From the Laboratory for Molecular Pharmacology, Panum
Institute, DK-2200 Copenhagen, Denmark, the § Department
for Infectious Diseases, Rigshospitalet, DK-2100 Copenhagen, Denmark,
the
Biomed Research Center, University of British Columbia,
Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada V6T 1Z4, and the
** Department for Clinical Microbiology, Rigshospitalet,
DK-2100 Copenhagen, Denmark
Received for publication, November 6, 2002, and in revised form, January 16, 2003
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ABSTRACT |
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The chemokine-like, secreted protein product of
the U83 gene from human herpesvirus 6, here named vCCL4, was chemically
synthesized to be characterized in a complete library of the 18 known
human chemokine receptors expressed individually in stably transfected cell lines. vCCL4 was found to cause calcium mobilization as
efficiently as the endogenous chemokine ligand CCL2 through the CCR2
receptor, whereas the virally encoded chemokine did not affect any of
the other 17 human chemokine receptors tested. Mutual
cross-desensitization between CCL2 and vCCL4 was demonstrated in the
CCR2-transfected cells. The affinity of vCCL4 for the CCR2 receptor was
79 nM as determined in competition binding against
radioactively labeled CCL2. In the murine pre-B lymphocyte cell line
L1.2 stably transfected with the CCR2 receptor, vCCL4 acted as a
relatively low potency but highly efficacious chemoattractant being
equally or more efficacious in causing cell migration than CCL2 and
CCL7 and considerably more efficacious than CCL8 and CCL13. It is
concluded that human herpesvirus 6 encodes a highly selective and
efficacious CCR2 agonist, which will attract CCR2 expressing cells, for
example macrophages and monocytes, conceivably for the virus to infect and to establish latency in. It is suggested that vCCL4 during reactivation of the virus in for example monocyte-derived microglia could perhaps be involved in the pathogenesis of the
CCR2-dependent disease, multiple sclerosis.
Human herpesvirus 6 (HHV6)1 was identified in
1986 (1). Subsequently, it has been shown that over 95% of people
older than 2 years are seropositive for HHV6 (2). The primary infection with HHV6 can give rise to exanthema subitum, also known as
roseola infantum or the sixth disease (2). The course is generally benign, but complications such as seizures, meningitis, and
encephalitis are well recognized (2). HHV6 is known to establish
latency in its host and to be highly neurotropic (2). HHV6 has been suggested as an agent involved in multiple sclerosis (MS) (2); however,
the ubiquitous presence of HHV6 in the human population from an early
age on combined with the frequent finding of HHV6 in the central
nervous system of infected persons has made it difficult to determine
whether reactivation of HHV6 in the central nervous system is in fact
implicated in plaque formation in multiple sclerosis or whether the
virus is just an innocent bystander (2).
Large DNA viruses such as poxviruses and herpesviruses encode proteins,
which interfere with their host immune system. Several of these
immune-evasive genes encode proteins, which target the chemokine
system. Chemokines are 70-80 amino acid proteins with well
characterized three-dimensional structures that are involved in
attracting and activating distinct leukocyte subsets (3, 4). The
current number of endogenous human chemokine genes is approaching 50. These can be divided into four subfamilies on the basis of the pattern
and number of the conserved cysteine residues located near their N
termini, which are involved in disulfide binding formation. In the CC
family the two N-terminal cysteines are adjacent, and in the CXC family
and CX3C family the two residues are separated by a single
amino acid and by three amino acids, respectively, whereas in the XC
family only one cysteine is present.
Chemokines act through seven-transmembrane receptors, G protein-coupled
receptors of which we today know 10 CC chemokine receptors, six CXC
receptors, one CX3C receptor (CX3CR1), and one
XC receptor (XCR1) (4, 5).
Among herpesvirus cytomegalovirus or HHV5 (6), HHV6 (7, 8), HHV7 (9),
and HHV8 (10) are all known to encode chemokine-like proteins and/or
chemokine receptors. For most of these receptors the function has not
yet been identified, except in the case of the open reading frame 74 CXC chemokine receptor from HHV8, which apparently is crucially
involved in the angiogenic lesions in Kaposi's sarcoma (11-13) and
the CC/CX3C chemokine receptor US28 receptor from
cytomegalovirus, which appears to be involved in the cellular transfer
of virus and as a chemokine scavenger (14, 15).
