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Dive into the research topics where Suzanne M. Pritchard is active.

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Featured researches published by Suzanne M. Pritchard.


Journal of Virology | 2001

CD5 Is Dissociated from the B-Cell Receptor in B Cells from Bovine Leukemia Virus-Infected, Persistently Lymphocytotic Cattle: Consequences to B-Cell Receptor-Mediated Apoptosis

Glenn H. Cantor; Suzanne M. Pritchard; Franck Dequiedt; Luc Willems; Richard Kettmann; William C. Davis

ABSTRACT Bovine leukemia virus (BLV), a retrovirus related to human T-cell leukemia virus types 1 and 2, can induce persistent nonneoplastic expansion of the CD5+ B-cell population, termed persistent lymphocytosis (PL). As in human CD5+ B cells, we report here that CD5 was physically associated with the B-cell receptor (BCR) in normal bovine CD5+ B cells. In contrast, in CD5+ B cells from BLV-infected PL cattle, CD5 was dissociated from the BCR. In B cells from PL cattle, apoptosis decreased when cells were stimulated with antibody to surface immunoglobulin M (sIgM), while in B cells from uninfected cattle, apoptosis increased after sIgM stimulation. The functional significance of the CD5-BCR association was suggested by experimental dissociation of the CD5-BCR interaction by cross-linking of CD5. This caused CD5+ B cells from uninfected animals to decrease apoptosis when stimulated with anti-sIgM. In contrast, in CD5+ B cells from PL animals, in which CD5 was already dissociated from the BCR, there was no statistically significant change in apoptosis when CD5 was cross-linked and the cells were stimulated with anti-sIgM. Disruption of CD5-BCR interactions and subsequent decreased apoptosis and increased survival in antigenically stimulated B cells may be a mechanism of BLV-induced PL.


Journal of Virology | 2013

Contributions of Herpes Simplex Virus 1 Envelope Proteins to Entry by Endocytosis

Tri Komala Sari; Suzanne M. Pritchard; Cristina W. Cunha; George A. Wudiri; Elizabeth Laws; Hector C. Aguilar; Naomi S. Taus; Anthony V. Nicola

ABSTRACT Herpes simplex virus (HSV) proteins specifically required for endocytic entry but not direct penetration have not been identified. HSVs deleted of gE, gG, gI, gJ, gM, UL45, or Us9 entered cells via either pH-dependent or pH-independent endocytosis and were inactivated by mildly acidic pH. Thus, the required HSV glycoproteins, gB, gD, and gH-gL, may be sufficient for entry regardless of entry route taken. This may be distinct from entry mechanisms employed by other human herpesviruses.


Virus Research | 2002

Bovine leukemia virus gp30 transmembrane (TM) protein is not tyrosine phosphorylated: examining potential interactions with host tyrosine-mediated signaling.

Valerie T Hamilton; Diana M. Stone; Suzanne M. Pritchard; Glenn H. Cantor

Bovine leukemia virus (BLV) causes persistent lymphocytosis, a preneoplastic, polyclonal expansion of B lymphocytes. The expansion increases viral transmission to new hosts, but the mechanisms of this expansion have not been determined. We hypothesized that BLV infection contributes to B-cell expansion by signaling initiated via viral transmembrane protein motifs undergoing tyrosine phosphorylation. Viral mimicry of host cell proteins is a well-demonstrated mechanism by which viruses may increase propagation or decrease recognition by the host immune system. The cytoplasmic tail of BLV transmembrane protein gp30 (TM) has multiple areas of homology to motifs of host cell signaling proteins, including two immunoreceptor tyrosine-based activation motifs (ITAMs) and two immunoreceptor tyrosine-based inhibition motifs (ITIMs), which are homologous to B-cell receptor and inhibitory co-receptor motifs. Signaling by these motifs in B cells typically relies on tyrosine phosphorylation, followed by interactions with Src-homology-2 (SH2) domains of nonreceptor protein tyrosine kinases or phosphatases. Phosphorylation of tyrosine residues in the cytoplasmic tail of TM was tested in four systems including ex vivo cultured peripheral blood mononuclear cells from BLV infected cows, BLV-expressing fetal lamb kidney cell and bat lung cell lines, and DT40 B cells transfected with a fusion of mouse extracellular CD8alpha and cytoplasmic TM. No phosphorylation of TM was detected in our experiments in any of the cell types utilized, or with various stimulation methods. Detection was attempted by immunoblotting for phosphotyrosines, or by metabolic labeling of cells. Thus BLV TM is not likely to modify host signal pathways through interactions between phosphorylated tyrosines of the ITAM or ITIM motifs and host-cell tyrosine kinases or phosphatases.


