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Epstein-Barr virus inactivates the transcriptome and disrupts the chromatin architecture of its host cell in the first phase of lytic reactivation

View ORCID ProfileAlexander Buschle, View ORCID ProfilePaulina Mrozek-Gorska, Stefan Krebs, Helmut Blum, View ORCID ProfileFilippo M. Cernilogar, View ORCID ProfileGunnar Schotta, Dagmar Pich, View ORCID ProfileTobias Straub, View ORCID ProfileWolfgang Hammerschmidt
doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/573659
Alexander Buschle
1Research Unit Gene Vectors, Helmholtz Zentrum München, German Research Center for Environmental Health and German Center for Infection Research (DZIF), Partner site Munich, Germany, Marchioninistr. 25, D-81377 Munich, Germany
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Paulina Mrozek-Gorska
1Research Unit Gene Vectors, Helmholtz Zentrum München, German Research Center for Environmental Health and German Center for Infection Research (DZIF), Partner site Munich, Germany, Marchioninistr. 25, D-81377 Munich, Germany
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Stefan Krebs
2Laboratory for Functional Genome Analysis (LAFUGA), Gene Center of the Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität (LMU) München, Munich, Germany
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Helmut Blum
2Laboratory for Functional Genome Analysis (LAFUGA), Gene Center of the Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität (LMU) München, Munich, Germany
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Filippo M. Cernilogar
3Biomedical Center, Molecular, Biology, LMU Munich, 82152 Planegg-Martinsried, Germany
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Gunnar Schotta
3Biomedical Center, Molecular, Biology, LMU Munich, 82152 Planegg-Martinsried, Germany
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Dagmar Pich
1Research Unit Gene Vectors, Helmholtz Zentrum München, German Research Center for Environmental Health and German Center for Infection Research (DZIF), Partner site Munich, Germany, Marchioninistr. 25, D-81377 Munich, Germany
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Tobias Straub
3Biomedical Center, Molecular, Biology, LMU Munich, 82152 Planegg-Martinsried, Germany
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Wolfgang Hammerschmidt
1Research Unit Gene Vectors, Helmholtz Zentrum München, German Research Center for Environmental Health and German Center for Infection Research (DZIF), Partner site Munich, Germany, Marchioninistr. 25, D-81377 Munich, Germany
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  • For correspondence: hammerschmidt@helmholtz-muenchen.de
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ABSTRACT

Epstein-Barr virus (EBV), a herpes virus also termed HHV 4 and the first identified human tumor virus, establishes a stable long-term latent infection in human B cells, its preferred host. Upon induction of EBV’s lytic phase the latently infected cells turn into a virus factory, a process, that is governed by EBV. In the lytic, productive phase all herpesviruses ensure the efficient induction of all lytic viral genes to produce progeny, but certain of these genes also repress the ensuing antiviral responses of the virally infected host cells, regulate their apoptotic death or control the cellular transcriptome. We now find that EBV causes previously unknown massive and global alterations in the chromatin of its host cell upon induction of the viral lytic phase and prior to the onset of viral DNA replication. The viral initiator protein of the lytic cycle, BZLF1, binds to >105 binding sites with different sequence motifs in cellular chromatin and in a concentration dependent manner. Concomitant with DNA binding, silent chromatin opens locally as shown by ATAC-seq experiments, while previously wide-open cellular chromatin becomes inaccessible on a global scale within hours. While viral transcripts increase drastically, the induction of the lytic phase results in a massive reduction of cellular transcripts and a loss of chromatin-chromatin interactions of cellular promoters with their distal regulatory elements as shown in Capture-C experiments. Our data document that EBV’s lytic cycle induces discrete early processes that disrupt the architecture of host cellular chromatin and repress the cellular epigenome and transcriptome likely supporting the efficient de novo synthesis of this herpesvirus.

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Posted March 20, 2019.
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Epstein-Barr virus inactivates the transcriptome and disrupts the chromatin architecture of its host cell in the first phase of lytic reactivation
Alexander Buschle, Paulina Mrozek-Gorska, Stefan Krebs, Helmut Blum, Filippo M. Cernilogar, Gunnar Schotta, Dagmar Pich, Tobias Straub, Wolfgang Hammerschmidt
bioRxiv 573659; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/573659
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Epstein-Barr virus inactivates the transcriptome and disrupts the chromatin architecture of its host cell in the first phase of lytic reactivation
Alexander Buschle, Paulina Mrozek-Gorska, Stefan Krebs, Helmut Blum, Filippo M. Cernilogar, Gunnar Schotta, Dagmar Pich, Tobias Straub, Wolfgang Hammerschmidt
bioRxiv 573659; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/573659

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