The virally encoded chemokine proteins have rather different
pharmacological phenotypes. Thus, we found that the HHV8-encoded vMIP-II functions as a broad spectrum chemokine antagonist, whereas the
MC148 chemokine encoded by the poxvirus Molluscum
contagiosum is a highly selective CCR8 antagonist (16-18). Other
groups have characterized the CC chemokines vMIP-I and vMIP-III, which
are also encoded by HHV8 as being CCR4 and CCR8 agonists, respectively (19-21). Cytomegalovirus encodes two CXC chemokines, vCXC1 and vCXC2
(22), of which vCXC1 has been characterized as a CXCR2 agonist (23).
vMIP-II was shown to function in vivo as an efficient immunosuppressive agent in a rat model for glomerulonephritis and rat
model for spinal cord contusion (24, 25).
HHV6 encodes two putative chemokine receptors and a chemokine-like
protein, which based on its primary structure, is predicted to be
either a CC or a CX3C chemokine (Fig.
1). In the present study we show that the
HHV6 U83 gene encodes a CC chemokine, which functions as a highly
selective and efficacious agonist for the human CCR2 receptor both in
respect of signal transduction and the ability to induce chemotaxis. In
analogy with the two cytomegalovirus-encoded chemokines vCXC1 and
vCXC2, we suggest that the U83 gene product be named vCCL4 because it
is the fourth human herpesvirus-encoded CC chemokine to be
characterized, and this name is used throughout the present paper.
U-83 Constructs--
U83 was cloned from HHV6B DNA bought from
Autogen Bioclear England into the pTej8 vector using standard
techniques. The sequence of the gene was similar to
GenBankTM accession number 405187. To knock-out two
reported splice sites, another construct was made with two silent
mutations (167TACCTG172 to
167TGCCAG172 and
244TACCTG249 to
244TATTTG249).
Recombinant Protein--
To purify vCCL4, the same method that
had been successfully used for MC148 was applied with minor
modifications. In brief COS-7 cells and CHO cells were transiently
transfected with the two U83 constructs by a calcium phosphate
precipitate method with addition of chloroquine. Serum- and phenol
red-free medium was collected 24 h after transfection. The medium
was centrifuged at 1500 × g for 20 min, the
supernatant was adjusted to pH 9.5 and filtered through 0.22-µm
filters (Nalgene, Rochester, NY). The medium was diluted with water 1:1
to decrease ionic strength and loaded on anion exchange SP-Sepharose
columns (Amersham Biosciences). The columns were washed with 20 mM ethanolamin buffer, pH 9.5, and the protein was eluted
with 2 M NaCl in the same buffer. The eluate was made 0.2%
in trifluoroacetic acid, filtered and loaded on a C8 (Vydac, Hesperia,
CA) column for reverse-phase HPLC from where bound material was eluted
with 0.1% trifluoroacetic acid in water on a gradient of
CH3CN. We tried to identify the elution position of vCCL4
by mass spectroscopy of different protein fractions.
Chemokines--
vCCL4 (21-113 from GenBankTM NC
000898), CCL2, CCL7, CCL8, CCL13, and CCL27 were chemically synthesized
as described previously (26). Mass spectroscopy and HPLC of vCCL4
revealed a monomeric protein with the predicted molecular mass of 9957 Da. CXCL8 was expressed in Escherichia coli and purified
in-house. CCL1, CCL5, CCL11, CCL16, CXCL12, CXCL16, CX3CL1,
and murine XCL1 were bought from R & D (Minneapolis, MN), whereas
CCL25 and CXCL11 were bought from PeproTech (Rocky Hill, NJ). CCL20 was
kindly provided by Tim Wells (Serono, Geneva, Switzerland). CCL21 and
CCL22 were kindly provided by Thomas Schall (ChemoCentryx). CXCL13 was
kindly provided by Bernhard Moser (Thedor-Kocher Institute, Bern, Switzerland).
Stable Cell Lines--
CCR2b and CCR8 were transfected into the
murine pre-B cell line 300.19 by electroporation, and stable
transfectants were obtained after limiting dilution and chemical
selection with G418 and subsequently functional selection by testing
the clones for calcium response to CCL2 and CCL1, respectively. Kuldeep
Neote (Pfizer, Groton, CT) kindly provided 300.19 cells expressing
the CXCR3 receptor, and Bernhard Moser (Thedor-Kocher Institute) kindly
provided 300.19 cells expressing the CXCR5 receptor.
