|
|
||||||||
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||


Division of Virology, Department of Pathology, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK
Correspondence
Philip G. Stevenson
pgs27{at}cam.ac.uk
| ABSTRACT |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Present address: Immunology–Vaccinology, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, University of Liège, Liège, Belgium. ![]()
Present address: Instituto de Microbiologia e Instituto de Medicina Molecular, Faculdade de Medicina, Universidade de Lisboa, Lisboa, Portugal. ![]()
| INTRODUCTION |
|---|
|
|
|---|
How might herpesvirus membrane fusion be blocked better? Answering this means understanding how fusion works. Virus-specific glycoproteins, such as herpes simplex virus gD, can modulate fusion (Avitabile et al., 2007
; Atanasiu et al., 2007
) and some herpesviruses can express alternative fusion complexes by using different accessory glycoproteins (Borza & Hutt-Fletcher, 2002
; Wang & Shenk, 2005
), but the core machinery, comprising the gH–gL heterodimer and gB (Browne et al., 2001
), is conserved. MuHV-4 membrane fusion is pH-dependent and occurs in late endosomes (Gillet et al., 2008b
). Fusion is associated with conformation changes in both gH and gB (Gillet et al., 2008b
, c
). gB probably switches between pre- and post-fusion states, like the structurally homologous vesicular stomatitis virus glycoprotein G (Roche et al., 2007
), but gH is different. It switches from a gL-dependent to a gL-independent conformation in late endosomes (Gillet et al., 2008c
), implying that gH and gL dissociate. Yet gL– virions, which constitutively express the downstream form of gH (gH-only), remain infectious; indeed, they show premature rather than impaired membrane fusion (Gillet et al., 2008c
). It therefore appears that gH changes from gH–gL to gH-only before engaging in fusion.
Not only is gH different in gL– virions: gB also shows conformational instability. This is consistent with a knock-on effect of the change in gH, as gH–gL and gB are associated in the virion membrane (Gillet & Stevenson, 2007a
). A link – probably intramembrane – is maintained between gH and gB, even without gL (Gillet & Stevenson, 2007a
), but any extracellular interaction must change, as the gH–gL and gH-only conformations are antigenically very different (Gill et al., 2006
). The gB N terminus covers part of gH–gL, and deleting it also seems to destabilize gB (Gillet & Stevenson, 2007b
). This region may therefore bridge the gB and gH–gL extracellular domains.
The gB and gH conformation changes present problems for antibodies that would block membrane fusion (Gill et al., 2006
; Gillet et al., 2006
). First, antibodies must act indirectly, either by blocking conformation changes (probably the major mechanism for gH–gL) or by causing steric hindrance (probably the major mechanism for gB) (Gillet et al., 2008b
). Second, they must remain attached to their targets in late endosomes and compete with conformation changes that are energetically favourable at low pH. With glycan shielding (Gillet & Stevenson, 2007b
) and poor immunogenicity (Gillet et al., 2007b
) also factored in, it is perhaps unsurprising that complete MuHV-4 neutralization is so hard.
The central roles of gL in MuHV-4 cell binding and membrane fusion suggest an additional role for it in virion neutralization. Whether gL itself is a neutralization target is unknown, but gH–gL is the major mAb-defined target on wild-type virions (Gill et al., 2006
). This neutralization operates downstream of cell binding, presumably by inhibiting the post-endocytic dissociation of gL from gH. Disrupting gL would remove gH–gL as a target, but could instead reveal other gH epitopes. In order to understand how gL affects neutralization, we compared the infectivity of gL+ and gL– virions after exposure to immune sera or mAbs. Our results explain some of the resistance of wild-type MuHV-4 virions to neutralization and shed new light on herpesvirus entry.
| METHODS |
|---|
|
|
|---|
|
Virus titres and neutralization assays.
