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(Investigative Ophthalmology and Visual Science. 2003;44:4601-4607.)
© 2003 by The Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology, Inc.
DOI:  10.1167/iovs.03-0582

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Tyrosine 116 of the Herpes Simplex Virus Type 1 IE{alpha}22 Protein Is an Ocular Virulence Determinant and Potential Phosphorylation Site

Curtis R. Brandt1,2 and Aaron W. Kolb1,3

1From the Departments of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences, 2Medical Microbiology and Immunology, and 3Bacteriology, University of Wisconsin Medical School, Madison, Wisconsin.

PURPOSE. To determine whether tyrosine 116 of the HSV-1 {alpha}22 protein is involved in virulence and is a potential phosphorylation site.

METHODS. Site-directed mutagenesis was used to revert the Y116C mutation in the {alpha}22 gene of the strain OD4 to wild type (C116Y), and the effect of virulence was tested by using a marker transfer–infection protocol in mice. Immunoblot analysis, tryptic phosphopeptide mapping, and phosphotyrosine pulldown–immunoblot protocols were used to assess the OD4 {alpha}22 isoforms.

RESULTS. Reversion of the Y116C mutation resulted in a significant increase in the severity of ocular disease compared with the OD4 virus alone. Reversion of the Y116C and a previously identified mutation (S34A) together did not alter the severity of virulence compared with either mutation alone. Immunoblot analysis revealed a loss or reduction in {alpha}22 isoforms in the OD4 virus compared with wild type (CJ394 virus). The OD4 virus had numerous alterations in the {alpha}22 tryptic phosphopeptide pattern, including loss of specific peptides and shifts in the position of several peptides. Phosphotyrosine pulldowns revealed a loss of one or more isoforms and shifts in the apparent size of others.

CONCLUSIONS. The data indicate that Y116 is a determinant of peripheral virulence in mice and that mutations at S34 and Y116 affect virulence independently. The data also show that the S34 and Y116 mutations substantially alter phosphorylation of the {alpha}22 protein, that Y116 is a potential phosphorylation site, and that the {alpha}22 protein contains at least two phosphotyrosines. These results are the first to show that mutation of a specific tyrosine in the {alpha}22 protein is associated with virulence.








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