CCR10 and CXCR6 were transfected into the murine pre-B cell line L1.2
by electroporation, and stable transfectants were obtained after
limiting dilution and chemical selection with G418 and subsequently functional selection by testing the clones for calcium response to
CCL27 and CXCL16, respectively. The L1.2 cell lines expressing the
CCR2b, CCR3, and CCR7 receptors were established at ICOS (Seattle, WA).
The L12 cells stably expressing CCR4, CCR6, XCR1, and
CX3CR1 were a kind gift from Osamu Yoshie (Kinki
University, Osaka, Japan).
The CHO cells stably expressing CCR1, CCR2b, CCR5, CXCR1, CXCR2, and
CXCR4 were generously provided by Tim Wells (Serono). Gabriel Marquez
(Autonomous University, Madrid, Spain) kindly provided HEK293 stably
expressing the CCR9 receptor.
Binding--
Whole cell binding (2 × 105
cells/well) was performed at 4 °C for 3 h in 0.5 ml of 25 mM Hepes buffer containing 1 mM
CaCl2 and 5 mM MgCl2 at pH 7.2, supplemented with 0.5% bovine serum albumin on CHO cells stably
transfected with CCR2. The incubation was stopped by washing four times
with 0.5 ml of ice-cold binding buffer made 0.5 mM in NaCl.
Cell-associated radioactivity was determined after extraction of the
cells with 8 M urea in 3 M acetic acid
supplemented with 1% Nonidet P-40. Nonspecific binding, determined in
the presence of the relevant chemokine peptide (0.1 µM),
was subtracted. 125I-CCL2 (IM280) was obtained from
Amersham Biosciences.
Calcium Flux--
The cells stably transfected with various
chemokine receptors were loaded with Fura-2 acetoxy methyl
(Molecular Probes, Eugene, OR) in RPMI with 1% fetal calf serum for
20-30 min, aliquots were made of 1 × 106 cells, and
each aliquot was pelleted and resuspended in RPMI with 10 mM EGTA. Fluorescence was measured on a Jobin Yvon
FluoroMax-2 (Jobin Yvon Spex, Edison, NJ) as the ratio of emission at
490 nm when excited at 340 and 380 nm, respectively.
Chemotaxis--
Chemotaxis was measured using 24-transwell
polycarbonate 3-µm membranes (Corning Costar, Cambridge, MA).
Chemokines were diluted in 0.6 ml of chemotaxis buffer (RPMI medium
containing 0.5% bovine serum albumin) and added to the lower
chemotaxis chamber. 1 × 106 CCR2/L1.2 cells were
resuspended in 0.1 ml of chemotaxis buffer and added to the top chamber
insert. Chemotaxis plates were then incubated for 4 h at 37 °C
in a 5% CO2-humidified incubator. After the incubation the
cells from the bottom well were collected and counted by a
fluorescence-activated cell sorter (Becton Dickinson, Franklin Lakes, NJ).
Initially we tried to express the U83 gene in transfected COS-7
and CHO cells and purify the protein on an anion exchange column and
HPLC as described previously (17), but we were unable to recover the
protein. One possible explanation could be that the transcript was
spliced in uninfected cells (splicing is normally silenced under viral
replication), resulting in a protein truncated 8 amino acids after the
CC chemokine motif (27). Therefore two internal splice-sites were
removed with silent mutations. This construct was transfected into CHO
cells, but again no protein could be recovered. Using prediction
servers the precursor protein of the U83 gene product was predicted to
have one cleavage site for a signal peptide between residues 20 and 21, and the supposed secreted form of the viral chemokine was produced
synthetically. This predicted N terminus was identical to the one
reported from a group, who expressed a fusion construct of the U83 and
a IgG gene in mammalian cells and did amino acid sequence analysis of the purified protein (28). The synthetic vCCL4 protein was used for
receptor activation studies, receptor binding studies, and chemotaxis assays.
To screen for a possible interaction of vCCL4 with the known chemokine
receptors, vCCL4 was probed in calcium mobilization assays on a panel
of cell lines individually expressing the 18 known human chemokine
receptors. Initially, 1 µM of vCCL4 was used in these assays. vCCL4 was unable to elicit a calcium response through 17 of the 18 human chemokine receptors. However, in 300.19 cells stably transfected with CCR2, vCCL4 gave a robust calcium response similar in magnitude to the response elicited by CCL2, the
major endogenous CCR2 ligand. The same concentration of vCCL4 was for
example unable to induce a calcium response in CX3CR1 L12-transfected cells, indicating that the U83 gene product is indeed a
CC chemokine. In contrast, vCCL4 was not able to induce a calcium
response in 300.19 cells stably transfected with for example CXCR3 and
CXCR5 (Fig. 2), showing that the effect
was mediated through CCR2 and not an endogenous receptor in 300.19 cells.2 vCCL4 did not act as
an antagonist on any of the tested human chemokine receptors because
pretreatment of the cell lines with vCCL4 was unable to inhibit or
block the response to the relevant endogenous chemokine through any of
the human chemokine receptors tested as seen in (Fig. 2). However, in
the CCR2-transfected 300.19 cells a diminished response to CCL2 was
observed after pretreatment with 1 µM of vCCL4 (Fig. 2).
