Ce. Acklandberglund et al., THE ROLES OF THE CAMP-RESPONSE ELEMENT AND TATA BOX IN EXPRESSION OF THE HERPES-SIMPLEX VIRUS TYPE-1 LATENCY-ASSOCIATED TRANSCRIPTS, Virology, 210(1), 1995, pp. 141-151
A quantitative ribonuclease protection assay (RPA) was developed in or
der to rapidly and accurately measure the levels and timing of latency
-associated transcript (LAT) expression in ganglia latently infected w
ith wild-type and mutant herpes simplex Virus (HSV). Use of this assay
in parallel with measurement of viral titers in murine trigeminal gan
glia demonstrated that the peak of viral replication precedes the peak
and subsequent plateau of LAT expression. This plateau of LAT express
ion was unaltered from Day 7 through the end of the experimental perio
d on Day 28, suggesting that LAT does not further accumulate during la
tency of wild-type virus. RPA analyses of trigeminal ganglia latently
infected with HSV-1 mutants containing specific alterations in the LAT
TATA box, cyclic AMP-response element (CRE), and both TATA and CRE we
re performed. Mutation of the upstream TATA box reduced LAT expression
to 25% of wild-type or marker-rescued virus levels, whereas mutation
of the CRE did not significantly affect LAT expression in vivo whether
in the presence or absence of the TATA box. These experiments demonst
rate a specific requirement for the upstream promoter TATA box for wil
d-type LAT expression. Further examination of the role of the CRE and
the TATA box by transient expression assays suggests that the CRE is i
mportant for inducible activity and that its interaction with the TATA
box requires stereospecific alignment. (C) 1995 Academic Press, Inc.