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  4. Single cell detection of latent cytomegalovirus reactivation in host tissue
 
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2011
Journal Article
Title

Single cell detection of latent cytomegalovirus reactivation in host tissue

Abstract
The molecular mechanisms leading to reactivation of latent cytomegalovirus are not well understood. To study reactivation, the few cells in an organ tissue that give rise to reactivated virus need to be identified, ideally at the earliest possible time point in the process. To this end, mouse cytomegalovirus (MCMV) reporter mutants were designed to simultaneously express the red fluorescent protein mCherry and the secreted Gaussia luciferase (Gluc). Whereas Gluc can serve to assess infection at the level of individual mice by measuring luminescence in blood samples or by in vivo imaging, mCherry fluorescence offers the advatage of detection of infection at the single cell level. To visualize cells in which MCMV was being reactivated, precision-cut lung slices (PCLS) that preserve tissue microanatomy were prepared from the lungs of latently infected mice. By day 3 of cultivation of the PCLS, reactivation was revealed by Gluc expression, preceding the detection of infecti ous virus by approximately 4 days. Reactivation events in PCLS could be identified when they were still confined to single cells. Notably, using fractalkine receptor-GFP reporter mice, we never observed reactivation originating from CX3CR1+ monocytes or pulmonary dendritic cells derived therefrom. Furthermore, latent viral genome in the lungs was not enriched in sorted bone-marrow-derived cells expressing CD11b. Taken together, these complementary approaches suggest that CD11b+ and CX3CR1+ subsets of the myeloid differentiation lineage are not the main reservoirs and cellular sites of MCMV latency and reactivation in the lungs.
Author(s)
Marquardt, A.
Halle, S.
Seckert, C.K.
Lemmermann, N.A.W.
Veres, T.Z.
Braun, A.
Maus, U.A.
Förster, R.
Reddehase, M.J.
Messerle, M.
Busche, A.
Journal
Journal of general virology  
DOI
10.1099/vir.0.029827-0
Language
English
Fraunhofer-Institut für Toxikologie und Experimentelle Medizin ITEM  
Keyword(s)
  • cytomegalovirus

  • reporter genes

  • animal

  • disease - animal model

  • gene expression

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