This inhibitory effect is due to specific desensitization (see
below).
INTRODUCTION
TOP
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
MATERIALS AND METHODS
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
REFERENCES
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Fig. 1.
Alignment of selected CCR2 ligands to
vCCL4. CCL2, CCL7, CCL8, CCL11, CCL13, CCL16, and vCCL4 were
aligned using the ClustalW 1.8. Identical amino acids are shown
white on black, whereas similar amino acids are
shown with white on gray. Asterisks
indicate Cys residues. The region in vCCL4 with the CC/CX3C
chemokine motif is shown magnified in a box.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
TOP
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
MATERIALS AND METHODS
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
REFERENCES
RESULTS
TOP
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
MATERIALS AND METHODS
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
REFERENCES
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Fig. 2.
Effect of synthetic vCCL4 on calcium
mobilization on a panel of cell lines stably transfected with humane
chemokine receptors. 10 6 M of vCCL4 or
vehicle were first added to the cells followed by a submaximal dose of
an appropriate endogenous human chemokine. The height of the response
with the endogenous ligand only, the height of the response with vCCL4
only, and the height of the endogenous ligand after the addition of
vCCL4 was measured. The upper panel shows the response of
vCCL4 compared with the response of endogenous ligand with S.E. as
indicated (n = 2). The lower panel
shows the inhibition with vCCL4 of the response of endogenous ligand
compared with the response with endogenous ligand only with S.E. as
indicated. The chemokine concentrations used were: CCR1,
10
8 M CCL5; CCR2, 10
9
M CCL2; CCR3, 10
8 M CCL7; CCR4,
10
8 M CCL22; CCR5, 10
8
M CCL5; CCR6, 10
8 M CCL20; CCR7,
10
9 M CCL21; CCR8, 10
8
M CCL1; CCR9, 10
8 M CCL25; CCR10,
10
8 M CCL27; CXCR1, 10
8
M CXCL8; CXCR2, 10
8 M CXCL8;
CXCR3, 10
9 M CXCL11; CXCR4, 10
8
M CXCL12; CXCR5, 10
8 M CXCL13;
CXCR6, 10
8 M CXCL16; XCR1, 10
7
M mXCL1; and CX3CR1, 10
8
M CX3CL1.
To characterize the affinity of vCCL4 and compare this affinity with
known endogenous human CCR2 ligands, we did binding studies on CHO
cells stably transfected with the CCR2 receptor using
125I-CCL2 (Fig. 3). vCCL4
displaced 125I-CCL2 from the CCR2 receptor with an affinity
of 79 nM. In contrast, the endogenous human CCR2 ligands
all belonging to the proteins in the previously designated monocyte
chemoattractant protein family of chemokines bound the receptor with
higher affinity. Thus, the IC50 values were 0.08 nM for CCL2, 3.1 nM for CCL7, 2.7 nM for CCL8, and 2.2 nM for CCL13. CCL11 was
found to have a comparable affinity of 72 nM, whereas the
affinity of CCL16 was higher (>100 nM; data not
shown).
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As shown in Fig. 4 1 µM of
vCCL4 induced a maximal calcium response through CCR2 in stably
transfected 300.19 cells. In these cells CCL2 was found to have an
EC50 of 0.7 nM, whereas the EC50 values were 2.2 nM for CCL7, 15.4 nM for
CCL8, 8.2 nM for CCL13, and 156 nM
for the HHV6-encoded vCCL4, values that correlated well with the
affinities found in binding experiments in the CCR2-transfected CHO
cells. As shown in Fig. 4, vCCL4 was able to cross-desensitize the
response of 1 nM of CCL2 and vice versa, indicating that
the effect of vCCL4 is indeed mediated through the common CCR2
receptor.
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The chemotactic activity of vCCL4 was compared with that of the
endogenous human chemokines from the monocyte chemoattractant protein
family in the murine pre-B lymphocyte cell line L1.2 stably transfected
with the human CCR2 receptor (Fig. 5).
