Friend virus utilizes the BMP4-dependent stress erythropoiesis pathway to induce erythroleukemia.
Journal
  Journal of virology.
Citation
  J Virol. 82(1):382-93
Publication date
  2008 Jan
Authors
  Subramanian A
Hegde S
Porayette P
Yon M
Hankey P
Paulson RF
Investigators
  Robert Paulson
Grants
  United States NHLBI HL070720
MeSH headings
  Bone Morphogenetic Proteins
Friend murine leukemia virus
Leukemia, Erythroblastic, Acute
Leukemia, Experimental
Retroviridae Infections
Tumor Virus Infections
MeSH qualifiers
  physiology
virology
pathology
Abstract
  More than 50 years of genetic analysis has identified a number of host genes that are required for the expansion of infected cells during the progression of Friend-virus-induced erythroleukemia. In this report, we show that Friend virus induces the bone morphogenetic protein 4 (BMP4)-dependent stress erythropoiesis pathway in the spleen, which rapidly amplifies target cells, propagating their infection and resulting in acute splenomegaly. This mechanism mimics the response to acute anemia, in which BMP4 expressed in the spleen drives the expansion of a specialized population of stress erythroid progenitors. Previously we demonstrated that these progenitors, termed stress BFU-E, are targets for Friend virus in the spleen (A. Subramanian, H. E. Teal, P. H. Correll, and R. F. Paulson, J. Virol. 79:14586-14594, 2005). Here, we extend those findings by showing that Friend virus infects two distinct populations of bone marrow cells. One population, when infected, differentiates into mature erythrocytes in an Epo-independent manner, while a second population migrates to the spleen after infection, where it induces BMP4 expression and acts as a reservoir of virus. The activation of the stress erythropoiesis pathway in the spleen by Friend virus results in the rapid expansion of stress BFU-E, providing abundant target cells for viral infection. These observations suggest a novel mechanism by which a virus induces a stress response pathway that amplifies target cells for the virus, leading to acute expansion of infected cells.