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Rho-ROCK and Rac-PAK Signaling Pathways Have Opposing Effects on the Cell-to-Cell Spread of Marek's Disease Virus

Marek's Disease Virus (MDV) is an avian alpha-herpesvirus that only spreads from cell-to-cell in cell culture. While its cell-to-cell spread has been shown to be dependent on actin filament dynamics, the mechanisms regulating this spread remain largely unknown. Using a recombinant BAC20 virus e...

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Autores principales: Richerioux, Nicolas, Blondeau, Caroline, Wiedemann, Agnès, Rémy, Sylvie, Vautherot, Jean-François, Denesvre, Caroline
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3428312/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22952878
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0044072
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author Richerioux, Nicolas
Blondeau, Caroline
Wiedemann, Agnès
Rémy, Sylvie
Vautherot, Jean-François
Denesvre, Caroline
author_facet Richerioux, Nicolas
Blondeau, Caroline
Wiedemann, Agnès
Rémy, Sylvie
Vautherot, Jean-François
Denesvre, Caroline
author_sort Richerioux, Nicolas
collection PubMed
description Marek's Disease Virus (MDV) is an avian alpha-herpesvirus that only spreads from cell-to-cell in cell culture. While its cell-to-cell spread has been shown to be dependent on actin filament dynamics, the mechanisms regulating this spread remain largely unknown. Using a recombinant BAC20 virus expressing an EGFPVP22 tegument protein, we found that the actin cytoskeleton arrangements and cell-cell contacts differ in the center and periphery of MDV infection plaques, with cells in the latter areas showing stress fibers and rare cellular projections. Using specific inhibitors and activators, we determined that Rho-ROCK pathway, known to regulate stress fiber formation, and Rac-PAK, known to promote lamellipodia formation and destabilize stress fibers, had strong contrasting effects on MDV cell-to-cell spread in primary chicken embryo skin cells (CESCs). Inhibition of Rho and its ROCKs effectors led to reduced plaque sizes whereas inhibition of Rac or its group I-PAKs effectors had the adverse effect. Importantly, we observed that the shape of MDV plaques is related to the semi-ordered arrangement of the elongated cells, at the monolayer level in the vicinity of the plaques. Inhibition of Rho-ROCK signaling also resulted in a perturbation of the cell arrangement and a rounding of plaques. These opposing effects of Rho and Rac pathways in MDV cell-to-cell spread were validated for two parental MDV recombinant viruses with different ex vivo spread efficiencies. Finally, we demonstrated that Rho/Rac pathways have opposing effects on the accumulation of N-cadherin at cell-cell contact regions between CESCs, and defined these contacts as adherens junctions. Considering the importance of adherens junctions in HSV-1 cell-to-cell spread in some cell types, this result makes of adherens junctions maintenance one potential and attractive hypothesis to explain the Rho/Rac effects on MDV cell-to-cell spread. Our study provides the first evidence that MDV cell-to-cell spread is regulated by Rho/Rac signaling.
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spelling pubmed-34283122012-09-05 Rho-ROCK and Rac-PAK Signaling Pathways Have Opposing Effects on the Cell-to-Cell Spread of Marek's Disease Virus Richerioux, Nicolas Blondeau, Caroline Wiedemann, Agnès Rémy, Sylvie Vautherot, Jean-François Denesvre, Caroline PLoS One Research Article Marek's Disease Virus (MDV) is an avian alpha-herpesvirus that only spreads from cell-to-cell in cell culture. While its cell-to-cell spread has been shown to be dependent on actin filament dynamics, the mechanisms regulating this spread remain largely unknown. Using a recombinant BAC20 virus expressing an EGFPVP22 tegument protein, we found that the actin cytoskeleton arrangements and cell-cell contacts differ in the center and periphery of MDV infection plaques, with cells in the latter areas showing stress fibers and rare cellular projections. Using specific inhibitors and activators, we determined that Rho-ROCK pathway, known to regulate stress fiber formation, and Rac-PAK, known to promote lamellipodia formation and destabilize stress fibers, had strong contrasting effects on MDV cell-to-cell spread in primary chicken embryo skin cells (CESCs). Inhibition of Rho and its ROCKs effectors led to reduced plaque sizes whereas inhibition of Rac or its group I-PAKs effectors had the adverse effect. Importantly, we observed that the shape of MDV plaques is related to the semi-ordered arrangement of the elongated cells, at the monolayer level in the vicinity of the plaques. Inhibition of Rho-ROCK signaling also resulted in a perturbation of the cell arrangement and a rounding of plaques. These opposing effects of Rho and Rac pathways in MDV cell-to-cell spread were validated for two parental MDV recombinant viruses with different ex vivo spread efficiencies. Finally, we demonstrated that Rho/Rac pathways have opposing effects on the accumulation of N-cadherin at cell-cell contact regions between CESCs, and defined these contacts as adherens junctions. Considering the importance of adherens junctions in HSV-1 cell-to-cell spread in some cell types, this result makes of adherens junctions maintenance one potential and attractive hypothesis to explain the Rho/Rac effects on MDV cell-to-cell spread. Our study provides the first evidence that MDV cell-to-cell spread is regulated by Rho/Rac signaling. Public Library of Science 2012-08-27 /pmc/articles/PMC3428312/ /pubmed/22952878 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0044072 Text en © 2012 Richerioux et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Richerioux, Nicolas
Blondeau, Caroline
Wiedemann, Agnès
Rémy, Sylvie
Vautherot, Jean-François
Denesvre, Caroline
Rho-ROCK and Rac-PAK Signaling Pathways Have Opposing Effects on the Cell-to-Cell Spread of Marek's Disease Virus
title Rho-ROCK and Rac-PAK Signaling Pathways Have Opposing Effects on the Cell-to-Cell Spread of Marek's Disease Virus
title_full Rho-ROCK and Rac-PAK Signaling Pathways Have Opposing Effects on the Cell-to-Cell Spread of Marek's Disease Virus
title_fullStr Rho-ROCK and Rac-PAK Signaling Pathways Have Opposing Effects on the Cell-to-Cell Spread of Marek's Disease Virus
title_full_unstemmed Rho-ROCK and Rac-PAK Signaling Pathways Have Opposing Effects on the Cell-to-Cell Spread of Marek's Disease Virus
title_short Rho-ROCK and Rac-PAK Signaling Pathways Have Opposing Effects on the Cell-to-Cell Spread of Marek's Disease Virus
title_sort rho-rock and rac-pak signaling pathways have opposing effects on the cell-to-cell spread of marek's disease virus
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3428312/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22952878
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0044072
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