The endogenous chemokines demonstrated different patterns with respect
to both efficacy and potency. Thus, CCL2 and to a certain degree also CCL7 both showed high potency and high efficacy, whereas CCL13 had a
poor potency and a rather poor efficacy, and CCL8, although it is of
rather high potency, showed a very limited efficacy. All of the
endogenous chemokines demonstrated the classical bell-shaped dose-response curve in the chemotactic experiments (Fig. 5).
Surprisingly the efficacy of vCCL4 was very high, and in fact it is
unclear whether the maximal response was even reached with the
available amount of the virally encoded protein (Fig. 5). The
chemotactic response to vCCL4 was at least as high as that of CCL2 and
CCL7 and much higher than that of CCL13 and CCL8.
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DISCUSSION |
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In the present study we find that the chemokine-like protein product of the U83 gene from HHV6B vCCL4 acts as a highly efficacious but relatively low potency agonist for the human CCR2 receptor. Thus, the virally encoded chemokine could serve a role initially in the infectious life cycle of the virus by attracting, for example, macrophages and monocytes, which express the CCR2 receptor, to infect and establish latency in them. During reactivation of latent virus in monocyte-derived microglia in the central nervous system, vCCL4 could be involved in the pathogenesis of MS, which at least in experimental animals is known to be totally dependent on the presence of a functional CCR2 receptor (29, 30).
vCCL4 Protein-- The vCCL4 protein has very limited homology with the known human chemokines; however, it is clearly a chemokine protein because it has the required disulfide pattern (Fig. 1). The notion that vCCL4 has a very long N-terminal extension of 27 amino acid residues is particularly interesting because often important structural epitopes related to receptor activation are located in the N-terminal extension of chemokines. Thus, the N-terminal of vCCL4 lacks the glutamine in the first position that is conserved among all human endogenous CCR2 ligands and when missing has been found to reduce the biological activity of for example CCL2 100-1000-fold (31, 32). Moreover, a potential glycosaminoglycan (GAG)-binding epitope, BBXB (B being a basic residue) (33), is found right before the third Cys residue, which very likely forms a disulfide bridge back to the first Cys of the protein. This location would place the GAG-binding epitope in a loop region conceivably optimally exposed for interaction with GAGs in the tissue. It is in fact very likely that vCCL4 is a good GAG-binding chemokine because it has an additional potential basic pair located in the opposite end of the canonical three-dimensional structure of the molecule.
Endogenous CCR2 Ligands-- Most studies with CCR2 ligands have been done on primary cells especially monocytes. So when comparing data it is important to bear in mind that primary cells express multiple chemokine receptors and that the CCR2 ligands CCL7, CCL8, and CCL13 can activate CCR1, CCR3, and CCR5 in addition to CCR2. Other groups using CCR2-transfected cells have found binding affinities of the four members of the monocyte chemoattractant protein family in the nanomolar range, which are in agreement with our results (34, 35) except that we found CCL2 to have an affinity in the subnanomolar range, which probably is due to cell line and assay differences. The finding that CCL8 and CCL13 were unable displace all bound 125I-CCL2 from CCR2 are known from other binding studies on monocytes and CCR2-transfected cell lines (35-38), where one group even reported increasing binding of 125I-CCL2 with increasing concentrations of CCL8 (36), a phenomenon known from other chemokines in binding assays and that probably is due to fact that certain chemokines tend to oligomerize (39). The potencies in chemotaxis for CCL2, CCL7, and CCL13 were in agreement with another study using a CCR2-transfected 300.19 murine pre-B cell line (38).
vCCL4 and the HHV6 Lifecycle-- Why does HHV6 specifically target the CCR2 receptor? In this connection it should be noted that a herpesvirus, in addition to having the capacity to generate a productive infection, should be able to establish latency in certain cell types, where it can hide from the immune system waiting for the moment, when it will be reactivated. HHV6 can replicate in several cell types, for example T cells and macrophages/monocytes (2), and HHV6 can be recovered from macrophages from normal adult human beings, indicating that HHV6 establishes latency in this cell type (40). CCR2 is known to be expressed on macrophages and lymphocytes (4). Thus, it could be speculated that HHV6 has optimized vCCL4 to attract T cells and macrophages/monocytes, to infect them, and to establish latency at least in the monocyte/macrophage lineage. It is interesting that human immunodeficiency virus seems to have chosen the same strategy to exploit the chemokine system as the human immunodeficiency virus-encoded Tat protein when it acts as a CCR2 agonist capable of attracting monocytes and thereby favor rapid spread of infection (41).