Journal of Virology | 2017

Mildly Acidic pH Triggers an Irreversible Conformational Change in the Fusion Domain of Herpes Simplex Virus 1 Glycoprotein B and Inactivation of Viral Entry

Darin J. Weed; Suzanne M. Pritchard; Floricel Gonzalez; Hector C. Aguilar; Anthony V. Nicola

ABSTRACT Herpes simplex virus (HSV) entry into a subset of cells requires endocytosis and endosomal low pH. Preexposure of isolated virions to mildly acidic pH of 5 to 6 partially inactivates HSV infectivity in an irreversible manner. Acid inactivation is a hallmark of viruses that enter via low-pH pathways; this occurs by pretriggering conformational changes essential for fusion. The target and mechanism(s) of low-pH inactivation of HSV are unclear. Here, low-pH-treated HSV-1 was defective in fusion activity and yet retained normal levels of attachment to cell surface heparan sulfate and binding to nectin-1 receptor. Low-pH-triggered conformational changes in gB reported to date are reversible, despite irreversible low-pH inactivation. gB conformational changes and their reversibility were measured by antigenic analysis with a panel of monoclonal antibodies and by detecting changes in oligomeric conformation. Three-hour treatment of HSV-1 virions with pH 5 or multiple sequential treatments at pH 5 followed by neutral pH caused an irreversible >2.5 log infectivity reduction. While changes in several gB antigenic sites were reversible, alteration of the H126 epitope was irreversible. gB oligomeric conformational change remained reversible under all conditions tested. Altogether, our results reveal that oligomeric alterations and fusion domain changes represent distinct conformational changes in gB, and the latter correlates with irreversible low-pH inactivation of HSV. We propose that conformational change in the gB fusion domain is important for activation of membrane fusion during viral entry and that in the absence of a host target membrane, this change results in irreversible inactivation of virions. IMPORTANCE HSV-1 is an important pathogen with a high seroprevalence throughout the human population. HSV infects cells via multiple pathways, including a low-pH route into epithelial cells, the primary portal into the host. HSV is inactivated by low-pH preexposure, and gB, a class III fusion protein, undergoes reversible conformational changes in response to low-pH exposure. Here, we show that low-pH inactivation of HSV is irreversible and due to a defect in virion fusion activity. We identified an irreversible change in the fusion domain of gB following multiple sequential low-pH exposures or following prolonged low-pH treatment. This change appears to be separable from the alteration in gB quaternary structure. Together, the results are consistent with a model by which low pH can have an activating or inactivating effect on HSV depending on the presence of a target membrane.


Virology Journal | 2015

Polyethylene glycol-mediated fusion of herpes simplex type 1 virions with the plasma membrane of cells that support endocytic entry.