MuHV-4 was titrated by plaque assay (de Lima et al., 2004
). After incubation with virus (2 h, 37 °C), BHK-21 cell monolayers were overlaid with 0.3 % carboxymethylcellulose and 4 days later fixed and stained in 4 % formaldehyde/0.1 % toluidine blue. Viruses with an eGFP expression cassette (Adler et al., 2000
) were alternatively titrated by eGFP expression. Cells were exposed to virus overnight in phosphonoacetic acid (100 µg ml–1) to prevent infection spreading. RAW-264 cells were further treated with LPS (6 h, 100 ng ml–1) to activate the eGFP expression cassette maximally (Rosa et al., 2007
). The proportion of infected cells in each culture was determined by flow cytometry. BHK-21 or NMuMG cells were infected at 0.1–0.3 p.f.u. per cell and RAW-264 cells at 1–3 p.f.u. per cell to give 20–60 % eGFP+ cells, eGFP titres being typically 2-fold higher than plaque titres for BHK-21 cells and 10-fold higher for BHK-21 than for RAW-264 cells. Virus titres were calculated by assuming each eGFP+ cell to be a single hit. For neutralization, viruses were incubated with dilutions of serum or mAb (2 h, 37 °C) before being added to the cells and assayed for infectivity as above. All sera were pooled from at least three mice. The sera within each experiment were equivalent in ELISA titre for IgG binding to Triton X-100-disrupted virions (Stevenson & Doherty, 1999
).
Immunofluorescence.
MuHV-4 virions (3 p.f.u. per cell) were exposed or not to antibody (2 h, 37 °C) then bound to cells on glass coverslips (2 h, 4 °C). The cells were then washed three times in PBS to remove unbound virions, and shifted to 37 °C to allow endocytosis. After incubation at 37 °C, the cells were fixed in 4 % paraformaldehyde (30 min), permeabilized with 0.1 % Triton X-100 (15 min) and stained with virus-specific mAbs plus Alexa 488-conjugated goat anti-mouse IgG1 (Invitrogen) and Alexa 568-conjugated goat anti-mouse IgG2a. Nuclei were counterstained with DAPI (4,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole). Fluorescence was visualized with a Leica SP2 confocal microscope and analysed with ImageJ. None of the mAbs stained uninfected cells detectably.
Flow cytometry.
Transfected or MuHV-4-infected cells (2 p.f.u. per cell, 18 h) were trypsinized, washed in PBS and incubated (1 h, 4 °C) with MuHV-4-glycoprotein-specific mAbs, followed by fluorescein-conjugated rabbit anti-mouse IgG pAb (Dako Cytomation) or Alexa 633-conjugated goat anti-mouse IgG (Invitrogen). The cells were washed in PBS after each incubation and analysed on a FACScalibur (BD Biosciences).
Immunoblotting.
Virions were lysed and denatured by heating (95 °C, 5 min) in Laemmli's buffer, resolved by SDS-PAGE and transferred to PVDF membranes. The membranes were probed with the ORF17 capsid antigen-specific mAb 150-7D1 plus horseradish peroxidase-conjugated rabbit anti-mouse IgG pAb (Dako Cytomation), followed by ECL substrate development (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech).
| RESULTS |
|---|
|
|
|---|
|
|
The converse was true, to a lesser degree, of gp70– virions: they were neutralized poorly by gL–-immune sera, which lack antibodies to gH–gL. As MuHV-4 neutralization by immune sera correlates with a block to cell binding (Gill et al., 2006
) and this requires either gp70 or gH–gL, but not both (Gillet et al., 2008a
), it was surprising that gL–-immune and gp70–-immune sera still neutralized wild-type virions quite well (Fig. 2a, b
). This presumably reflects that immune sera can also neutralize in other ways. For example, some mice mount gB-specific neutralizing responses (Gillet et al., 2006
). Antibodies specific for abundant virion glycoproteins could also hinder infection sterically. This would explain why gL–-immune sera neutralized wild-type virions better than they neutralized gp70– virions: gp70 is normally highly abundant and immunogenic (Gillet et al., 2007b
), but would be missing from gp70– virions.
Immune sera neutralize gL– virions poorly for macrophage infection
Although immune sera block MuHV-4 fibroblast and epithelial-cell infections quite well, they tend to enhance dendritic-cell and macrophage infections via IgG Fc receptors (Rosa et al., 2007
). This reflects that Fc receptor binding allows opsonized virions to bypass blocks to conventional cell binding. The infection enhancement depends mainly on antibodies to gp150 (Gillet et al., 2007b
); the chief inhibitory antibodies recognize gH–gL (Gillet et al., 2007d
).
The greater gL– virus neutralization observed for BHK-21 fibroblasts did not apply to RAW-264 macrophages (Fig. 2b
). Very large amounts of immune serum reduced wild-type infection, lower amounts increased it, gp70– virions were similar, and gL– virions showed marked infection enhancement even at serum doses virtually abolishing BHK-21 cell infection. The neutralization differences between gL–-immune and gp70–-immune sera for different virions were also greatly reduced with RAW-264 cells. These data indicated further that the strong neutralization of gL– virions for BHK-21 cell infection by wild-type-immune and gL–-immune sera reflected mainly a better block of cell binding.
