Varicella-zoster virus (VZV) is distinguished from herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) by the fact that cell-to-cell fusion and syncytium formation require only gH and gL within a transient-expression system. In the HSV system, four glycoproteins, namely, gH, gL, gB, and gD, are required to induce a similar fusogenic event. VZV lacks a gD homologous protein. In this report, the role of VZV gB as a fusogen was investigated and compared to the gH-gL complex. First of all, the VZV gH-gL experiment was repeated under a different set of conditions; namely, gH and gL were cloned into the same vaccinia virus (VV) genome. Surprisingly, the new expression system demonstrated that a recombinant VV-gH؉gL construct was even more fusogenic than seen in the prior experiment with two individual expression plasmids containing gH and gL (K. M. Duus and C. Grose, J. Virol. 70:8961-8971, 1996). Recombinant VV expressing VZV gB by itself, however, effected the formation of only small syncytia. When VZV gE and gB genes were cloned into one recombinant VV genome and another fusion assay was performed, extensive syncytium formation was observed. The degree of fusion with VZV gE-gB coexpression was comparable to that observed with VZV gH-gL: in both cases, >80% of the cells in a monolayer were fused. Thus, these studies established that VZV gE-gB coexpression greatly enhanced the fusogenic properties of gB. Control experiments documented that the fusion assay required a balance between the fusogenic potential of the VZV glycoproteins and the fusion-inhibitory effect of the VV infection itself.Varicella-zoster virus (VZV) is a highly fusogenic virus, but the degree of fusion is dependent on the cell substrate in which the virus is propagated (20). In human fibroblast cells, fusion formation is limited to a small number of nuclei per syncytium. In contrast, in human melanoma cells, all VZV strains examined to date exhibit fusion formation in which the entire monolayer is eventually involved. Polykaryon formation also occurs during primary VZV infection in human epidermal cells. Therefore, fusion formation appears to be related to cells of ectodermal origin (20). The question of which glycoproteins are involved in VZV-induced fusion was addressed in two earlier reports in which transfection studies were carried out with the VZV gH and gL genes (13,14). Transfection with gH alone caused little or no syncytium formation. In contrast, cotransfection with gH and gL genes led to multiple foci of fusion within the monolayer, where syncytia from 6 to 25 nuclei were easily detected. This set of experiments also documented the utility of confocal microscopy as an instrument to detect syncytium formation and glycoprotein expression within a polykaryon.Of interest, the VZV results differed markedly from the herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) data, which showed that cotransfection with four glycoprotein genes, namely those of gH, gL, gB, and gD, was required for syncytium formation (42,55). In the latter case, each syncytium often included 10 to 20 ...