# The Requirement of Turkey Herpesvirus (HVT) Glycoprotein C During Natural Infection in Chickens and Turkeys

**Authors:** Huai Xu, Widaliz Vega-Rodriguez, Kathrine Van Etten, Keith Jarosinski

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/pathogens14060538 · Pathogens · 2025-05-28

## TL;DR

This study shows that glycoprotein C is essential for turkey herpesvirus transmission in turkeys but not in chickens, and that a related virus's protein can substitute for it.

## Contribution

The study demonstrates that turkey herpesvirus glycoprotein C is required for transmission in turkeys and can be functionally replaced by a related virus's protein.

## Key findings

- HVT glycoprotein C is essential for turkey-to-turkey transmission but not for chicken-to-chicken transmission.
- Replacing HVT gC with MDV gC restored transmission in turkeys, showing functional conservation of gC across alphaherpesviruses.
- Deleting HVT gC blocked transmission in turkeys, but transmission was rescued by reintroducing HVT gC or MDV gC.

## Abstract

The glycoprotein C (gC) of gallid alphaherpesvirus 2—better known as Marek’s disease (MD) virus (MDV)—and gallid alphaherpesvirus 3 is required for horizontal transmission in chickens. Since gC is conserved within the Alphaherpesvirinae subfamily, we hypothesized that gC was also essential for the horizontal transmission of meleagrid alphaherpesvirus 1 (MeAHV1) or turkey herpesvirus (HVT). To test this hypothesis, we generated a fluorescent protein-tagged clone of recombinant (r)HVT (vHVT47G), removed the open reading frame of HVT gC from the genome (vHΔgC), and rescued the deletion by inserting an HA-epitope tagged HVT gC (vHΔgC-R) to test their ability to transmit in chickens and turkeys. We also tested whether MDV gC could compensate for HVT gC during transmission, where HVT gC was replaced with MDV gC (vH-MDVgC). Although all viruses replicated in chickens, none spread from chicken to chicken. However, when tested in turkeys, all viruses except vHΔgC transmitted from turkey to turkey. Importantly, the rescuent virus (vHΔgC-R) and HVT expressing MDV gC (vH-MDVgC) rescued transmission, showing that HVT gC is required and MDV gC can compensate for HVT gC for turkey-to-turkey transmission. These data confirm the host-specific transmission of HVT in turkeys and suggest that the essential function of alphaherpesvirus gC proteins is conserved. This information can be exploited while generating future vaccines against MD that will affect the poultry industry worldwide.

## Linked entities

- **Genes:** GC (GC vitamin D binding protein) [NCBI Gene 2638]
- **Diseases:** Marek’s disease (MONDO:0016101)
- **Species:** Gallus gallus (taxon 9031), Meleagris gallopavo (taxon 9103)

## Full-text entities

- **Species:** Meleagris gallopavo (common turkey, species) [taxon 9103], Gallid alphaherpesvirus 2 (Marek disease virus type 1, no rank) [taxon 10390], Gallid alphaherpesvirus 3 (no rank) [taxon 35250], Meleagrid alphaherpesvirus 1 (herpesvirus of turkeys, no rank) [taxon 37108], Gallus gallus (bantam, species) [taxon 9031]

## Full text

_Full body text omitted from this summary view._ Fetch the complete paper as Markdown: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12195939/full.md

## Figures

3 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12195939/full.md

## References

36 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12195939/full.md

---
Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12195939