The striking enhancement of gL– RAW-264 cell infection by immune sera should not be overinterpreted. gL– viruses showed capsid protein : p.f.u. ratios approximately 3-fold higher than for gL+ (Fig. 2c
), i.e. gL– viruses were 3-fold less infectious by plaque assay. gL– and gL+ virus eGFP+ titres were proportionate to their plaque titres. Therefore, gL– virions showed approximately 3-fold less infectivity for RAW-264 cells without antibody than did gL+ virions. The main gL-dependent infection deficits are reduced binding to BHK-21 cells (Gillet et al., 2007c
) and premature membrane fusion in NMuMG cells (Gillet et al., 2008c
). Opsonization would overcome any macrophage-binding deficit and could alleviate any premature membrane fusion by diverting virions into different endosomes. Such effects would restore gL– infectivity back towards wild-type levels. Thus, it is difficult to compare degrees of gL+ and gL– infection enhancement. Our conclusion from RAW-264 cell infections was simply that gL+ and gL– virions showed much less difference in neutralization when their dependence on heparan sulfate for cell binding was reduced.
gL– virion neutralization maps to the gp70 N-terminal domains
Immune sera contain complex mixtures of immunoglobulin specificities and isotypes. We therefore used mAbs to define gp70-directed gL– virion neutralization more precisely (Fig. 3a
; Table 1
). gp70 comprises four short consensus repeats (SCRs 1–4) and an S/T-rich cytoplasmic domain (Kapadia et al., 1999
). As with the homologous protein of the Kaposi's sarcoma-associated herpesvirus (Mark et al., 2006
), heparan sulfate binding maps to gp70 SCRs 1–2 (Gillet et al., 2007a
). We identified mAb-recognition sites on gp70 by staining cells transfected with membrane-anchored gp70 C-terminal truncation mutants, as described previously (Gillet et al., 2007a
). The most effective gL–-virus-neutralizing mAb, LT-6E8, recognized SCR2; T2B11 and T1G10, which also neutralized, recognized SCR1; mAbs specific for SCRs 3–4 did not neutralize (Fig. 3a
). gp70-directed neutralization therefore mapped to the same domains as heparan sulfate binding.
|
No gp70-specific IgG mAb blocked RAW-264 cell infection by gL– virions (Fig. 3a
). This was again consistent with gp70-directed neutralization blocking cell binding, and therefore being unable to block infection when IgG Fc receptors provided an alternative binding route. In contrast, the gp70-specific IgM mAb T2B11 inhibits RAW-264 infection by wild-type MuHV-4 moderately (Rosa et al., 2007
), presumably because its bulk causes steric hindrance and RAW-264 cells lack high-affinity Fc µ binding. gp70-specific IgGs generally enhanced gL+ RAW-264 cell infection better than gL– RAW-264 cell infection. Interestingly, SCR1/2-specific IgGs gave the best enhancement. Such antibodies may mimic the orientation of normal ligand binding and so optimally recruit the virion fusion machinery.
We then tested neutralization by mAb LT-6E8 in combination with mAb 230-4A2 (Gillet et al., 2008a
), which blocks heparan sulfate binding by gH–gL–Fc (Fig. 3c
). LT-6E8 only inhibited wild-type MuHV-4 infection of BHK-21 cells when combined with 230-4A2. 230-4A2 alone inhibited moderately, presumably because it also stabilizes gH–gL to inhibit membrane fusion; it was much more inhibitory when combined with LT-6E8 to block heparan sulfate binding by both gH–gL and gp70. RAW-264 cell infection resisted this inhibition. Thus, mAbs LT-6E8 and 230-4A2 recapitulated the hierarchical effects of immune sera (Fig. 2
): 230-4A2 was analogous to gp70–-immune sera (no LT-6E8-type response), LT-6E8 to gL–-immune sera (no 230-4A2-type response) and both mAbs together to wild-type-immune sera. These data further supported the idea that immune sera inhibit fibroblast infection mainly by blocking heparan sulfate binding.
