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Stabilization of the Human Cytomegalovirus UL136p33 Reactivation Determinant Overcomes the Requirement for UL135 for Replication in Hematopoietic Cells

Abstract

Human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) is a beta herpesvirus that persists indefinitely in the human host through a latent infection. The polycistronic gene locus of HCMV encodes genes regulating latency and reactivation. While is pro-latency, restricting virus replication in CD34 hematopoietic progenitor cells (HPCs), overcomes this restriction and is required for reactivation. By contrast, is expressed with later kinetics and encodes multiple proteins with differential roles in latency and reactivation. Like , the largest isoform, UL136p33, is required for reactivation from latency in HPCs; viruses failing to express either protein are unresponsive to reactivation stimuli. Furthermore, UL136p33 is unstable, and its instability is important for the establishment of latency, and sufficient accumulation of UL136p33 is a checkpoint for reactivation. We hypothesized that stabilizing UL136p33 might overcome the requirement of for replication. We generated recombinant viruses lacking that expressed a stabilized variant of UL136p33. Stabilizing UL136p33 did not impact the replication of the mutant virus in fibroblasts. However, in the context of infection in HPCs, stabilization of UL136p33 strikingly compensated for the loss of resulting in increased replication in CD34 HPCs and in humanized NOD- IL2Rγ (huNSG) mice. This finding suggests that while is essential for replication in HPCs, it functions largely at steps preceding the accumulation of UL136p33, and that stabilized expression of UL136p33 largely overcomes the requirement for . Taken together, our genetic evidence indicates an epistatic relationship between UL136p33 and , whereby may initiate events early in reactivation that drive the accumulation of UL136p33 to a threshold required for productive reactivation. IMPORTANCE Human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) is one of nine human herpesviruses and a significant human pathogen. While HCMV establishes a lifelong latent infection that is typically asymptomatic in healthy individuals, its reactivation from latency can have devastating consequences in the immunocompromised. Defining viral genes important in the establishment of or reactivation from latency is important to defining the molecular basis of latent and replicative states and in controlling infection and CMV disease. Here we define a genetic relationship between two viral genes in controlling virus reactivation from latency using primary human hematopoietic progenitor cells and humanized mouse models.

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