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Method Article
γ-Herpesviruses (γ-HVs) establish life-long persistency in their host. Infection of mice with γ-HV68 provides a genetically tractable in vivo model for the characterization of the lifecycle/pathogenesis of γHVs. This protocol describes the detection and quantitation of γHV68 infection at acute and latent stages following infection by plaque-forming, infectious center, and qPCR assays.
γ-Herpesviruses (γ-HVs) are notable for their ability to establish latent infections of lymphoid cells1. The narrow host range of human γ-HVs, such as EBV and KSHV, has severely hindered detailed pathogenic studies. Murine γ-herpesvirus 68 (γHV68) shares extensive genetic and biological similarities with human γ-HVs and is a natural pathogen of murid rodents2. As such, evaluation of γHV68 infection of mice inbred strains at different stages of viral infection provides an important model for understanding viral lifecycle and pathogenesis during γ-HVs infection.
Upon intranasal inoculation, γHV68 infection results in acute viremia in the lung that is later resolved into a latent infection of splenocytes and other cells, which may be reactivated throughout the life of the host3,4. In this protocol, we will describe how to use the plaque assay to assess infectious virus titer in the lung homogenates on Vero cell monolayers at the early stage (5 - 7 days) of post-intranasal infection (dpi). While acute infection is largely cleared 2 - 3 weeks postinfection, a latent infection of γHV68 is established around 14 dpi and maintained later on in the spleen of the mice. Latent infection usually affects a very small population of cells in the infected tissues, whereby the virus stays dormant and shuts off most of its gene expression. Latently-infected splenocytes spontaneously reactivate virus upon explanting into tissue culture, which can be recapitulated by an infectious center (IC) assay to determine the viral latent load. To further estimate the amount of viral genome copies in the acutely and/or latently infected tissues, quantitative real-time PCR (qPCR) is used for its maximal sensitivity and accuracy. The combined analyses of the results of qPCR and plaque assay, and/or IC assay will reveal the spatiotemporal profiles of viral replication and infectivity in vivo.
The following protocol will describe the study of virus titers and viral genome loads in the lytic and latent infection cycle of γHV68 in mice, which can theoretically be used to evaluate infection by other viruses sharing similar lifestyle to that of γHV68.
1. Amplification of γHV68
2. Intranasal Infection of Mice with γHV68
3. Plaque Assay to Determine the Virus Titer in Acutely Infected Lungs
4. Infectious Center Assay to Determine the Virus Load in Latently Infected Splenocytes
5. Quantification of the Viral Genome
6. Representative Results:
Figure 1 depicts the overall scheme of the experiments for the measurement of γHV68 infection in mice in vivo. Representative results of virus titers in the lungs during acute infection of γHV68, as determined by plaque assay, were shown in Figure 2A. A mutant strain of γHV68 containing non-functional viral Bcl-2 (vBcl-2) replicated at levels comparable to wild-type γHV68 in the lungs after 7 days intranasal infection of BALB/c mice (6 - 7 mice per group). No statistically significant differences in the lung titers of the virus were detected between two groups. This data indicates that vBcl-2 is not a crucial factor for the acute infection of γHV68 in mice. However, by 28 days postinfection, the titer of vBcl-2 mutant virus in the spleens dropped 6- to 10- fold compared to the WT, as measured by infectious center assay (Figure 2B), suggesting that the vBcl-2 mutant γHV68 virus is defective in the maintenance of splenic latency after infection. In agreement with the reduced infectious center titers, the viral genome load of the vBcl-2 mutant virus was severely reduced compared to that of WT viruses at day 28 in repeated experiments, as shown in Figure 2C. The close correlation between viral genome loads and the frequency of latent-HV68vBcl-2 mutant virus reactivation ex vivo at latent stage of infection highlights a latency defect of this mutant virus infection.
Figure 1. Schematic diagram for the measurement of γHV68 infection in mice by means of plaque formation, infectious center, and qPCR assays.
Figure 2. Lytic and latent infection of the WT and mutant γHV68 viruses in vivo. Acute replication (A) of the WT and mutant vBcl-2 γHV68 viruses in the lungs of the BALB/c mice at 7 dpi (day post infection) was determined by plaque assay. (B and C) Splenic infectious centers (B) and viral genome load (C) in the spleens of infected mice were measured at 28 dpi by infectious center assay and qPCR, respectively. Red lines, the averages of indicated values. n.s., not significant.
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γHV68 has been widely used as a model to understand the pathogenesis of human γ-HVs2,4,5. In this protocol, we described three routinely used methods, including plaque assay for infectious virus titer, IC assay for viral latent load, and qPCR for viral genome load, to evaluate the acute and latent infection of γHV68 after intranasal inoculation in mice.
The plaque assay has been used extensively to determine the virus titer in infected cells or tissues, but the op...
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No conflicts of interest declared.
The authors would like to acknowledge the technical advice and support from Ren Sun (University of California, Los Angeles) and Seungmin Hwang (Washington University). This work was funded by the Baxter Foundation, National Institutes of Health grants (R01 CA140964 and R21 AI083841 to C. Liang).
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