gH-only is a neutralization target on gL– virions
Although the major neutralization difference between gL+ and gL– virions mapped to heparan sulfate binding by gp70, this did not rule out other additional effects. In particular, the vulnerability of fibroblast infection to cell-binding blocks and the complexities of RAW-264 cell infection by opsonized gL+ and gL– virions would have made post-binding inhibitions by immune sera hard to identify. We therefore explored gL-dependent neutralization further by testing mAbs from MuHV-4-infected mice for preferential neutralization of gL– virions. We identified five mAbs: four were equivalent to LT-6E8, recognizing gp70, and were therefore not analysed further. However, LT-5D3 (Fig. 4a, b
) recognized gH-only, the gH antigenic form expressed by gL– virions (Gillet et al., 2007c
). Other gH-only specific mAbs also neutralized gL– virions (Fig. 4c
). They enhanced gL– virus infection of RAW-264 cells at low doses and inhibited it, albeit weakly, at high doses (Fig. 4d
), a pattern similar to that of gH–gL-specific mAbs with wild-type virions (Gillet et al., 2007d
).
|
|
|
|
| DISCUSSION |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Disrupting gL also made the gH-only conformation of gH a neutralization target. This supported the idea that gH-only, although downstream of gH–gL, is still pre-fusion (Gillet et al., 2008c
). Thus, gL limits gH-directed neutralization to inhibiting the gH–gL to gH-only transition. Antibody binding to gL-dependent gH epitopes or compound gL–gH epitopes would stabilize gH–gL. Antibodies specific for gL alone are unlikely to neutralize unless gL also changes its conformation significantly when it dissociates from gH. The recognition of both virus-infected cells and recombinant gL by our gL-specific mAbs implied that it does not. Accordingly, they did not neutralize.
Finally, gL disruption made multiple gB epitopes better neutralization targets. This presumably reflected the same molecular events as the previously observed gL-dependent conformational instability of gB (Gillet et al., 2008c
). However, the gB on extracellular gL– virions is conformationally normal – its instability manifests only after endocytosis (Gillet et al., 2008c
), and gL– virions were susceptible not to new gB-specific antibodies, but to those also recognizing gL+ virions. Therefore the greater vulnerability of gL– virions to gB-directed neutralization appeared to reflect a greater exposure of its normal, pre-fusion form.
Several lines of evidence indicate that disrupting gL destabilizes gB by abolishing an extracellular interaction between gB and gH–gL. First, the gH–gL and gB extracellular domains are both unstable when expressed alone, gH–gL becoming gH-only (Gillet et al., 2008a
) and gB adopting mainly its post-fusion form (Gillet et al., 2008b
). Second, gH–gL associates with gB and, although their strongest link is probably intra-membrane (Gillet & Stevenson, 2007a
), it is hard to envisage how their extracellular domains could avoid being associated too. Third, the gB N terminus hides and so presumably contacts part of gH–gL (Gillet & Stevenson, 2007b
). As gB is trimeric (Heldwein et al., 2006
), each gB spike could contact three copies of gH–gL; if gH–gL were also multimeric, a two-dimensional lattice could form, and such clustering would allow gH–gL to hide an appreciable portion of gB. gL dissociation would then prime virions for fusion by both changing gH and revealing gB. Normally this would happen in late endosomes. A lack of gL would trigger it sooner, making pre-fusion gB accessible to antibody. Such a model would explain why most gB-specific mAbs that neutralize wild-type virions are IgMs (Gillet et al., 2008b
): wild-type virions express some gH-only (Gillet et al., 2007c
), implying that some gB is accessible; IgMs could bind one or two vulnerable gBs extracellularly, then use their remaining arms to bind newly revealed gBs in late endosomes.
A complete definition of MuHV-4 entry awaits gB–gH–gL and gB–gH crystal structures, but already some points seem clear. First, the gH–gL–gB composite presents epitopes from both gB and gH–gL. The gH–gL heparan sulfate-binding site defined by mAb 230-4A2 is not made more accessible by deleting the gB N terminus (Gillet & Stevenson, 2007b
), and the N-terminal gB epitope defined by MG-2C10 was not revealed better by deleting gL. These must therefore be surface features. Second, when gL is lost, multiple epitopes on both gB and gH–gL are revealed, indicating a large-scale change. Third, the partial availability of these epitopes on wild-type virions implies that not all entry complexes are the same, perhaps because not all gH is bound to gL.
