RRC ID 82072
Author Suryawanshi RK, Patil CD, Agelidis A, Koganti R, Yadavalli T, Ames JM, Borase H, Shukla D.
Title Pathophysiology of reinfection by exogenous HSV-1 is driven by heparanase dysfunction.
Journal Sci Adv
Abstract Limited knowledge exists on exogenous DNA virus reinfections. Herpes simplex virus-1 (HSV-1), a prototype DNA virus, causes multiple human diseases including vision-threatening eye infections. While reinfection with an exogenous HSV-1 strain is considered plausible, little is known about the underlying mechanisms governing its pathophysiology in a host. Heparanase (HPSE), a host endoglycosidase, when up-regulated by HSV-1 infection dictates local inflammatory response by destabilizing tissue architecture. Here, we demonstrate that HSV-1 reinfection in mice causes notable pathophysiology in wild-type controls compared to the animals lacking HPSE. The endoglycosidase promotes infected cell survival and supports a pro-disease environment. In contrast, lack of HPSE strengthens intrinsic immunity by promoting cytokine expression, inducing necroptosis of infected cells, and decreasing leukocyte infiltration into the cornea. Collectively, we report that immunity from a recent prior infection fails to abolish disease manifestation during HSV-1 reinfection unless HPSE is rendered inactive.
Volume 9(17)
Pages eadf3977
Published 2023-4-28
DOI 10.1126/sciadv.adf3977
PMID 37115924
PMC PMC10146881
MeSH Animals Glucuronidase / genetics Glucuronidase / metabolism Herpes Simplex* Herpesvirus 1, Human* Humans Mice Reinfection
IF 13.117
Resource
Human and Animal Cells HCE-T(RCB1384)