The nuclear antigen 3 family genes (EBNA-3, EBNA-4, and EBNA-6) of Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) are important for EBV-induced immortalization and survival of B lymphocytes. However, little is known about how the expression of these genes is regulated. Each of the EBNA-3, EBNA-4, and EBNA-6 genes consists of two exons separated by a small intron. Reverse transcriptase PCR assays revealed that the vast majority of the EBNA-3, EBNA-4, and EBNA-6 mRNA, expressed in transfected and EBV-infected B cells, retained intron sequences. Northern blot and S1 protection assays confirmed that most of the EBNA-3 mRNA contained intron. Examination of deletion mutants of EBNA-3 indicated that the EBNA-3 protein was not necessary for intron retention and that there was no splicing silencing element encoded in the EBNA-3 mRNA. Cell fractionation and RNA gradient analysis revealed that the unspliced EBNA 3 family mRNAs were transported into the cytoplasm and associated with the polysomes. However, Western blot analysis of FLAG-epitope tagged EBNA-3 gave no indication of the presence of splice variant protein forms of EBNA-3. In contrast, transiently transfected cells expressing EBNA-3 revealed a sixfold increase in EBNA-3 protein expression from the genomic EBNA-3 gene compared to EBNA-3 cDNA. These data show that the intronic sequences can influence EBNA-3 protein expression and suggest that intron retention may provide a means for the fine-tuning of expression of the individual EBNA 3 family genes.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/JVI.73.2.1195-1204.1999 | DOI Listing |
Cancers (Basel)
June 2022
Microbiology Department, Faculty of Pharmacy, 87025 Limoges, France.
The Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) is associated with angioimmunoblastic T cell lymphoma (AITL), a peripheral T lymphoma of poor prognosis in at least 90% of cases. The role of EBV in this pathology is unknown. Using next-generation sequencing, we sequenced the entire EBV genome in biopsies from 18 patients with AITL, 16 patients with another EBV-associated lymphoma, and 2 controls.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Immunol
September 2020
Department of Medicine, Monash University, Central Clinical School, The Alfred Hospital, Melbourne, Victoria 3004, Australia;
EBV is one of the most common viruses found in humans and is prototypic of a persistent viral infection characterized by periods of latency. Across many HLA class I molecules, the latent-specific CD8 T cell response is focused on epitopes derived from the EBNA-3 protein family. In the case of HLA-B*07:02 restriction, a highly frequent class I allele, the T cell response is dominated by an epitope spanning residues 379-387 of EBNA-3 (RPPIFIRRL [EBV]).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Microbiol
April 2016
Department of Biological Sciences, Presidency University Kolkata, India.
Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) is highly ubiquitous in human population and establishes a lifelong asymptomatic infection within the infected host unless the immune system is compromised. Following initial infection in the oropharyngeal epithelial cells, EBV primarily infects naive B-lymphocytes and develops a number of B-cell lymphomas particularly in immune-deficient individuals. In vitro, EBV can also infect and subsequently transform quiescent B-lymphocytes into continuously proliferating lymphoblastoid cell lines (LCLs) resembling EBV-induced lymphoproliferative disorders in which a subset of latent transcripts are detected.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Type 1 narcolepsy is a neurological disorder characterized by excessive daytime sleepiness and cataplexy associated with the HLA allele DQB1*06:02. Genetic predisposition along with external triggering factors may drive autoimmune responses, ultimately leading to the selective loss of hypocretin-positive neurons.
Objective: The aim of this study was to investigate potential aetiological factors in Swedish cases of postvaccination (Pandemrix) narcolepsy defined by interferon-gamma (IFNγ) production from immune cells in response to molecularly defined targets.
PLoS Pathog
October 2014
Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Pennsylvania State University College of Medicine, and the Penn State Hershey Cancer Institute, Hershey, Pennsylvania, United States of America.
Latent infection by Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) is highly associated with the endemic form of Burkitt lymphoma (eBL), which typically limits expression of EBV proteins to EBNA-1 (Latency I). Interestingly, a subset of eBLs maintain a variant program of EBV latency - Wp-restricted latency (Wp-R) - that includes expression of the EBNA-3 proteins (3A, 3B and 3C), in addition to EBNA-1. In xenograft assays, Wp-R BL cell lines were notably more tumorigenic than their counterparts that maintain Latency I, suggesting that the additional latency-associated proteins expressed in Wp-R influence cell proliferation and/or survival.
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