vCCL4 as a CCR2 Agonist-- vCCL4 appears to be a highly efficacious but relatively low potency agonist for CCR2. Obviously, the potency of a ligand should be compared with the actual available concentrations of the ligand, which for vCCL4 at present is unknown but could be considerable locally around a HHV6-infected cell because of a potential highly efficient expression and the potential efficient GAG binding, which is discussed above. In a previous study Zou and co-workers (28) found that a protein consisting of the U83 chemokine domain fused to an IgG molecule was biologically active because this molecule could induce chemotaxis and calcium mobilization in the monocytic THP-1 cell line. The THP-1 cells are known to express at least the CCR1, CCR2, CCR5, and CX3CR1 chemokine receptors, and no attempt was done in that study to identify the specific target receptor for the U83 gene product (42, 43). The present study indicates that the fusion protein conceivably acted through CCR2 receptors on the THP-1 cells.
Despite its high efficacy, it is still puzzling that the HHV6-encoded chemokine has 25-1000-fold less affinity compared with the endogenous human ligands. In general it is not uncommon that viral homologues of cytokines have less affinity than their endogenous mammalian counterparts. This is the case for example for the HHV8-encoded viral chemokine vMIP-III, which has been characterized to be a low affinity CCR4 agonist (19). Also the EBV-encoded IL-10 homologue has a 1000-fold less affinity to the human IL-10 receptor than endogenous IL-10 (44), and the HHV8-encoded IL-6 homologue has a 10-fold less affinity to the human IL-6 receptor than endogenous IL-6 (45). Similarly, poxvirus homologues of the epidermal growth factor (EGF) have 10-1000-fold lower affinity to the EGF receptor than endogenous EGF (46). Importantly, in the latter study the viral EGF homologues were in respect of mitogenic activity even more potent than their mammalian counterparts because of attenuation of receptor degradation leading to a sustained signal transduction. These results underline the point that viral homologues of human gene products can be significantly different from their human counterparts not just quantitatively but also qualitatively.
vCCL4 and Possible HHV6-associated Diseases--
MS is regarded as
an autoimmune disease with a likely environmental trigger (47). Many
viral candidates have been suggested during the years as being involved
in MS. In recent years HHV6 has attracted much attention as the virus
is neurotropic and in a number of studies and reports has been linked
to MS. For example, strong IgM responses to HHV6 have been detected in
MS patients (48, 49), HHV6 has been detected in oligodendrocytes around MS plaques (49, 50), and clinical cases have been reported where active
HHV6 infection was closely associated with demyelinative disease
(51-53). Importantly, experiments have shown that mice deleted for
CCR2, in contrast to mice deleted for CCR5, are resistant to
experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (29, 30, 54). Thus, it could
be speculated that when HHV6 residing latently in the central nervous
system is reactivated, vCCL4 is produced, and CCR2 expressing
lymphocytes and macrophages are recruited. In this way HHV6 could be
one factor among others in the generation of the autoimmune response
seen in MS. The identification of vCCL4 in active plaques with
immunohistochemistry and the development of vCCL4 transgenic mice could
help to clarify these questions.
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENT |
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We thank Professor Ulrik Gether for use of the spectrofluorometer.
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FOOTNOTES |
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* This work was supported by the Danish Foundation for Multiple Sclerosis (to H. R. L. and T. W. S.) and by grants from the Danish Medical Research Council (to T. W. S.).The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
This paper is dedicated to Ian Clark-Lewis, who sadly and suddenly
passed away on December 30, 2002.
¶ To whom correspondence should be addressed: Lab. for Molecular Pharmacology, Panum Institute 18/6, Blegdamsvej 3, DK-2200 Copenhagen N, Denmark. Tel.: 45-3532-7604; Fax: 45-3532-7610; E-mail: hrl@molpharm.dk.
Published, JBC Papers in Press, January 27, 2003, DOI 10.1074/jbc.M211329200
2 For example 300.19 cells are known to express an endogenous CXCR4 receptor.
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ABBREVIATIONS |
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The abbreviations used are: HHV6, human herpesvirus 6; CHO, Chinese hamster ovary; MIP, macrophage inflammatory protein; MS, multiple sclerosis; HPLC, high pressure liquid chromatography; GAG, glycosaminoglycan; IL, interleukin; EGF, epidermal growth factor.
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