METABOLIC AND EPIGENETIC REGULATION OF HERPESVIRUS INFECTION IN ORAL EPITHELIAL CELLS
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Date
2026
Authors
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Publisher
Saudi Digital Library
Abstract
Kaposi’s sarcoma-associated herpesvirus (KSHV) is an oncogenic double-stranded DNA
virus. There are no vaccines or antiviral therapies for KSHV. KSHV establishes a lifelong
infection via a biphasic life cycle comprising a latent and a lytic phase. Although KSHV
establishes long-term latency in most infected cell types, oral epithelial cells support sustained
lytic infection, contributing to viral shedding and transmission. Lytic infection and viral
replication place high energetic and biosynthetic demands on host cells, promoting extensive
reprogramming of host metabolic and regulatory pathways. However, the host metabolic
adaptations that support KSHV lytic infection in oral epithelial cells remain incompletely defined.
In this dissertation, we investigated the metabolic and epigenetic mechanisms that facilitate
KSHV lytic infection in telomerase-immortalized gingival keratinocyte (TIGK) cells by
performing untargeted metabolomic profiling using liquid chromatography–high-resolution mass
spectrometry (LC-MS). We characterized early metabolic alterations following KSHV infection.
At 4 hours post-infection, KSHV induced rapid reprogramming of the cellular metabolism by
dysregulating metabolites involved in the urea cycle, polyamine biosynthesis, dimethylarginine
metabolism, and de novo pyrimidine synthesis. These early metabolic changes suggest that KSHV
rapidly hijacks host metabolic pathways to support viral gene expression and replication.
Furthermore, we assess the metabolic changes at 24 post-infections to complement our
previous study. Combined untargeted metabolomic and lipidomic analyses were performed at 24
14
hours post-infection. At this point, KSHV infection led to pathway-specific alterations in lipid and
amino acid metabolism, including increased triglyceride accumulation and depletion of several
amino acids. Triglyceride enrichment is known to induce lipid droplet biogenesis, which may
serve as an energy reservoir to support the elevated energetic and biosynthetic demands of viral
replication. Concurrent depletion of amino acids likely reflects increased utilization to support
viral protein synthesis and central carbon metabolism, indicating sustained host metabolic
reprogramming during early lytic infection.
In addition to metabolic remodeling, we examined the role of the host epigenetic regulator
lysine-specific demethylase 1 (LSD1) during KSHV infection. KSHV infection was associated
with reduced LSD1 protein levels in TIGK cells, and both LSD1 knockdown and pharmacological
inhibition enhanced KSHV lytic gene expression and viral protein accumulation. Mechanistically,
LSD1 inhibition increased the enrichment of the activating histone modification H3K4
dimethylation at viral lytic gene promoters.
These results show that host metabolic reprogramming events and epigenetic regulation
support KSHV lytic infection in oral epithelial cells. Our work increases understanding of the
interaction between KSHV and its host and highlights host metabolic and chromatin-modifying
pathways as crucial regulators that support lytic infection. Identifying the cellular metabolic
pathways that KSHV manipulates can broaden the knowledge of how these pathways contribute to
sustaining lytic infection, which can be targeted in future therapies to prevent viral spread.
Description
the study of epigenetic and metabolomics of KSHV in oral epithelial cells
Keywords
Metabolomics, KSHV, Epigenetics
Citation
Alfaez, A.; Christopher, M.W.; Garrett, T.J.; Papp, B. Analysis of Metabolomic Reprogramming Induced by Infection with Kaposi’s Sarcoma-Associated Herpesvirus Using Untargeted Metabolomic Profiling. Int. J. Mol. Sci. 2025, 26, 3109.
