Ex Vivo Stimulation of B Cells Latently Infected with Gammaherpesvirus 68 Triggers Reactivation from Latency

Abstract
Murine gammaherpesvirus 68 (γHV68) infection of mice results in the establishment of a chronic infection, which is largely maintained through latent infection of B lymphocytes. Acute virus replication is almost entirely cleared by 2 weeks postinfection. Spontaneous reactivation of γHV68 from latently infected splenocytes upon ex vivo culture can readily be detected at the early stages of infection (e.g., day 16). However, by 6 weeks postinfection, very little spontaneous reactivation is detected upon explant into tissue culture. Here we report that stimulation of latently infected splenic B cells harvested at late times postinfection with cross-linking surface immunoglobulin (Ig), in conjunction with anti-CD40 antibody treatment, triggers virus reactivation. As expected, this treatment resulted in B-cell activation, as assessed by upregulation of CD69 on B cells, and ultimately B-cell proliferation. Since anti-Ig/anti-CD40 stimulation resulted in splenic B-cell proliferation, we assessed whether this reactivation stimulus could overcome the previously characterized defect in virus reactivation of a v-cyclin null γHV68 mutant. This analysis demonstrated that anti-Ig/anti-CD40 stimulation could drive reactivation of the v-cyclin null mutant virus in latently infected splenocytes, but not to the levels observed with wild-type γHV68. Thus, there appears to be a role for the v-cyclin in B cells following anti-Ig/anti-CD40 stimulation independent of the induction of the cell cycle. Finally, to assess signals that are not mediated through the B-cell receptor, we demonstrate that addition of lipopolysaccharide to explanted splenocyte cultures also enhanced virus reactivation. These studies complement and extend previous analyses of Epstein-Barr virus and Kaposi's sarcoma-associated virus reactivation from latently infected cell lines by investigating reactivation of γHV68 from latently infected primary B cells recovered from infected hosts.