Picture of Donald Coen

Donald Mark Coen, Ph.D.

Professor of Biological Chemistry and Molecular Pharmacology

Our laboratory takes molecular approaches to herpesvirus replication and latency. Current projects focus on the biogenesis, mechanisms of repression, and biological roles of viral microRNAs during HSV infection.

Research:

Our laboratory takes molecular approaches to herpesvirus replication and latency.  These studies provide excellent models for biological processes in eukaryotic cells and, because herpesviruses such as herpes simplex virus (HSV) and human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) are important pathogens, to exploit differences between herpesvirus and cellular processes for safe and effective antiviral therapy.   Areas of research include:

Novel post-transcriptional regulatory mechanisms.  Current projects focus on the biogenesis, mechanisms of repression, and biological roles of viral microRNAs during HSV infection.

Herpesvirus DNA replication proteins:  Projects include determining the 3-D structures of these proteins (with the Hogle lab), and the roles of poorly understood structural domains, and exploring their interactions with each other, cellular proteins, and nucleic acids via biochemical, mutational, and biophysical approaches, including (with the Loparo and Golan labs) single molecule methods.   These studies should permit detailed understanding of these complicated proteins and rational drug design.

Nuclear egress:  How do HCMV nucleocapsids move towards and gain access to the inner nuclear membrane, and bud through it?  Projects include biochemical and biophysical studies of a viral enzyme that mimics cyclin-dependent kinase and of a nuclear egress complex (in collaboration with the Hogle lab), and molecular genetic and cell biological studies of these proteins' functions in infected cells.

Drug targets and development of new therapies.   Aside from studies of established drug targets (herpesvirus DNA polymerases and the HCMV protein kinase), projects include discovering new antiviral drugs that inhibit protein-protein interactions, and finding new drug targets by a combination of "chemical genetic" and molecular genetic approaches.

HSV latency/pathogenesis.  HSV forms latent infections that persist for the life of the host.  How this occurs is biologically fascinating and clinically important.  Projects entail molecular genetic, and PCR-basedmethods to explore viral gene regulation especially how viral and host microRNAs repress viral gene expression, thereby maintaining latency.

Address: 

Room SGM - 304

250 Longwood Avenue

Boston, MA 02115

Publications View
Human thymidine kinase can functionally replace herpes simplex virus type 1 thymidine kinase for viral replication in mouse sensory ganglia and reactivation from latency upon explant.
Authors: Authors: Chen SH, Cook WJ, Grove KL, Coen DM.
J Virol
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white+ transgene insertions presenting a dorsal/ventral pattern define a single cluster of homeobox genes that is silenced by the polycomb-group proteins in Drosophila melanogaster.
Authors: Authors: Netter S, Fauvarque MO, Diez del Corral R, Dura JM, Coen D.
Genetics
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Human cytomegalovirus mutant with sequence-dependent resistance to the phosphorothioate oligonucleotide fomivirsen (ISIS 2922).
Authors: Authors: Mulamba GB, Hu A, Azad RF, Anderson KP, Coen DM.
Antimicrob Agents Chemother
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The persistence of (HIV in) memory (T cells).
Authors: Authors: Coen DM.
Trends Microbiol
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Importance of the herpes simplex virus UL24 gene for productive ganglionic infection in mice.
Authors: Authors: Jacobson JG, Chen SH, Cook WJ, Kramer MF, Coen DM.
Virology
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Accumulation of viral transcripts and DNA during establishment of latency by herpes simplex virus.
Authors: Authors: Kramer MF, Chen SH, Knipe DM, Coen DM.
J Virol
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Penciclovir and pathogenesis phenotypes of drug-resistant Herpes simplex virus mutants.
Authors: Authors: Pelosi E, Mulamba GB, Coen DM.
Antiviral Res
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Effects of mutations in the Exo III motif of the herpes simplex virus DNA polymerase gene on enzyme activities, viral replication, and replication fidelity.
Authors: Authors: Hwang YT, Liu BY, Coen DM, Hwang CB.
J Virol
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A viral function represses accumulation of transcripts from productive-cycle genes in mouse ganglia latently infected with herpes simplex virus.
Authors: Authors: Chen SH, Kramer MF, Schaffer PA, Coen DM.
J Virol
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The human cytomegalovirus UL97 protein is a protein kinase that autophosphorylates on serines and threonines.
Authors: Authors: He Z, He YS, Kim Y, Chu L, Ohmstede C, Biron KK, Coen DM.
J Virol
View full abstract on Pubmed