ICP27 protein of Marek's disease virus interacts with SR proteins and inhibits the splicing of cellular telomerase chTERT and viral vIL8 transcripts

2011 
All herpesviruses have a post-transcriptional regulatory protein that prevents precursor mRNA splicing and leads to the shutting off of host protein synthesis. The ICP27 protein of herpes simplex virus 1 (HSV-1) is the prototype of these proteins. Marek’s disease virus (MDV-1), an alphaherpesvirus that induces lymphoma in birds, also has an ICP27 protein that is produced in lytic MDV-1-infected cells. We characterized this protein. We demonstrated ICP27 production in latently infected MSB-1 cells, but only on MDV-1 reactivation. ICP27 was found predominantly in specific structures within the nucleus. The ICP27 of MDV-1 colocalized and interacted with SR proteins. We demonstrated inhibitory effects of MDV-1 ICP27 on the splicing of both the viral vIL8 and cellular chTERT (telomerase reverse transcriptase) genes. Thus, the ICP27 of MDV-1 plays a similar role to the ICP27 of HSV-1 and may be involved in MDV-1 replication and the development of Marek’s disease.
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