[No authors listed]
Gammaherpesviruses are ubiquitous pathogens that are associated with cancers, including B cell lymphomas. These viruses are unique in that they infect naive B cells and subsequently drive a robust polyclonal germinal center response in order to amplify the latent reservoir and to establish lifelong infection in memory B cells. The gammaherpesvirus-driven germinal center response in combination with robust infection of germinal center B cells is thought to precipitate lymphomagenesis. Importantly, host and viral factors that selectively affect the gammaherpesvirus-driven germinal center response remain poorly understood. Global deficiency of antiviral tumor-suppressive interferon regulatory factor 1 (IRF-1) selectively promotes the murine gammaherpesvirus 68 (MHV68)-driven germinal center response and expansion of the viral latent reservoir. To determine the extent to which antiviral effects of IRF-1 are B cell intrinsic, we generated mice with conditional IRF-1 deficiency. Surprisingly, B cell-specific IRF-1 deficiency attenuated the establishment of chronic infection and the germinal center response, indicating that MHV68 may, in a B cell-intrinsic manner, usurp IRF-1 to promote the germinal center response and expansion of the latent reservoir. Further, we found that B cell-specific IRF-1 deficiency led to reduced levels of active tyrosine phosphatase SHP1, which plays a B cell-intrinsic proviral function during MHV68 infection. Finally, results of this study indicate that the antiviral functions of IRF-1 unveiled in MHV68-infected mice with global IRF-1 deficiency are mediated via IRF-1 expression by non-B cell populations.IMPORTANCE Gammaherpesviruses establish lifelong infection in over 95% of all adults and are associated with B cell lymphomas. The virus's manipulation of the germinal center response and B cell differentiation to establish lifelong infection is thought to also precipitate malignant transformation, through a mechanism that remains poorly understood. The host transcription factor IRF-1, a well-established tumor suppressor, selectively attenuates MHV68-driven germinal center response, a phenotype that we originally hypothesized to occur in a B cell-intrinsic manner. In contrast, in testing, B cell-intrinsic IRF-1 expression promoted the MHV68-driven germinal center response and the establishment of chronic infection. Our report highlights the underappreciated multifaceted role of IRF-1 in MHV68 infection and pathogenesis.
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