What are the implications for neutralization-based vaccines? As immunodominant viral antigens work against neutralization (Gillet et al., 2007b
), one priority is to identify minimal expression systems for key epitopes. An example is gH and gL fused together, which stably present native gH–gL epitopes (Gillet et al., 2007d
). gB-specific neutralizing IgMs are probably an unrealistic vaccine goal. However, reconstitution of the epitope of SC-9E8, a neutralizing IgG, may allow a similar approach with gB. Our increasing understanding of MuHV-4 entry makes it a suitable model to test the value of neutralization in a persistent infection.
| ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
|---|
| REFERENCES |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Atanasiu, D., Whitbeck, J. C., Cairns, T. M., Reilly, B., Cohen, G. H. & Eisenberg, R. J. (2007). Bimolecular complementation reveals that glycoproteins gB and gH/gL of herpes simplex virus interact with each other during cell fusion. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 104, 18718–18723.
Avitabile, E., Forghieri, C. & Campadelli-Fiume, G. (2007). Complexes between herpes simplex virus glycoproteins gD, gB, and gH detected in cells by complementation of split enhanced green fluorescent protein. J Virol 81, 11532–11537.
Borza, C. M. & Hutt-Fletcher, L. M. (2002). Alternate replication in B cells and epithelial cells switches tropism of Epstein–Barr virus. Nat Med 8, 594–599.[CrossRef][Medline]
Browne, H., Bruun, B. & Minson, T. (2001). Plasma membrane requirements for cell fusion induced by herpes simplex virus type 1 glycoproteins gB, gD, gH and gL. J Gen Virol 82, 1419–1422.
de Lima, B. D., May, J. S. & Stevenson, P. G. (2004). Murine gammaherpesvirus 68 lacking gp150 shows defective virion release but establishes normal latency in vivo. J Virol 78, 5103–5112.
Gaspar, M., Gill, M. B., Lösing, J. B., May, J. S. & Stevenson, P. G. (2008). Multiple functions for ORF75c in murid herpesvirus-4 infection. PLoS One 3, e2781[CrossRef][Medline]
Gill, M. B., Gillet, L., Colaco, S., May, J. S., de Lima, B. D. & Stevenson, P. G. (2006). Murine gammaherpesvirus-68 glycoprotein H–glycoprotein L complex is a major target for neutralizing monoclonal antibodies. J Gen Virol 87, 1465–1475.
Gillet, L. & Stevenson, P. G. (2007a). Evidence for a multi-protein gamma-2-herpesvirus entry complex. J Virol 81, 13082–13091.
Gillet, L. & Stevenson, P. G. (2007b). Antibody evasion by the N terminus of murid herpesvirus-4 glycoprotein B. EMBO J 26, 5131–5142.[CrossRef][Medline]
Gillet, L., Gill, M. B., Colaco, S., Smith, C. M. & Stevenson, P. G. (2006). Murine gammaherpesvirus-68 glycoprotein B presents a difficult neutralization target to monoclonal antibodies derived from infected mice. J Gen Virol 87, 3515–3527.
Gillet, L., Adler, H. & Stevenson, P. G. (2007a). Glycosaminoglycan interactions in murine gammaherpesvirus-68 infection. PLoS One 2, e347[CrossRef][Medline]
Gillet, L., May, J. S., Colaco, S. & Stevenson, P. G. (2007b). The murine gammaherpesvirus-68 gp150 acts as an immunogenic decoy to limit virion neutralization. PLoS One 2, e705[CrossRef][Medline]
Gillet, L., May, J. S., Colaco, S. & Stevenson, P. G. (2007c). Glycoprotein L disruption reveals two functional forms of the murine gammaherpesvirus 68 glycoprotein H. J Virol 81, 280–291.
Gillet, L., May, J. S. & Stevenson, P. G. (2007d). Post-exposure vaccination improves gammaherpesvirus neutralization. PLoS One 2, e899[CrossRef][Medline]
Gillet, L., Colaco, S. & Stevenson, P. G. (2008a). The murid herpesvirus-4 gH/gL binds to glycosaminoglycans. PLoS ONE 3, e1669[CrossRef][Medline]
Gillet, L., Colaco, S. & Stevenson, P. G. (2008b). Glycoprotein B switches conformation during murid herpesvirus 4 entry. J Gen Virol 89, 1352–1363.
