Abstract
Programmed cell death activated by herpes simplex virus 1 mutants can be caspase dependent or independent depending on the nature of the infected cell. The recently discovered mitochondrial apoptosis-inducing factor (AIF) on activation is translocated to the nucleus and induces programmed cell death that is caspase independent. To assess the role of AIF and also to assay apoptosis-related events in primary human embryonic lung (HEL) fibroblasts, cells were mock infected or infected with wild-type virus previously shown not to induce apoptosis in continuous lines of primate cells or with the d 120 mutant lacking infected cell protein no. 4 (ICP4) and were shown to induce apoptosis in all cell lines tested. Cells exposed to dexamethasone or osmotic shock induced by sorbitol were the positive controls. The results were as follows: (i) AIF was translocated to the nucleus in all infected cell cultures and in cells treated with dexamethasone or sorbitol, but cells infected with the wild type-virus showed no evidence of undergoing programmed death. (ii) Cytochrome c was released from mitochondria of cells infected with the d 120 mutant or exposed to dexamethasone or sorbitol but not from mitochondria in cells treated with sorbitol and infected with the wild-type virus. (iii) Poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase was cleaved in mock-infected cells exposed to sorbitol or dexamethasone and in cells infected with the d 120 mutant but not in either untreated cells infected with wild-type virus or cells exposed to sorbitol and then infected with wild-type virus. In contrast to HEp-2 cells, neither d 120 infection nor treatment with dexamethasone or sorbitol caused fragmentation of DNA in HEL fibroblasts. Electron microscopic examination showed chromatin condensation and vacuolization in a fraction of cells infected with d 120 but not in wild-type virus-infected cells or cells treated with dexamethasone or sorbitol. We conclude that AIF is translocated to the nucleus in infected cells but apoptosis does not ensue in wild-type-infected cells. HEL fibroblasts infected with the d 120 virus exhibit symptoms of classical apoptosis, such as cytochrome c release and cleavage of poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase observed also in cells undergoing caspase 3-dependent programmed cell death in which AIF is either not involved or not a contributory factor.