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Featured researches published by Travis J. Taylor.


Journal of Virology | 2004

Proteomics of Herpes Simplex Virus Replication Compartments: Association of Cellular DNA Replication, Repair, Recombination, and Chromatin Remodeling Proteins with ICP8

Travis J. Taylor; David M. Knipe

ABSTRACT In this study, we have used immunoprecipitation and mass spectrometry to identify over 50 cellular and viral proteins that are associated with the herpes simplex virus 1 (HSV-1) ICP8 single-stranded DNA-binding protein. Many of the coprecipitating cellular proteins are known members of large cellular complexes involved in (i) DNA replication or damage repair, including RPA and MSH6; (ii) nonhomologous and homologous recombination, including the catalytic subunit of the DNA-dependent protein kinase, Ku86, and Rad50; and (iii) chromatin remodeling, including BRG1, BRM, hSNF2H, BAF155, mSin3a, and histone deacetylase 2. It appears that DNA mediates the association of certain proteins with ICP8, while more direct protein-protein interactions mediate the association with other proteins. A number of these proteins accumulate in viral replication compartments in the infected cell nucleus, indicating that these proteins may have a role in viral replication. WRN, which functions in cellular recombination pathways via its helicase and exonuclease activities, is not absolutely required for viral replication, as viral yields are only very slightly, if at all, decreased in WRN-deficient human primary fibroblasts compared to control cells. In Ku70-deficient murine embryonic fibroblasts, viral yields are increased by almost 50-fold, suggesting that the cellular nonhomologous end-joining pathway inhibits HSV replication. We hypothesize that some of the proteins coprecipitating with ICP8 are involved in HSV replication and may give new insight into viral replication mechanisms.


Virology | 2003

Herpes simplex virus replication compartments can form by coalescence of smaller compartments

Travis J. Taylor; Elizabeth E. McNamee; Cheryl L. Day; David M. Knipe

Herpes simplex virus (HSV) uses intranuclear compartmentalization to concentrate the viral and cellular factors required for the progression of the viral life cycle. Processes as varied as viral DNA replication, late gene expression, and capsid assembly take place within discrete structures within the nucleus called replication compartments. Replication compartments are hypothesized to mature from a few distinct structures, called prereplicative sites, that form adjacent to cellular nuclear matrix-associated ND10 sites. During productive infection, the HSV single-stranded DNA-binding protein ICP8 localizes to replication compartments. To further the understanding of replication compartment maturation, we have constructed and characterized a recombinant HSV-1 strain that expresses an ICP8 molecule with green fluorescent protein (GFP) fused to its C terminus. In transfected Vero cells that were infected with HSV, the ICP8-GFP protein localized to prereplicative sites in the presence of the viral DNA synthesis inhibitor phosphonoacetic acid (PAA) or to replication compartments in the absence of PAA. A recombinant HSV-1 strain expressing the ICP8-GFP virus replicated in Vero cells, but the yield was increased by 150-fold in an ICP8-complementing cell line. Using the ICP8-GFP protein as a marker for replication compartments, we show here that these structures start as punctate structures early in infection and grow into large, globular structures that eventually fill the nucleus. Large replication compartments were formed by small structures that either moved through the nucleus to merge with adjacent compartments or remained relatively stationary within the nucleus and grew by accretion and fused with neighboring structures.


Journal of Virology | 2000

A Dominant-Negative Herpesvirus Protein Inhibits Intranuclear Targeting of Viral Proteins: Effects on DNA Replication and Late Gene Expression

Elizabeth E. McNamee; Travis J. Taylor; David M. Knipe

ABSTRACT The d105 dominant-negative mutant form of the herpes simplex virus 1 (HSV-1) single-stranded DNA-binding protein, ICP8 (d105 ICP8), inhibits wild-type viral replication, and it blocks both viral DNA replication and late gene transcription, although to different degrees (M. Gao and D. M. Knipe, J. Virol. 65:2666–2675, 1991; Y. M. Chen and D. M. Knipe, Virology 221:281–290, 1996). We demonstrate here that this protein is also capable of preventing the formation of intranuclear prereplicative sites and replication compartments during HSV infection. We defined three patterns of ICP8 localization using indirect immunofluorescence staining of HSV-1-infected cells: large replication compartments, small compartments, and no specific intranuclear localization of ICP8. Cells that form large replication compartments replicate viral DNA and express late genes. Cells that form small replication compartments replicate viral DNA but do not express late genes, while cells without viral replication compartments are incapable of both DNA replication and late gene expression. The d105 ICP8 protein blocks formation of prereplicative sites and large replication compartments in 80% of infected cells and formation of large replication compartments in the remaining 20% of infected cells. The phenotype ofd105 suggests a correlation between formation of large replication compartments and late gene expression and a role for intranuclear rearrangement of viral DNA and bound proteins in activation of late gene transcription. Thus, these results provide evidence for specialized machinery for late gene expression within replication compartments.


