB link http://www.genome.jp/virushostdb/view/?virus_lineage=Herpesviridae

Publication Information

Paper Title Establishment and maintenance of long-term murine gammaherpesvirus 68 latency in B cells in the absence of CD40
Author's Name David O. Willer and Samuel H. Speck
Journal Name Journal Of Virology
Pubmed ID 15709008
Abstract Murine gammaherpesvirus 68 (gammaHV68), like Epstein-Barr virus (EBV), establishes a chronic infection in its host by gaining access to the memory B-cell reservoir, where it persists undetected by the hosts immune system. EBV encodes a membrane protein, LMP1, that appears to function as a constitutively active CD40 receptor, and is hypothesized to play a central role in EBV-driven differentiation of infected naive B cells to a memory B-cell phenotype. However, it has recently been shown that there is a critical role for CD40-CD40L interaction in B-cell immortalization by EBV (K.-I. Imadome, M. Shirakata, N. Shimizu, S. Nonoyama, and Y. Yamanashi, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 100:7836-7840, 2003), indicating that LMP1 does not adequately recapitulate all of the necessary functions of CD40. The role of CD40 receptor expression on B cells for the establishment and maintenance of gammaHV68 latency is unclear. Data previously obtained with a competition model, demonstrated that in the face of CD40-sufficient B cells, gammaHV68 latency in CD40-deficient B cells waned over time in chimeric mice (I.-J. Kim, E. Flano, D. L. Woodland, F. E. Lund, T. D. Randall, and M. A. Blackman, J. Immunol. 171:886-892, 2003). To further investigate the role of CD40 in gammaHV68 latency in vivo, we have characterized the infection of CD40 knockout (CD40(-/-)) mice. Here we report that, consistent with previous observations, gammaHV68 efficiently established a latent infection in B cells of CD40(-/-) mice. Notably, unlike the infection of normal C57BL/6 mice, significant ex vivo reactivation from splenocytes harvested from infected CD40(-/-) mice 42 days postinfection was observed. In addition, in contrast to gammaHV68 infection of C57BL/6 mice, the frequency of infected naive B cells remained fairly stable over a 3-month period postinfection. Furthermore, a slightly higher frequency of gammaHV68 infection was observed in immunoglobulin D (IgD)-negative B cells, which was stably maintained over a period of 3 months postinfection. The presence of virus in IgD-negative B cells indicates that gammaHV68 may either directly infect memory B cells present in CD40(-/-) mice or be capable of driving differentiation of naive CD40(-/-) B cells. A possible explanation for the apparent discrepancy between the failure of gammaHV68 latency to be maintained in CD40-deficient B cells in the presence of CD40-sufficient B cells and the stable maintenance of gammaHV68 B-cell latency in CD40(-/-) mice came from examining virus replication in the lungs of infected CD40(-/-) mice, where we observed significantly higher levels of virus replication at late times postinfection compared to those in infected C57BL/6 mice. Taken together, these findings are consistent with a model in which chronic virus infection of CD40(-/-) mice is maintained through virus reactivation in the lungs and reseeding of latency reservoirs.
Used Model NIH 3T12 and MEF cells
DOI 10.1128/JVI.79.5.2891-2899.2005