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Dive into the research topics where Mark S. Parcells is active.

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Featured researches published by Mark S. Parcells.


Journal of Virology | 2001

Marek's Disease Virus (MDV) Encodes an Interleukin-8 Homolog (vIL-8): Characterization of the vIL-8 Protein and a vIL-8 Deletion Mutant MDV

Mark S. Parcells; Su Fang Lin; Robert L. Dienglewicz; Vladimir Majerciak; Dan Robinson; Hua Chien Chen; Zining Wu; George R. Dubyak; Peter Brunovskis; Henry D. Hunt; Lucy F. Lee; Hsing Jien Kung

ABSTRACT Chemokines induce chemotaxis, cell migration, and inflammatory responses. We report the identification of an interleukin-8 (IL-8) homolog, termed vIL-8, encoded within the genome of Mareks disease virus (MDV). The 134-amino-acid vIL-8 shares closest homology to mammalian and avian IL-8, molecules representing the prototype CXC chemokine. The gene for vIL-8 consists of three exons which map to theBamHI-L fragment within the repeats flanking the unique long region of the MDV genome. A 0.7-kb transcript encoding vIL-8 was detected in an n-butyrate-treated, MDV-transformed T-lymphoblastoid cell line, MSB-1. This induction is essentially abolished by cycloheximide and herpesvirus DNA polymerase inhibitor phosphonoacetate, indicating that vIL-8 is expressed with true late (γ2) kinetics. Baculovirus-expressed vIL-8 was found to be secreted into the medium and shown to be functional as a chemoattractant for chicken peripheral blood mononuclear cells but not for heterophils. To characterize the function of vIL-8 with respect to MDV infection in vivo, a recombinant MDV was constructed with a deletion of all three exons and a soluble-modified green fluorescent protein (smGFP) expression cassette inserted at the site of deletion. In two in vivo experiments, the vIL-8 deletion mutant (RB1BvIL-8ΔsmGFP) showed a decreased level of lytic infection in comparison to its parent virus, an equal-passage-level parent virus, and to another recombinant MDV containing the insertion of a GFP expression cassette at the nonessential US2 gene. RB1BvIL-8ΔsmGFP retained oncogenicity, albeit at a greatly reduced level. Nonetheless, we have been able to establish a lymphoblastoid cell line from an RB1BvIL-8ΔsmGFP-induced ovarian lymphoma (MDCC-UA20) and verify the presence of a latent MDV genome lacking vIL-8. Taken together, these data describe the identification and characterization of a chemokine homolog encoded within the MDV genome that is dispensable for transformation but may affect the level of MDV in vivo lytic infection.


Journal of Virology | 2008

Sequence Conservation and Differential Expression of Marek's Disease Virus MicroRNAs

Robin W. Morgan; Amy S. Anderson; Erin L. Bernberg; Sachin Kamboj; Emily Huang; Grace Lagasse; Grace Isaacs; Mark S. Parcells; Blake C. Meyers; Pamela J. Green; Joan Burnside

ABSTRACT Mareks disease virus (MDV), a herpesvirus that causes a lymphoproliferative disorder in chickens, encodes a number of microRNAs derived primarily from two locations in the MDV genome. One cluster of microRNA genes flanks the meq oncogene, and a second cluster is found within the latency-associated transcript (LAT) region. The sequences of MDV microRNAs from a collection of field and reference strains with various levels of virulence were compared and found to be highly conserved. However, microRNAs from the meq cluster were detected at higher levels in lymphomas caused by a form of the virus designated very virulent plus (vv+; strain 615K, also known as T. King) than in those caused by a less virulent (very virulent [vv]) form (RB1B). For example, levels of mdv1-miR-M4, which shares a seed sequence with miR-155, a microRNA implicated in B-cell lymphoma, were threefold higher and levels of mdv1-miR-M2*/3p were more than sixfold higher in vv+ MDV-induced tumors than in vv MDV-induced tumors. In contrast, levels of the microRNAs from the LAT cluster were equivalent in tumors produced by vv and vv+ strains. Additionally, mdv1-miR-M4 is the MDV microRNA most highly expressed in tumors, where it accounts for 72% of all MDV microRNAs, as determined by deep sequencing. These data suggest that the meq cluster microRNAs play an important role in the pathogenicity of MDV.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2006

A virus-encoded telomerase RNA promotes malignant T cell lymphomagenesis

Sascha Trapp; Mark S. Parcells; Jeremy P. Kamil; Daniel Schumacher; B. Karsten Tischer; Pankaj M. Kumar; Venugopal Nair; Nikolaus Osterrieder

