In vivo reactivation of latent herpes simplex virus 1 in mice can occur in the brain before occurring in the trigeminal ganglion.
Hui-Wen YaoPin LingYuk-Ying TungSheng-Min HsuShun-Hua ChenPublished in: Journal of virology (2014)
Herpes simplex virus 1 (HSV-1) establishes latency in neurons of the brains and sensory ganglia of humans and experimentally infected mice. The latent virus can reactivate to cause recurrent infection. In the past, studies of viral reactivation focused on the ganglion, because efficient viral reactivation was detected in the ganglion but not in the brain when assessed ex vivo by cultivating mouse tissue explants. In this study, we report that the brain contains more viral genomes than the trigeminal ganglion in latently infected mice. Notably, the brain yields reactivated virus early and efficiently compared with the trigeminal ganglion after mice are stimulated to reactivate latent virus. Our findings raise the potential importance of HSV-1 latent infection and reactivation in the brain.