Lawrence T. Feldman
University of California, Los Angeles
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Featured researches published by Lawrence T. Feldman.
Neuron | 1990
Anthony T. Dobson; Todd P. Margolis; Farhad Sedarati; Jack G. Stevens; Lawrence T. Feldman
A genetically engineered herpes simplex virus variant was constructed for use as a stable gene vector for neurons. To inhibit replication, the agent possessed a deletion in the immediate early gene ICP4, and to minimize reactivation from the latent state, the gene encoding the latency-associated transcript was deleted. The E. coli beta-galactosidase gene under the control of the Maloney murine leukemia virus long terminal repeat promoter was inserted into the ICP4 region. When introduced into the peripheral nervous system, this virus established latent infections and stably expressed beta-galactosidase in primary sensory neurons. Expression of beta-galactosidase over a more limited time period was observed when the latent infection was established in motor neurons of the hypoglossal nucleus. Agents of this general design have considerable potential for use as gene vectors for studies of neuronal function and correction of genetic defects affecting neurons.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2002
Lawrence T. Feldman; Aaron R. Ellison; Cynthia C. Voytek; Li Yang; Philip R. Krause; Todd P. Margolis
Infection of the mouse trigeminal ganglia (TG) is the most commonly used model for the study of herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) latency. Its popularity is caused, at least in part, by the perception that latent infection can be studied in this system in the absence of spontaneous viral reactivation. However, this perception has never been rigorously tested. To carefully study this issue, the eyes of Swiss–Webster mice were inoculated with HSV-1 (KOS), and 37–47 days later the TG were dissected, serial-sectioned, and probed for HSV-1 ICP4, thymidine kinase, glycoprotein C, and latency-associated transcript RNA by in situ hybridization. Serial sections of additional latently infected TG were probed with HSV-1-specific polyclonal antisera. Analysis of thousands of probed sections revealed abundant expression of viral transcripts, viral protein, and viral DNA replication in about 1 neuron per 10 TG tested. These same neurons were surrounded by a focal white cell infiltrate, indicating the presence of an antigenic stimulus. We conclude that productive cycle viral genes are abundantly expressed in rare neurons of latently infected murine TG and that these events are promptly recognized by an active local immune response. In the absence of detectable infectious virus in these ganglia, we propose the term “spontaneous molecular reactivation” to describe this ongoing process.
Virology | 1992
Todd P. Margolis; Farhad Sedarati; Anthony T. Dobson; Lawrence T. Feldman; Jack G. Stevens
Pathways of viral gene expression were investigated during the acute phase of sensory ganglionic infection with HSV-1. To facilitate these studies we constructed KOS/62-3, an HSV-1 vector in which the Escherichia coli lac-Z gene was inserted behind both copies of the promoter for the viral latency-associated transcripts. Following footpad inoculation of mice with the virus, acutely infected dorsal root ganglion (DRG) neurons were assayed by dual immunofluorescence for the presence of beta-galactosidase and HSV viral antigens. Most infected neurons stained for either beta-galactosidase or viral antigens. Less than 0.2% of neurons staining for viral antigens also expressed beta-galactosidase, and less than 10% of neurons expressing beta-galactosidase also stained for viral antigen. As a consequence of these findings, we propose that there are essentially two populations of HSV-infected neurons during the acute phase of ganglionic infection. In one population of neurons there is abundant viral protein synthesis but minimal transcription of latency-associated transcripts, whereas in a second population of neurons viral gene expression is severely restricted except for the synthesis of latency-associated transcripts. Since DRG neurons are a heterogeneous population of cells, we further sought to determine whether either pathway of gene expression was more likely to occur in a particular neuronal phenotype. To accomplish this, antibodies were used to characterize the DRG neuronal phenotypes acutely infected with the virus. The results indicated that the pathway of neuronal infection characterized by transcription of abundant latency-associated transcripts and minimal viral protein synthesis was much more likely to occur in DRG neurons expressing the cellular antigen SSEA-3. These data indicate that the neuron plays a major role in regulating the outcome of infection with HSV. Finally, we sought to determine whether DNA replication occurs in the course of establishment of a latent infection. We found that the DNA content of neurons latently infected with KOS(M) strain HSV was not affected by treatment with nucleotide analogues during the acute phase of ganglionic infection, suggesting that viral DNA replication does not occur during the establishment of latent infection.
Current Opinion in Microbiology | 1998
Massoud Daheshia; Lawrence T. Feldman; Barry T. Rouse
Following infection, herpes simplex virus establishes latency in the nervous system and recurrences of lytic replication occur periodically. Molecular events which may determine how virus enters latency, how it is maintained and what occurs during reactivation have been investigated. The role of the immune response in limiting infection of the nervous system, influencing the latent state and removing virus from peripheral sites following reactivation has also been studied.