Gillet, L., Colaco, S. & Stevenson, P. G. (2008c). The murid herpesvirus-4 gL regulates an entry-associated conformation change in gH. PLoS One 3, e2811[CrossRef][Medline]
Heldwein, E. E., Lou, H., Bender, F. C., Cohen, G. H., Eisenberg, R. J. & Harrison, S. C. (2006). Crystal structure of glycoprotein B from herpes simplex virus 1. Science 313, 217–220.
Inada, T., Chong, K. T. & Mims, C. A. (1985). Enhancing antibodies, macrophages and virulence in mouse cytomegalovirus infection. J Gen Virol 66, 871–878.
Kapadia, S. B., Molina, H., van Berkel, V., Speck, S. H. & Virgin, H. W. (1999). Murine gammaherpesvirus 68 encodes a functional regulator of complement activation. J Virol 73, 7658–7670.
Köhler, G. & Milstein, C. (1975). Continuous cultures of fused cells secreting antibody of predefined specificity. Nature 256, 495–497.[CrossRef][Medline]
Lopes, F. B., Colaco, S., May, J. S. & Stevenson, P. G. (2004). Characterization of murine gammaherpesvirus 68 glycoprotein B. J Virol 78, 13370–13375.
Maidji, E., McDonagh, S., Genbacev, O., Tabata, T. & Pereira, L. (2006). Maternal antibodies enhance or prevent cytomegalovirus infection in the placenta by neonatal Fc receptor-mediated transcytosis. Am J Pathol 168, 1210–1226.
Mancini, G., Carbonara, A. O. & Heremans, J. F. (1965). Immunochemical quantitation of antigens by single radial immunodiffusion. Immunochemistry 2, 235–254.[CrossRef][Medline]
Mark, L., Lee, W. H., Spiller, O. B., Villoutreix, B. O. & Blom, A. M. (2006). The Kaposi's sarcoma-associated herpesvirus complement control protein (KCP) binds to heparin and cell surfaces via positively charged amino acids in CCP1–2. Mol Immunol 43, 1665–1675.[CrossRef][Medline]
May, J. S., Colaco, S. & Stevenson, P. G. (2005). Glycoprotein M is an essential lytic replication protein of the murine gammaherpesvirus 68. J Virol 79, 3459–3467.
Roche, S., Rey, F. A., Gaudin, Y. & Bressanelli, S. (2007). Structure of the prefusion form of the vesicular stomatitis virus glycoprotein G. Science 315, 843–848.
Roop, C., Hutchinson, L. & Johnson, D. C. (1993). A mutant herpes simplex virus type 1 unable to express glycoprotein L cannot enter cells, and its particles lack glycoprotein H. J Virol 67, 2285–2297.
Rosa, G. T., Gillet, L., Smith, C. M., de Lima, B. D. & Stevenson, P. G. (2007). IgG Fc receptors provide an alternative infection route for murine gamma-herpesvirus-68. PLoS One 2, e560[CrossRef][Medline]
Stevenson, P. G. & Doherty, P. C. (1999). Non-antigen-specific B-cell activation following murine gammaherpesvirus infection is CD4 independent in vitro but CD4 dependent in vivo. J Virol 73, 1075–1079.
Wang, D. & Shenk, T. (2005). Human cytomegalovirus virion protein complex required for epithelial and endothelial cell tropism. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 102, 18153–18158.
Zinkernagel, R. M. & Hengartner, H. (2006). Protective immunity by pre-existent neutralizing antibody titers and preactivated T cells but not by so-called immunological memory. Immunol Rev 211, 310–319.[CrossRef][Medline]
Received 11 November 2008;
accepted 19 January 2009.
This article has been cited by other articles:
![]() |
D. E. Wright, S. Colaco, C. Colaco, and P. G. Stevenson Antibody limits in vivo murid herpesvirus-4 replication by IgG Fc receptor-dependent functions J. Gen. Virol., November 1, 2009; 90(11): 2592 - 2603. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
P. G. Stevenson, J. P. Simas, and S. Efstathiou Immune control of mammalian gamma-herpesviruses: lessons from murid herpesvirus-4 J. Gen. Virol., October 1, 2009; 90(10): 2317 - 2330. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| HOME | HELP | FEEDBACK | SUBSCRIPTIONS | ARCHIVE | SEARCH | TABLE OF CONTENTS |
| INT J SYST EVOL MICROBIOL | MICROBIOLOGY | J GEN VIROL |
| J MED MICROBIOL | ALL SGM JOURNALS | |