Telomerase is a ribonucleoprotein complex consisting of two essential core components: a reverse transcriptase and an RNA subunit (telomerase RNA [TR]). Dysregulation of telomerase has been associated with cell immortalization and oncogenesis. Mareks disease herpesvirus (MDV) induces a malignant T cell lymphoma in chickens and harbors in its genome two identical copies of a viral TR (vTR) with 88% sequence identity to chicken TR. MDV mutants lacking both copies of vTR were significantly impaired in their ability to induce T cell lymphomas, although lytic replication in vivo was unaffected. Tumor incidences were reduced by >60% in chickens infected with vTR − viruses compared with animals inoculated with MDV harboring at least one intact copy of vTR. Lymphomas in animals infected with the vTR − viruses were also significantly smaller in size and less disseminated. Constitutive expression of vTR in the chicken fibroblast cell line DF-1 resulted in a phenotype consistent with transformation as indicated by morphological alteration, enhanced anchorage-independent cell growth, cell growth beyond saturation density, and increased expression levels of integrin αv. We concluded that vTR plays a critical role in MDV-induced T cell lymphomagenesis. Furthermore, our results provide the first description of tumor-promoting effects of TR in a natural virus–host infection model.


Journal of Virology | 2003

Characterization of the Chromosomal Binding Sites and Dimerization Partners of the Viral Oncoprotein Meq in Marek's Disease Virus-Transformed T Cells

Alon M. Levy; Yoshihiro Izumiya; Peter Brunovskis; Liang Xia; Mark S. Parcells; Sanjay M. Reddy; Lucy F. Lee; Hong Wu Chen; Hsing Jien Kung

ABSTRACT Mareks disease virus (MDV) is an acute transforming alphaherpesvirus that causes T-cell lymphomas in chickens. We previously reported the identification of a putative oncogene, meq, that is encoded only by the oncogenic serotype of MDV. The gene product, Meq, is a latent protein that is consistently expressed in MDV-transformed lymphoblastoid cells and tumor cells. Meq has a bZIP (basic leucine zipper) structure resembling the family of Jun/Fos. The mechanism whereby Meq transforms T cells remains poorly understood. In this study, we explored the properties of Meq as a transcriptional factor. We analyzed Meqs dimerization partners and its target genes in MSB-1, an MDV-transformed T-cell line. By using in vitro assays, we first demonstrated Meqs potential to dimerize with a variety of bZIP proteins. We then identified c-Jun as the primary dimerization partner of Meq. Both are found to be colocalized in the nucleus and corecruited to promoters with AP-1 sequences. By using chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP), we scanned the entire MDV genome for Meq binding sites and found three regions that were enriched with Meq binding: the MDV lytic replication origin, the promoter for Meq, and the promoter for ICP4. Transactivation assays using the above promoters showed that Meq/Meq homodimers exhibited repression activity, whereas Meq/Jun heterodimers showed activation. Finally, we were able to show by ChIP that Meq is recruited to the interleukin-2 promoter in a region encompassing an AP-1 site. Thus, in addition to providing general knowledge about the transcriptional properties of Meq, our studies revealed for the first time the ability of Meq to interact with the latent MDV and host genomes. Our data suggest, therefore, a role for Meq in viral genome regulation during latency, in addition to its putative causal role in T-cell transformation.


Veterinary Immunology and Immunopathology | 2003

Characterization of a spontaneously transformed chicken mononuclear cell line

N. C. Rath; Mark S. Parcells; H. Xie; E. Santin

We describe the characterization of a spontaneously transformed chicken monocytic cell line that developed as a single colony of cells in a heterophil culture that was inadvertently left in the incubator over a period of 25 days. These cells, hitherto named HTC, grow efficiently at both 37 or 41 degrees C in culture medium containing either 5% FBS or 2% chicken serum. The HTC cells are acid phosphatase positive, show expressions of both class I and class II major histocompatibility complex (MHC), CD44, K1, and K55 cell surface antigens, and engulf latex beads, produce nitrite and interleukin-6 on stimulation with bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS). Treatment with phorbol myristate acetate (PMA) induces respiratory burst in HTC cells and the secretion of matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) into culture medium. Using gene-specific primers and reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR), the presence of mRNA trancripts for interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma), interleukin-1 (IL-1), interleukin-6 (IL-6), nitric oxide synthase (NOS), matrix metalloproteinase-2 (MMP-2), and transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta) were detected. Lipopolysaccharide (LPS) treatment of HTC cells modulated IL-1, IL-6, IFN-gamma, NOS mRNA levels as detected by RT-PCR analyses. Using different avian tumor virus gene-specific primers and PCR, the HTC cells were positive for the presence of avian leukosis virus (ALV) and Mareks disease virus (MDV) but negative for reticuloendothelial virus (REV), chicken infectious anemia virus (CIAV), and herpes virus of turkeys (HVT). The production of ALV antigens by HTC cells was further confirmed using p27 gag protein ELISA. Collectively, these results show that the HTC cells belong to myeloid/macrophage lineage and were likely transformed by ALV and MDV but retain many interesting and useful biological activities.