Molecular Brain Research | 1995
David C. Bloom; Nigel T. Maidment; Aiko Tan; Vivian B. Dissette; Lawrence T. Feldman; Jack G. Stevens
A problem in utilizing herpes simplex virus (HSV) as a vector for expression of foreign genes in CNS neurons has been the inability to facilitate long-term expression of the engineered genes. Previously, we showed that the murine moloney leukemia virus LTR would drive beta-galactosidase (beta-gal) transcription for extended periods from the latent viral genome in sensory, but not motor neurons. In this communication we further evaluate the utility of the LTR promoter for use in long-term expression vectors. Following stereotactic injection of 8117/43 (an ICP4 minus, non-replicating virus with the LTR driving the beta-gal gene, or KD6 (an ICP4 minus non-replicating virus not expressing beta-gal) into the hippocampus of rats, polymerase chain reaction (PCR) analysis of viral DNA after 2 months indicated that latent infections were established. Assaying by both x-gal staining and reverse transcriptase PCR we demonstrate that (1) beta-gal can be detected for at least 6 months in hippocampal neurons, and (2) although the number of beta-gal transcripts in these cells drops considerably by 2 weeks, they can be detected during the period studied. These studies indicate that the LTR promoter is active and affords long-term expression in the CNS, albeit at comparatively low levels compared to those observed at acute times.
Journal of Virology | 2000
Herve Berthomme; James R. Lokensgard; Li Yang; Todd P. Margolis; Lawrence T. Feldman
ABSTRACT Herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) latent infection in vivo is characterized by the constitutive expression of the latency-associated transcripts (LAT), which originate from the LAT promoter (LAP). In an attempt to determine the functional parts of LAP, we previously demonstrated that viruses harboring a DNA fragment 3′ of the LAT promoter itself were able to maintain detectable promoter expression throughout latency whereas viruses not containing this element could not (J. R. Lokensgard, H. Berthomme, and L. T. Feldman, J. Virol. 71:6714–6719, 1997). This element was therefore called a long-term expression element (LTE). To further study the role of the LTE, we constructed plasmids containing a DNA fragment encompassing the LTE inserted into a synthetic intron between the reporterlacZ gene and either the LAT or the HSV-1 thymidine kinase promoter. Transient-expression experiments with both neuronal and nonneuronal cell lines showed that the LTE locus has an enhancer activity that does not activate the cytomegalovirus enhancer but does activate the promoters such as the LAT promoter and the thymidine kinase promoter. The enhancement of these two promoters occurs in both neuronal and nonneuronal cell lines. Recombinant viruses containing enhancer constructs were constructed, and these demonstrated that the enhancer functioned when present in the context of the viral DNA, both for in vitro infections of cells in culture and for in vivo infections of neurons in mouse dorsal root ganglia. In the infections of mouse dorsal root ganglia, there was a very high level of promoter activity in neurons infected with viruses bearing the LAT promoter-enhancer, but this decreased after the first 2 or 3 weeks. By 18 days postinfection, neurons harboring latent virus without the enhancer showed no β-galactosidase (β-gal) staining whereas those harboring latent virus containing the enhancer continued to show β-gal staining for long periods, extending to at least 6 months postinfection, the longest time examined.
Experimental Neurology | 1996
Nigel T. Maidment; Aiko M. Tan; David C. Bloom; Benito Anton; Lawrence T. Feldman; Jack G. Stevens
We recently demonstrated the efficacy of a nonreplicating herpes simplex type 1 virus construct, employing the Moloney murine leukemia virus long terminal repeat promoter, in providing long-term expression of the lacZ gene in rat hippocampal neurons. We now report the utility of this construct in expressing the reporter gene in neurons of the basal forebrain and substantia nigra and examine the spread of the virus to other brain regions. Dorsal and ventrolateral hippocampal formation injection of the virus resulted in numerous beta-gal-expressing cells in the stratum pyramidale, stratum oriens, stratum lacunosum-moleculare, and stratum granulosum. Scattered cells of the medial septum/diagonal band were positively stained following direct injection into this region. More intense staining of the basal forebrain was observed following hippocampal injection as a result of retrograde transport of the virus as shown by PCR analysis of viral DNA. Hippocampal injection also resulted in positive cell staining in several other afferent projection nuclei, namely, the supramammillary bodies, dorsal and caudal linear raphe, and perirhinal/entorhinal cortex. Very few cells were labeled around injection sites in the striatum or substantia nigra. However, substantia nigra zona compacta cells were blue following striatal injection, as were pallidal neurons following nigral injection. These data demonstrate the feasibility of using this virus construct to express foreign genes such as neurotrophic factors in basal forebrain and substantia nigra neurons, taking advantage of retrograde transport of the virus to preserve local anatomy.
