c Replacement of the herpes simplex virus 1 small capsid protein VP26 phosphorylation site Thr-111 with alanine reduced viral replication and neurovirulence to levels observed with the VP26 null mutation. This mutation reduced VP26 expression and mislocalized VP26 and its binding partner, the major capsid protein VP5, in the nucleus. VP5 mislocalization was also observed with the VP26 null mutation. Thus, we postulate that phosphorylation of VP26 at Thr-111 regulates VP26 function in vitro and in vivo. V iral capsids encase and protect viral genomes, and they enable release of viral genomes into newly infected cells (1). In infected cells, viral capsid proteins also perform important additional roles in regulating viral replicative processes, such as viral gene expression, genome replication, trafficking and maturation of virions, and inhibiting host defenses (i.e., immune response and apoptosis), and in modifying host cellular machinery to establish an environment for effective viral replication, i.e., host cellular signaling and cell cycle control (2-6). The fact that the capsid proteins of various viruses are phosphorylated in infected cells is well established (7-13). It has been reported that phosphorylation of viral capsid proteins regulates both subcellular localization and functions including transcriptional regulation, viral uncoating, and nucleic acid chaperone activity (7-13). These observations hold true in the life cycle of various viruses, including human immunodeficiency virus, hepatitis B virus, hepatitis C virus, and severe acute respiratory syndrome virus (7-13).Herpes simplex virus 1 (HSV-1), the subject of this study, is one of the best-studied members of the Herpesviridae family (herpesviruses) (14). All herpesvirus capsids, which contain genomic DNA and are able to mature into infectious virus (C capsids), share common structural features: an icosahedral shape with a diameter of 125 nm and consist of 161 capsomers (150 hexons and 11 pentons), a portal complex which has an axial channel through which viral genome DNA enters and exits the capsid, 320 triplexes which connect each of the capsomers and the portal complex, small capsomere-interacting proteins (SCP), and capsid vertexspecific components (CVSC) (15, 16). In HSV-1, the hexons and pentons consist of 6 and 5 molecules of VP5, respectively; the triplexes consist of one VP19C and two VP23 molecules, the portal complex consists of 12 molecules of UL6, the SCP is VP26 (which interacts with each of the VP5 molecules in the hexon), and the CVSC consists of one molecule of UL17 and one of UL25 (15-21). All of these HSV-1 capsid proteins are conserved in the Herpesviridae family, and all have been reported to be phosphorylated in HSV-1-infected cells (22)(23)(24)(25). However, there is a lack of information on the significance of phosphorylation in HSV-1 capsid proteins, and those of other herpesviruses, in viral replication and pathogenesis.Recently, Bell et al. reported that a large-scale, phosphoproteomic analysis of HSV-1-infected murine ...