Laura K. Hanson
Eastern Virginia Medical School
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Featured researches published by Laura K. Hanson.
Journal of Virology | 2006
Stephanie J. Child; Laura K. Hanson; Crystal E. Brown; Deanna M. Janzen; Adam P. Geballe
ABSTRACT In response to viral infection, cells activate a variety of antiviral responses, including several that are triggered by double-stranded (ds) RNA. Among these are the protein kinase R and oligoadenylate synthetase/RNase L pathways, both of which result in the shutoff of protein synthesis. Many viruses, including human cytomegalovirus, encode dsRNA-binding proteins that prevent the activation of these pathways and thereby enable continued protein synthesis and viral replication. We have extended these analyses to another member of the β subfamily of herpesviruses, murine cytomegalovirus (MCMV), and now report that products of the m142 and m143 genes together bind dsRNA. Coimmunoprecipitation experiments demonstrate that these two proteins interact in infected cells, consistent with their previously reported colocalization. Jointly, but not individually, the proteins rescue replication of a vaccinia virus mutant with a deletion of the dsRNA-binding protein gene E3L (VVΔE3L). Like the human cytomegalovirus dsRNA-binding protein genes TRS1 and IRS1, m142 and m143 are members of the US22 gene family. We also found that two other members of the MCMV US22 family, M23 and M24, encode dsRNA-binding proteins, but they do not rescue VVΔE3L replication. These results reveal that MCMV, like many other viruses, encodes dsRNA-binding proteins, at least two of which can inhibit dsRNA-activated antiviral pathways. However, unlike other well-studied examples, the MCMV proteins appear to act in a heterodimeric complex.
Journal of Virology | 2001
Laura K. Hanson; Jacquelyn S. Slater; Zaruhi Karabekian; Gina M Ciocco-Schmitt; Ann E. Campbell
ABSTRACT Efficient replication of murine cytomegalovirus (MCMV) in macrophages is a prerequisite for optimal growth and spread of the virus in its natural host. Simultaneous deletion of US22 gene family members M139, M140, and M141 results in impaired replication of MCMV in macrophages and mice. In this study, we characterized the proteins derived from these three genes and examined the impact of individual gene deletions on viral pathogenesis. The M139, M140, and M141 gene products were identified as early proteins that localize to both the nucleus and cytoplasm in infected cells. Gene M139 encodes two proteins, of 72 and 61 kDa, while M140 and M141 each encode a single protein of 56 (pM140) and 52 (pM141) kDa, respectively. No role for the M139 proteins in MCMV replication in macrophages or mice was determined in these studies. In contrast, deletion of either M140 or M141 resulted in impaired MCMV replication in macrophages and spleen tissue. Replication of the M140 deletion mutant was significantly more impaired than that of the virus lacking M141. Further analyses revealed that the absence of the pM140 adversely affected pM141 levels by rendering the latter protein unstable. Since the replication defect due to deletion of M140 was more profound than could be explained by the reduced half-life of pM141, pM140 must exert an additional, independent function in mediating efficient replication of MCMV in macrophages and spleen tissue. These data indicate that the US22 genes M140 and M141 function both cooperatively and independently to regulate MCMV replication in a cell type-specific manner and, thus, to influence viral pathogenesis.
Journal of Virology | 2005
Zaruhi Karabekian; Laura K. Hanson; Jacquelyn S. Slater; Neel K. Krishna; Lisa L. Bolin; Julie A. Kerry; Ann E. Campbell
ABSTRACT The murine cytomegalovirus (MCMV) proteins encoded by US22 genes M139, M140, and M141 function, at least in part, to regulate replication of this virus in macrophages. Mutant MCMV having one or more of these genes deleted replicates poorly in macrophages in culture and in the macrophage-dense environment of the spleen. In this report, we demonstrate the existence of stable complexes formed by the products of all three of these US22 genes, as well as a complex composed of the products of M140 and M141. These complexes form in the absence of other viral proteins; however, the pM140/pM141 complex serves as a requisite binding partner for the M139 gene products. Products from all three genes colocalize to a perinuclear region of the cell juxtaposed to or within the cis-Golgi region but excluded from the trans-Golgi region. Interestingly, expression of pM141 redirects pM140 from its predominantly nuclear residence to the perinuclear, cytoplasmic locale where these US22 proteins apparently exist in complex. Thus, complexing of these nonessential, early MCMV proteins likely confers a function(s) independent of each individual protein and important for optimal replication of MCMV in its natural host.
Journal of Virology | 2010
Lisa L. Bolin; Laura K. Hanson; Jacquelyn S. Slater; Julie A. Kerry; Ann E. Campbell
ABSTRACT Stable assembly of murine cytomegalovirus (MCMV) virions in differentiated macrophages is dependent upon the expression of US22 family gene M140. The M140 protein (pM140) exists in complex with products of neighboring US22 genes. Here we report that pM140 protects its binding partner, pM141, from ubiquitin-independent proteasomal degradation. Protection is conferred by a stabilization domain mapping to amino acids 306 to 380 within pM140, and this domain is functionally independent from the region that confers binding of pM140 to pM141. The M140 protein thus contains multiple domains that collectively confer a structure necessary to function in virion assembly in macrophages.
Journal of Virology | 1995
Thomas R. Jones; Laura K. Hanson; Lei Sun; Jacquelyn S. Slater; Richard M. Stenberg; Andann E. Campbell
Journal of Virology | 1999
Laura K. Hanson; Jacquelyn S. Slater; Zaruhi Karabekian; Herbert W. Virgin; Christine A. Biron; Melanie C. Ruzek; Nico van Rooijen; Richard P. Ciavarra; Richard M. Stenberg; Ann E. Campbell
Virology | 1999
Laura K. Hanson; Bridget L. Dalton; Zaruhi Karabekian; Helen E. Farrell; William D. Rawlinson; Richard M. Stenberg; Ann E. Campbell
Virology | 2005
Laura K. Hanson; Bridget L. Dalton; Laura F. Cageao; Rachel E. Brock; Jacquelyn S. Slater; Julie A. Kerry; Ann E. Campbell
Archive | 2014
Carla Madrid; Lisa L. Bolin; Laura K. Hanson
Archive | 2009
Laura K. Hanson; Jacquelyn S. Slater; Victoria J. Cavanaugh; William W. Newcomb; Lisa; Lisa L. Bolin; Christine N. Nelson; Lisa D. Fetters; Qiyi Tang; Jay C. Brown; Gerd G. Maul; Ann E. Campbell