Virus Genes | 1994

Characterization of a Marek's disease virus mutant containing alacZ insertion in the US6 (gD) homologue gene

Mark S. Parcells; Amy S. Anderson; Robin W. Morgan

We report the construction of a Mareks disease virus (MDV) mutant containing thelacZ gene ofEscherichia coli inserted into a homologue of the US6 (glycoprotein D, gD) gene of herpes simplex virus. The mutant was constructed using the high-passage GAatt85 MDV strain as the parent virus, since that strain grows readily in chicken embryo fibroblasts using culture conditions conducive to mutant virus construction. ThelacZ insertion site was positioned one third of the way into the US6 (gD) open reading frame. Insertion of thelacZ gene disrupted a major 6.2 kb transcript that initiated approximately 2.5 kb upstream of the gD homologue gene in the vicinity of the US3 homologue and sorf4 genes, and extended into the US7 (gI) homologue gene. The mutant virus (US6lac) and the parent virus had similar growth kinetics in cell culture at 37°C and 41°C. Furthermore, the US6lac mutant could be reisolated from the spleens and peripheral blood of infected chickens with a frequency comparable to that of the parent virus. Our results indicate that the gene encoding the gD homologue is nonessential for growth in cell culture or for infection of chickens following intra-abdominal inoculation with an attenuated serotype-1 MDV.


Journal of Virology | 2006

Nuclear localization and dynamic properties of the Marek's disease virus oncogene products Meq and Meq/vIL8.

Jonathan Anobile; Vaithilingaraja Arumugaswami; Danielle Downs; Kirk J. Czymmek; Mark S. Parcells; Carl J. Schmidt

ABSTRACT Mareks disease virus (MDV) is an avian herpesvirus that causes T-cell lymphomas and immune suppression in susceptible chickens. At least one gene product, MDV Eco Q-encoded protein (Meq), is essential for the oncogenicity of MDV. Alternative splicing permits the meq gene to give rise to two major transcripts encoding proteins designated Meq and Meq/vIL8. Meq is a basic leucine zipper protein capable of modulating transcription. The Meq/vIL8 protein retains a modified leucine zipper, along with the mature receptor-binding portion of vIL8, but lacks the domain of Meq responsible for transcriptional modulation. In this report, we describe studies using fusions between either Meq or Meq/vIL8 and fluorescent proteins to characterize the distribution and properties of these products in chicken embryo fibroblasts (CEFs). Meq and Meq/vIL8 both localized to the nucleoplasm, nucleoli, and Cajal bodies of transfected cells. Similar distributions were found for fluorescent fusion proteins and native Meq or Meq/vIL8. Fluorescence recovery after photobleaching and photoactivatable green fluorescent protein revealed that Meq exhibited mobility properties similar to those of other transcription factors, while Meq/vIL8 was far less mobile. In addition, fluorescence resonance energy transfer studies indicated the formation of Meq/vIL8 homodimers in CEFs. Time lapse studies revealed the coordinated elimination of a portion of Meq and Meq/vIL8 from the nucleus. Our data provide new insight regarding the dynamic cellular properties of two forms of a herpesvirus-encoded oncoprotein and suggest that these forms may have fundamentally different functions in MDV-infected cells.


