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Growth of herpes simplex virus in epidermal keratinocytes determines cutaneous pathogenicity in mice

โœ Scribed by Yoshihiro Yoshida; ZhiHong Li; Masahiko Kurokawa; Takashi Kawana; Masami Imakita; Kimiyasu Shiraki


Book ID
102377637
Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2005
Tongue
English
Weight
100 KB
Volume
75
Category
Article
ISSN
0146-6615

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โœฆ Synopsis


Herpes simplex viruses (HSV)-1 and -2 isolated from genital lesions were examined for cutaneous pathogenicity and its correlation with cellular tropism. HSV-1 caused vesiculation, erosion/ ulcer, and zosteriform lesions successively, but skin lesions of HSV-2 developed without vesiculation in some mice, and with statistically significantly less frequent vesiculation than HSV-1. Thus, the virological type of HSV was correlated with its cutaneous pathogenicity. The growth characteristics of HSV-1 and -2 were compared in cultured human embryonic lung (HEL) fibroblasts, human lung cancer A549 cells, human neonatal epidermal keratinocytes, human neonatal dermal fibroblasts, HeLa cells, and Vero cells. HSV-2 produced plaques that were 72% times the size of HSV-1 plaques in epidermal keratinocytes but 230%-500% the size in the other cells. The difference between HSV-1 and -2 in the ratio of plaque size to virus yield in epidermal keratinocytes was much larger (502 times) than the ratio of the other cells (5.57-28.8 times). Keratinocytes are the major constituent of the epidermal layer of the skin and the cells in which vesiculation and erosion/ ulceration occur histologically. Therefore, the smaller spread of HSV-2 in keratinocytes of the epidermal layer and the greater spread in other cells of the dermal layer might reflect its lesser invasiveness in the epidermal layer despite larger invasiveness in the dermal layer, which is reflected in the low incidence of erosion/ulcer of the skin compared to HSV-1. Thus, the growth of HSV in epidermal keratinocytes appeared to correlate with the cutaneous pathogenicity causing vesiculation in the skin.


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