Highly pure (>95%) terminally differentiated neurons derived from pluripotent stem cells appear healthy at 2 weeks after infection with varicella-zoster virus (VZV), and the cell culture medium contains no infectious virus. Analysis of the healthy-appearing neurons revealed VZV DNA, transcripts, and proteins corresponding to the VZV immediate early, early, and late kinetic phases of replication. Herein, we further characterized virus in these neuronal cells, focusing on (i) transcription and expression of late VZV glycoprotein C (gC) open reading frame 14 (ORF14) and (ii) ultrastructural features of virus particles in neurons. The analysis showed that gC was not expressed in most infected neurons and gC expression was markedly reduced in a minority of VZV-infected neurons. In contrast, expression of the early-late VZV gE glycoprotein (ORF68) was abundant. Transcript analysis also showed decreased gC transcription compared with gE. Examination of viral structure by high-resolution transmission electron microscopy revealed fewer viral particles than typically observed in cells productively infected with VZV. Furthermore, viral particles were more aberrant, in that most capsids in the nuclei lacked a dense core and most enveloped particles in the cytoplasm were light particles (envelopes without capsids). Together, these results suggest a considerable deficiency in late-phase replication and viral assembly during VZV infection of neurons in culture.V aricella-zoster virus (VZV) is an exclusively human neurotropic alphaherpesvirus. Primary infection usually produces varicella (chickenpox), after which virus becomes latent in ganglionic neurons along the entire neuraxis, revealing a unique nonlytic relationship of VZV with neurons, in contrast to productive infection of cells derived from other organs (1). Initial attempts to explore the VZV-neuron relationship were done with human ganglionic cells cultured in vitro and experimentally infected with VZV. While both neurons and nonneuronal cells became infected, productive infection of nonneuronal cells resulted in destruction of the entire culture (2, 3). Later studies in which VZV-infected human fetal fibroblasts were cocultivated with explanted human fetal dorsal root ganglia indicated that neurons were resistant to apoptosis (4). Recently, heterogeneous cultures derived from human embryonic stem cells that contained neurons were infected with VZV, but again productive infection ensued, presumably due to the presence of a significant proportion of nonneuronal cells (5). When differentiated human neural stem cells that were Ͼ90% neurons based on immunostaining were infected with VZV, no cytopathic effect developed, and VZV DNA, virus-specific transcripts, and proteins were detected in healthy-appearing neurons (6). Similarly, weeks after VZV infection of cultures containing Ͼ95% terminally differentiated human neurons derived from pluripotent stem cells, the neurons appeared healthy, and the tissue culture medium did not contain infectious virus (7); none of the cell...