Journal of NeuroVirology | 1995
Stuart D. Keir; William J. Mitchell; Lawrence T. Feldman; John R. Martin
One problem in devising strategies of gene transfer to the nervous system is targeting specific neuronal populations. To evaluate the potential for using herpes simplex virus (HSV) as a vector for gene transfer to spinal cord motor neurons, the HSV-1 mutant LAT-LTR in which the E. coli beta-galactosidase gene is expressed under control of the HSV LAT core promoter (LAT) and the Moloney murine leukemia virus long terminal repeat (LTR) was inoculated unilaterally into the gastrocnemius muscle. Infectious virus was isolated from the spinal cord on days 3-7 post inoculation (PI). Immunocytochemical labeling of HSV antigen was detected in ipsilateral ventral horn neurons in the spinal cord at day 3 PI and had spread to contiguous spinal cord regions by day 6 PI. No viral antigen was detected at 14 or 28 DPI. beta-galactosidase expression (driven by the LAT-LTR promoter) was detected in neurons of the ventral horn on days 3, 6, 14, and 28 PI. Histological analysis showed mild lesions in the ventral horn on day 3 PI which progressed through days 6, 14 and 28 PI. This study demonstrates the feasibility of gene delivery into spinal motor neurons after injection of an HSV vector at a peripheral muscular site. This approach should prove useful in neurobiological investigations and it suggests a possible application to development of gene therapy for heritable diseases affecting motor neurons.
Journal of NeuroVirology | 2007
Mohamed A. Hamza; Dennis Higgins; Lawrence T. Feldman; William T. Ruyechan
Herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) primarily infects mucoepithelial tissues of the eye, the orofacial region, and to a lesser extent the genitalia. The virus is retrogradely transported through the axons of sensory and sympathetic neurons to their cell bodies to establishe a life-long latent infection. Throughout this latency period, the viral genome is transcriptionally silent except for a single region encoding the latency-associated transcript (LAT). The function of LAT is still largely unknown. To understand how HSV-1 latency might affect neurons, the authors transfected primary cultures of sympathetic neurons and trigeminal sensory neurons obtained from rat embryos with LAT-expressing plasmids. LAT increased the survival of both sympathetic and trigeminal neurons after induction of cell death by nerve growth factor (NGF) deprivation. Because HSV-1 is transported through axons both after initial infection and during reactivation, the authors considered the possibility that LAT may affect axonal growth. They found that LAT expression increased axonal regeneration by twofold in both types of neurons. Inhibition of the mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathway reverses stimulation of both neuronal survival and axonal regeneration, which indicates that these effects are mediated through the MAPK pathway. These data provide evidence that HSV-1 LAT promotes survival of sympathetic as well as trigeminal neurons. The authors show for the first time that LAT stimulates axonal regeneration in both sympathetic and trigeminal neurons.
Journal of Virology | 2001
Herve Berthomme; Joëlle Thomas; Pascale Texier; Alberto L. Epstein; Lawrence T. Feldman
ABSTRACT During herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) latent infection in vivo, the latency-associated promoter (LAP) is the only promoter to remain highly active long term. In a previous attempt to characterize LAP activity in vitro and in a mouse model, we showed that a 1.5-kb fragment called the long-term expression element (LTE), located immediately downstream from the transcriptional start site of LAP, was able to (i) increase gene expression in an orientation-independent manner, regardless of the cell type or the promoter used in vitro (enhancer activity) and (ii) keep LAP active during latency in vivo (long-term expression activity) (H. Berthomme, J. Lokensgard, L. Yang, T. Margolis, and L. T. Feldman, J. Virol. 74:3613–3622, 2000). To determine if these two functions could be separated genetically, we conducted a mutational analysis on the LTE and analyzed the effect on the LAP-LTE properties in both transient expression in cell culture and mouse dorsal root ganglia lytic and latent infection. In this report, we show that the first half of the LTE sequence, corresponding to the region previously described as LAP2 or exon1, encodes the enhancer function. This same region is also required to keep the LAP active during latency. These results exclude the intron region as containing any significant enhancer activity or any ability to keep the LAP active during latency. The results also show that these two functions have not been separated, leaving open the possibility that there is no long-term expression function per se but that the enhancer itself may function to keep the LAP active during latency by raising the level of expression to a detectable one. Further mutational analysis will be required to determine if these two potential functions continue to cosegregate.