grant

Mechanism and Therapeutic Implication of Host Cell Telomerase Modulation by Human Cytomegalovirus

Organization RUTGERS BIOMEDICAL AND HEALTH SCIENCESLocation Newark, UNITED STATESPosted 1 Jan 2022Deadline 11 Jul 2026
NIHUS FederalResearch GrantFY2025AcuteAgingAnti-viral AgentsAnti-viral TherapyAssayAttenuatedBindingBioassayBiological AssayBiologyBirth DefectsCMVCMV infectionCancersCell BodyCell LineCell SurvivalCell ViabilityCellLineCellsChIP assayChromosomesChronicClinicalClinical ManagementCongenital AbnormalityCongenital Anatomical AbnormalityCongenital DefectsCongenital DeformityCongenital MalformationCytomegalic Inclusion DiseaseCytomegalovirusCytomegalovirus InfectionsDNADataDeoxyribonucleic AcidDeveloping CountriesDeveloping NationsDevelopmentDiseaseDisorderDoseDouble-Stranded DNAEC 2.7.7.49Ectopic ExpressionEnzyme GeneEnzymesFutureGanciclovirGancyclovirGene Expression InhibitorGenesGoalsHCMVHerpesviridaeHerpesvirusesHumanHyperactivityImmediate-Early GenesImmediate-Early ProteinsImmunocompetenceImmunocompetentImmunocompromisedImmunocompromised HostImmunocompromised PatientImmunologic CompetenceImmunological CompetenceImmunosuppressed HostImpairmentInclusion DiseaseIndividualInfectionLaboratoriesLatent virus infection phaseLess-Developed CountriesLess-Developed NationsLifeLife CycleLife Cycle StagesLinkMalignant NeoplasmsMalignant TumorMass Photometry/Spectrum AnalysisMass SpectrometryMass SpectroscopyMass SpectrumMass Spectrum AnalysesMass Spectrum AnalysisMeasuresMediatingMedicalMethodsModern ManMolecularMolecular InteractionMononuclearMorbidityMorbidity - disease rateNordeoxyguanosineOncogenicPathogenicityPathway interactionsPharmaceutical AgentPharmaceuticalsPharmacologic SubstancePharmacological SubstancePlayPopulationProductionProteinsRNA TranscriptaseRNA-Dependent DNA PolymeraseRNA-Directed DNA PolymeraseRecrudescencesRepressionReverse TranscriptaseRevertaseRiskRoleSalivary Gland Virus DiseaseSalivary Gland VirusesSeroprevalencesShort interfering RNASmall Interfering RNAStrains Cell LinesStressSystemTelomeraseTelomerase InhibitorTelomerase inhibitionTestingTetTetanus Helper PeptideTherapeuticThird-World CountriesThird-World NationsTranscriptUnder-Developed CountriesUnder-Developed NationsUpregulationVaccinesViralViral Gene ProductsViral Gene ProteinsViral GenesViral ProteinsVirusVirus ReplicationWorkanti-viral compoundanti-viral drugsanti-viral medicationanti-viral therapeuticanti-viralsattenuateattenuatesattenuationburden of diseaseburden of illnesscell typechromatin immunoprecipitationclinical relevanceclinical significanceclinically relevantclinically significantcongenital infectioncultured cell linecytomegalovirus groupdeveloping countrydeveloping nationdevelopmentaldisease burdends-DNAdsDNAeffective therapyeffective treatmentexperimentexperimental researchexperimental studyexperimentsgene productgenetic inhibitorglobal healthherpes virusimmune competentimmunosuppressed patientimprovedin uteroinfected neonateinfected newborninhibitorinsightknock-downknockdownlatent viral infectionlatent virus infectionlife coursemalignancyneonatal infectionneoplasm/cancernew drug treatmentsnew drugsnew pharmacological therapeuticnew therapeuticsnew therapynewborn infectionnext generation therapeuticsnovel drug treatmentsnovel drugsnovel pharmaco-therapeuticnovel pharmacological therapeuticnovel therapeuticsnovel therapypathwaypharmaceuticalpromoterpromotorresponseshRNAshort hairpin RNAsiRNAsmall hairpin RNAsocial roletelomereviral RNAviral infectious disease treatmentviral multiplicationviral replicationviral resistancevirus RNAvirus multiplicationvirus proteinvirus resistance
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Full Description

Project Summary
Human Cytomegalovirus (HCMV) is a herpesvirus whose seroprevalence and disease burden remain high

worldwide. While disease is often mild in immunocompetent individuals, it is often severe for

immunocompromised individuals, and congenital infection remains a leading cause of birth defects. There is

currently no vaccine or permanent effective anti-viral therapy against HCMV. The host enzyme telomerase,

which maintains telomeres to protect the integrity of DNA, is key for cell survival and has been implicated in

several diseases including cancer. Telomerase has been implicated as an important agent in the life cycles

and potential oncogenic activity of several herpesviruses, and recently has been shown to be hyperactive in

response to active HCMV infection. Furthermore, telomerase inhibition has been associated with a significant

reduction of viral infectivity in laboratory and clinical strains of HCMV. However, the significance of telomerase

in the HCMV viral life cycle, and the potential therapeutic implications of this relationship, remain unexplored.

We hypothesize host telomerase is important for the HCMV viral life cycle. We will first establish telomerase

activity upregulation upon HCMV infection, and reduced HCMV replication following telomerase inhibition, in

multiple strains and cell lines using several approaches to telomerase repression. Assays of telomerase

activity in the presence of pharmaceutical telomerase inhibitors BIBR1532 and MST-312 will establish a

reduction of viral infectivity following telomerase inhibition in both laboratory and clinical strains. Subsequent

assays using inducible genetic inhibitors, specifically siRNA and inducible shRNA constructs against hTERT,

will test whether reduction of viral replication is a result of telomerase inhibition and not off-target effects. To

define the mechanism of action by which HCMV upregulates telomerase activity, we will assess telomerase

activity following ectopic expression and shRNA-mediated knockdown of key viral genes, and implicated gene

products will be subjected to binding assays in infected and telomerase-inhibited infected conditions to assess

association with DNA via ChiP and QTIP assays, and with other proteins via IP and mass spectrometry. ChiP

assays in infected and telomerase-inhibited infected conditions will also be performed on host proteins

previously shown to influence telomerase activity. To define the function of telomerase in the viral life cycle, we

will conduct differentially-timed inhibition of telomerase and assess the viral gene class(es) the activity of which

is constrained by the absence of telomerase. Overall, these experiments will establish the potential clinical

relevance of telomerase in HCMV infection and define both the mechanism of action by which HCMV

upregulates telomerase activity and the function of telomerase in the viral life cycle. Increased understanding

of these relationships may provide insight into other herpesviruses, inform clinical HCMV management, and

lead to new anti-viral therapies.

Grant Number: 7F30AI157182-04
NIH Institute/Center: NIH

Principal Investigator: Chloe Cavanaugh

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