Erik B. Walker; Suzanne M. Pritchard; Cristina W. Cunha; Hector C. Aguilar; Anthony V. Nicola

BackgroundMouse B78 cells and Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells are important to the study of HSV-1 entry because both are resistant to infection at the level of viral entry. When provided with a gD-receptor such as nectin-1, these cells support HSV-1 entry by an endocytosis pathway. Treating some viruses bound to cells with the fusogen polyethylene glycol (PEG) mediates viral fusion with the cell surface but is insufficient to rescue viral entry. It is unclear whether PEG-mediated fusion of HSV with the plasma membrane of B78 or CHO cells results in successful entry and infection.FindingsTreating HSV-1 bound to B78 or CHO cells with PEG allowed viral entry as measured by virus-induced beta-galactosidase activity. Based on the mechanism of PEG action, we propose that entry likely proceeds by direct fusion of HSV particles with the plasma membrane. Under the conditions tested, PEG-mediated infection of CHO cells progressed to the level of HSV late gene expression, while B78 cells supported HSV DNA replication. We tested whether proteolysis or acidification of cell-bound virions could trigger HSV fusion with the plasma membrane. Under the conditions tested, mildly acidic pH of 5–6 or the protease trypsin were not capable of triggering HSV-1 fusion as compared to PEG-treated cell-bound virions.ConclusionsB78 cells and CHO cells, which typically endocytose HSV prior to viral penetration, are capable of supporting HSV-1 entry via direct penetration. HSV capsids delivered directly to the cytosol at the periphery of these cells complete the entry process. B78 and CHO cells may be utilized to screen for factors that trigger entry as a consequence of fusion of virions with the cell surface, and PEG treatment can provide a necessary control.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Analysis of Herpes Simplex Virion Tegument ICP4 Derived from Infected Cells and ICP4-Expressing Cells

Suzanne M. Pritchard; Cristina W. Cunha; Anthony V. Nicola

ICP4 is the major transcriptional regulatory protein of herpes simplex virus (HSV). It is expressed in infected cells with immediate early kinetics and is essential for viral growth. ICP4 is also a structural component of the virion tegument layer. Herpesviral tegument proteins exert regulatory functions important for takeover of the host cell. Tegument ICP4 has not been well characterized. We examined the ICP4 present in HSV-1 virions that were either derived from wild type infected cells or from ICP4-expressing (E5) cells infected with ICP4 deletion virus d120. Limited proteolysis demonstrated that virion-associated ICP4 from particles derived from E5 cells was indeed an internal component of the virion. A similar subset of virion structural proteins was detected in viral particles regardless of the cellular origin of ICP4. Genotypically ICP4-negative virions complemented with tegument ICP4 entered cells via a proteasome-dependent, pH-dependent pathway similar to wild type virions. In infected cells, ICP4 was distributed predominantly in intranuclear replication compartments regardless of whether it was expressed from a transgene or from the HSV genome.


Journal of Virology | 1999

Bovine Leukemia Virus-Induced Persistent Lymphocytosis in Cattle Does Not Correlate with Increased Ex Vivo Survival of B Lymphocytes

Franck Dequiedt; Glenn H. Cantor; Valerie T Hamilton; Suzanne M. Pritchard; William C. Davis; Pierre Kerkhofs; Arsène Burny; Richard Kettmann; Lucas Willems


Cellular Immunology | 1999

Bovine Leukemia Virus Transmembrane Protein gp30 Physically Associates with the Down-Regulatory Phosphatase SHP-1

Glenn H. Cantor; Suzanne M. Pritchard; Oto Orlik; Gary A. Splitter; William C. Davis; Raymond Reeves


Journal of Virology | 2018

Bovine Herpesvirus 1 Entry by a Low-pH Endosomal Pathway

Gabrielle Pastenkos; Becky Lee; Suzanne M. Pritchard; Anthony V. Nicola


Journal of Virology | 2018

Low pH endocytic entry of the porcine alphaherpesvirus pseudorabies virus

Jonathan L. Miller; Darin J. Weed; Becky Lee; Suzanne M. Pritchard; Anthony V. Nicola

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Anthony V. Nicola

Washington State University

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Glenn H. Cantor

Washington State University

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Hector C. Aguilar

Washington State University

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Cristina W. Cunha

Washington State University

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William C. Davis

Washington State University

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Darin J. Weed

Washington State University

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George A. Wudiri

Washington State University

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Valerie T Hamilton

Washington State University

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