Virology | 2003

C-terminal region of herpes simplex virus ICP8 protein needed for intranuclear localization

Travis J. Taylor; David M. Knipe

The herpes simplex virus single-stranded DNA-binding protein, ICP8, localizes initially to structures in the nucleus called prereplicative sites. As replication proceeds, these sites mature into large globular structures called replication compartments. The details of what signals or proteins are involved in the redistribution of viral and cellular proteins within the nucleus between prereplicative sites and replication compartments are poorly understood; however, we showed previously that the dominant-negative d105 ICP8 does not localize to prereplicative sites and prevents the localization of other viral proteins to prereplicative sites (J. Virol. 74 (2000) 10122). Within the residues deleted in d105 (1083 to 1168), we identified a region between amino acid residues 1080 and 1135 that was predicted by computer models to contain two alpha-helices, one with considerable amphipathic nature. We used site-specific and random mutagenesis techniques to identify residues or structures within this region that are required for proper ICP8 localization within the nucleus. Proline substitutions in the predicted helix generated ICP8 molecules that did not localize to prereplicative sites and acted as dominant-negative inhibitors. Other substitutions that altered the charged residues in the predicted alpha-helix to alanine or leucine residues had little or no effect on ICP8 intranuclear localization. The predicted alpha-helix was dispensable for the interaction of ICP8 with the U(L)9 origin-binding protein. We propose that this C-terminal alpha-helix is required for localization of ICP8 to prereplicative sites by binding viral or cellular factors that target or retain ICP8 at specific intranuclear sites.


Virology | 2016

Production of immunogenic West Nile virus-like particles using a herpes simplex virus 1 recombinant vector

Travis J. Taylor; Fernando Diaz; Robert C. Colgrove; Kristen A. Bernard; Neal A. DeLuca; Sean P. J. Whelan; David M. Knipe

West Nile virus (WNV) is a flavivirus that swept rapidly across North America in 1999, declined in prevalence, and then resurged in 2012. To date, no vaccine is available to prevent infection in the human population. Herpes simplex virus (HSV) replication-defective vaccine vectors induce a durable immunity characterized by strong antibody and CD8(+) T cell responses even in HSV-immune animals. In this study, a WNV protein expression cassette was optimized for virus-like particle (VLP) production in transfection studies, and the cassette was recombined into an HSV-1 d106-WNV virus vector, which produced extracellular VLPs, as confirmed by immunoelectron microscopy. Immunization of mice with the d106-WNV recombinant vector elicited a specific anti-WNV IgG response. This study highlights the flavivirus coding sequences needed for efficient assembly of virus-like particles. This information will facilitate generation of additional vaccine vectors against other flaviviruses including the recently emerged Zika virus.


Methods of Molecular Biology | 2009

The Use of Green Fluorescent Fusion Proteins to Monitor Herpes Simplex Virus Replication

Travis J. Taylor; David M. Knipe

The localization pattern of the seven herpes simplex virus (HSV) DNA replication proteins is dependent upon the status of viral DNA synthesis in the infected cell. Normally, the replication proteins accumulate within replication compartments, which expand as viral DNA synthesis increases. If viral replication is blocked, either by the addition of drugs or a genetic lesion, prereplicative sites are observed. Observing the distribution of a GFP-tagged HSV replication protein can monitor the progression of viral replication. Here, we demonstrate the use of an ICP8-GFP fusion protein to observe the status of HSV replication in cultured cells by the formation of viral replication compartments.


Frontiers in Bioscience | 2002

Herpes simplex virus.

Travis J. Taylor; Mark A. Brockman; Elizabeth E. McNamee; David M. Knipe


Virology | 2004

Proteomics of herpes simplex virus infected cell protein 27: association with translation initiation factors

Errin C. Fontaine-Rodriguez; Travis J. Taylor; Melanie Olesky; David M. Knipe


Virology | 2000

Biological Properties of Herpes Simplex Virus 2 Replication-Defective Mutant Strains in a Murine Nasal Infection Model

Cheryl A. Jones; Travis J. Taylor; David M. Knipe


Virology | 2007

Inhibitors of the sodium potassium ATPase that impair herpes simplex virus replication identified via a chemical screening approach.

Allen W. Dodson; Travis J. Taylor; David M. Knipe; Donald M. Coen

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Kristen A. Bernard

New York State Department of Health

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Neal A. DeLuca

University of Pittsburgh

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