Avian Diseases | 2006

Examination of the Effect of a Naturally Occurring Mutation in Glycoprotein L on Marek's Disease Virus Pathogenesis

Elizabeth R. Santin; Christine E. Shamblin; Jonathan T. Prigge; Vaithilingaraja Arumugaswami; Robert L. Dienglewicz; Mark S. Parcells

Abstract We recently reported a comparison of glycoprotein-encoding genes of different Mareks disease virus pathotypes (MDVs). One mutation found predominantly in very virulent (vv)+MDVs was a 12-bp (four–amino acid) deletion in the glycoprotein L (gL)–encoding gene in four of 23 MDV strains examined (three were vv+MDVs and one was a vvMDV). This mutation was noted in the gL of the TK (615K) strain, but not in the RL (615J) strain of MDV. These strains have identical mutations in the meq gene characteristic of vv+MDVs but can be distinguished by the mutation in the gL-encoding gene. The TK strain was originally isolated from vaccinated chickens and appeared to confer or enhance horizontal transmission of the vaccine virus, herpesvirus of turkeys (HVT). Because the molecular basis for increased virulence of MDV field strains is unknown, we hypothesized that one mechanism might be by coreplication of MDV-1 strains with HVT and that it could be mediated by the mutation of gL, an essential component of the glycoprotein H/L complex. In this study, we compared the pathogenicity of TK (615K) and RL (615J) strains of MDV in the presence and absence of simultaneous HVT coinfection. MDV infections were monitored at the levels of viremia (for both MDV-1 and HVT), clinical signs of MD, tumor incidence, and mortality in 1) inoculated chickens, 2) chickens exposed at 1 day of age, 3) chickens exposed at 2 wk of age, and 4) chickens exposed to both TK/HVT- and RL/HVT-infected chickens at 6 wk of age. We found high incidences of clinical MD signs in all inoculated treatment groups and all chickens exposed to TK and RL viruses, regardless of the presence of HVT. The median time to death of chickens exposed to TK/HVT-infected chickens, however, was lower than the other treatment groups for contact-exposed chickens. Although this difference was not considered to be statistically significant to a rigorously interpreted degree because of the removal of chickens for sampling from the test groups, these data suggest that replication of the TK strain and HVT, when coadministered, might incrementally affect the virulence of MDV-1 strains. The strict correlation of this enhancement of virulence with the mutation in gL, however, requires additional experiments with genetically identical MDV background strains.


Trends in Microbiology | 2009

Understanding animal viruses using the Gene Ontology

Fiona M. McCarthy; Timothy J. Mahony; Mark S. Parcells; Shane C. Burgess

Understanding the effects of viral infection has typically focused on specific virus-host interactions such as tissue tropism, immune responses and histopathology. However, modeling viral pathogenesis requires information about the functions of gene products from both virus and host, and how these products interact. Recent developments in the functional annotation of genomes using Gene Ontology (GO) and in modeling functional interactions among gene products, together with an increased interest in systems biology, provide an excellent opportunity to generate global interaction models for viral infection. Here, we review how the GO is being used to model viral pathogenesis, with a focus on animal viruses.


Avian Diseases | 2009

Latency of Marek's Disease Virus (MDV) in a Reticuloendotheliosis Virus–Transformed T-Cell Line. II: Expression of the Latent MDV Genome

Vaithilingaraja Arumugaswami; Pankaj M. Kumar; Vjollca Konjufca; Robert L. Dienglewicz; Sanjay M. Reddy; Mark S. Parcells

Abstract Mareks disease virus (MDV) is an alphaherpesvirus of chickens that causes the paralysis and rapid lymphoma formation known as Mareks disease. MDV establishes latent infection in activated CD4+ T-cells, and these cells are also the target for transformation. MDV latency has been studied using MDV lymphoma-derived cell lines and T-cells isolated from infected chickens. Each of these models has limitations because MDV-transformed cell lines require the use of oncogenic viruses; conversely, pools of latently infected cells are in relatively low abundance and invariably contain cells undergoing reactivation to lytic infection. In this study we have examined the spontaneous and induced expression of the MDV genome, the effect of genome uptake on cellular proliferation and apoptosis resistance, and differences in cellular surface antigen expression associated with MDV genome uptake in a reticuloendotheliosis virus (REV)–transformed T-cell model. We report that the MDV genome is highly transcribed during this latent infection, and that the expression of Mareks EcoRI-Q-encoded protein (Meq) transcripts is similar to that of MDV-transformed cells, but is somewhat lower than MDV-transformed cells at the protein level. Uptake of the MDV genome was associated with an increased growth rate and resistance to serum starvation-induced apoptosis. Treatment of cells with bromodeoxyuridine induced the expression of MDV lytic antigens in a manner similar to MDV-transformed cells. Uptake of the MDV genome, however, was not consistently associated with alteration of T-cell surface antigen expression. Overall, our data show that the REV-transformed cell line model for MDV latency mimics many important aspects of latency also observed in MDV-transformed cells and provides an additional tool for examining MDV latent infection.

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Henry D. Hunt

United States Department of Agriculture

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Lucy F. Lee

United States Department of Agriculture

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