Herpes simplex virus 1 (HSV-1) enters its human host via the skin and mucosa. The open question is how the virus invades this highly protective tissue to approach its receptors in the epidermis and initiate infection. Here, we performed infection studies in human skin to investigate how susceptible the epidermis and dermis are to HSV-1 and whether wounding facilitates viral invasion. Upon infection of complete skin, only sample edges with integrity loss demonstrated infected cells. After removal of the dermis, HSV-1 efficiently invaded the basal layer of the epidermis and, from there, gained access to suprabasal layers. This finding supports a high susceptibility of all epidermal layers which correlated with the surface expression of the receptors nectin-1 and herpesvirus entry mediator (HVEM). In contrast, only single infected cells were detected in the separated dermis, where minor expression of the receptors was found. Interestingly, after wounding, nearly no infection of the epidermis was observed via the skin surface. However, if the wounding of the skin samples led to breaks through the dermis, HSV-1 infected mainly keratinocytes via the damaged dermal layer. The application of latex beads revealed only occasional entry via the wounded dermis; however, it facilitated penetration via the wounded skin surface. Thus, we suggest that although the wounded human skin surface allows particle penetration, the skin still provides barriers that prevent HSV-1 from reaching its receptors. The human pathogen herpes simplex virus 1 (HSV-1) invades its host via the skin and mucosa, which leads to primary infection of the epithelium. As the various epithelial barriers effectively protect the tissue against viral invasion, successful infection most likely depends on tissue damage. We addressed the initial invasion process in human skin by infection to understand how HSV-1 overcomes physical skin barriers and reaches its receptors to enter skin cells. Our results demonstrate that intact skin samples allow viral access only from the edges, while the epidermis is highly susceptible once the basal epidermal layer serves as an initial entry portal. Surprisingly, mechanical wounding did not facilitate HSV-1 entry via the skin surface, although latex beads still penetrated via the lesions. Our results imply that successful invasion of HSV-1 depends on how well the virus can reach its receptors, which was not accomplished by skin lesions under conditions.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8513464PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/JVI.01338-21DOI Listing

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