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Multifaceted roles for STAT3 in gammaherpesvirus latency revealed through in vivo B cell knockout models.

Chad H HoganShana M OwensGlennys V ReynosoYifei LiaoThomas J MeyerMonika A ZelazowskaBin LiuXiaofan LiAnna K GrosskopfCamille KhairallahVarvara KirillovNancy C ReichBrian S SheridanKevin M McBrideBenjamin E GewurzHeather D HickmanJ Craig ForrestLaurie T Krug
Published in: mBio (2024)
There are no directed therapies to the latency program of the human gammaherpesviruses, Epstein-Barr virus and Kaposi sarcoma herpesvirus. Activated host factor signal transducer and activator of transcription 3 (STAT3) is a hallmark of cancers caused by these viruses. We applied the murine gammaherpesvirus pathogen system to explore STAT3 function upon primary B cell infection in the host. Since STAT3 deletion in all CD19+ B cells of infected mice led to altered B and T cell responses, we generated chimeric mice with both normal and STAT3-deleted B cells. B cells lacking STAT3 failed to support virus latency compared to normal B cells from the same infected animal. Loss of STAT3 impaired B cell proliferation and differentiation and led to a striking upregulation of interferon-stimulated genes. These findings expand our understanding of STAT3-dependent processes that are key to its function as a pro-viral latency determinant for oncogenic gammaherpesviruses in B cells and may provide novel therapeutic targets.
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