scholarly journals Roles for the E4 orf6, orf3, and E1B 55-Kilodalton Proteins in Cell Cycle-Independent Adenovirus Replication

1999 ◽  
Vol 73 (9) ◽  
pp. 7474-7488 ◽  
Author(s):  
Felicia D. Goodrum ◽  
David A. Ornelles

ABSTRACT Adenoviruses bearing lesions in the E1B 55-kDa protein (E1B 55-kDa) gene are restricted by the cell cycle such that mutant virus growth is most impaired in cells infected during G1 and least restricted in cells infected during S phase (F. D. Goodrum and D. A. Ornelles, J. Virol. 71:548–561, 1997). A similar defect is reported here for E4 orf6-mutant viruses. An E4 orf3-mutant virus was not restricted for growth by the cell cycle. However, orf3 was required for enhanced growth of an E4 orf6-mutant virus in cells infected during S phase. The cell cycle restriction may be linked to virus-mediated mRNA transport because both E1B 55-kDa- and E4 orf6-mutant viruses are defective at regulating mRNA transport at late times of infection. Accordingly, the cytoplasmic-to-nuclear ratio of late viral mRNA was reduced in G1 cells infected with the mutant viruses compared to that in G1 cells infected with the wild-type virus. By contrast, this ratio was equivalent among cells infected during S phase with the wild-type or mutant viruses. Furthermore, cells infected during S phase with the E1B 55-kDa- or E4 orf6-mutant viruses synthesized more late viral protein than did cells infected during G1. However, the total amount of cytoplasmic late viral mRNA was greater in cells infected during G1 than in cells infected during S phase with either the wild-type or mutant viruses, indicating that enhanced transport of viral mRNA in cells infected during S phase cannot account for the difference in yields in cells infected during S phase and in cells infected during G1. Thus, additional factors affect the cell cycle restriction. These results indicate that the E4 orf6 and orf3 proteins, in addition to the E1B 55-kDa protein, may cooperate to promote cell cycle-independent adenovirus growth.

1998 ◽  
Vol 72 (12) ◽  
pp. 9479-9490 ◽  
Author(s):  
Felicia D. Goodrum ◽  
David A. Ornelles

ABSTRACT The ability of the adenovirus type 5 E1B 55-kDa mutantsdl1520 and dl338 to replicate efficiently and independently of the cell cycle, to synthesis viral DNA, and to lyse infected cells did not correlate with the status of p53 in seven cell lines examined. Rather, cell cycle-independent replication and virus-induced cell killing correlated with permissivity to viral replication. This correlation extended to S-phase HeLa cells, which were more susceptible to virus-induced cell killing by the E1B 55-kDa mutant virus than HeLa cells infected during G1. Wild-type p53 had only a modest effect on E1B mutant virus yields in H1299 cells expressing a temperature-sensitive p53 allele. The defect in E1B 55-kDa mutant virus replication resulting from reduced temperature was as much as 10-fold greater than the defect due to p53 function. At 39°C, the E1B 55-kDa mutant viruses produced wild-type yields of virus and replicated independently of the cell cycle. In addition, the E1B 55-kDa mutant viruses directed the synthesis of late viral proteins to levels equivalent to the wild-type virus level at 39°C. We have previously shown that the defect in mutant virus replication can also be overcome by infecting HeLa cells during S phase. Taken together, these results indicate that the capacity of the E1B 55-kDa mutant virus to replicate independently of the cell cycle does not correlate with the status of p53 but is determined by yet unidentified mechanisms. The cold-sensitive nature of the defect of the E1B 55-kDa mutant virus in both late gene expression and cell cycle-independent replication leads us to speculate that these functions of the E1B 55-kDa protein may be linked.


2007 ◽  
Vol 81 (18) ◽  
pp. 10064-10071 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jean Dahl ◽  
H. Isaac Chen ◽  
Michael George ◽  
Thomas L. Benjamin

ABSTRACT Minichromosomes of wild-type polyomavirus were previously shown to be highly acetylated on histones H3 and H4 compared either to bulk cell chromatin or to viral chromatin of nontransforming hr-t mutants, which are defective in both the small T and middle T antigens. A series of site-directed virus mutants have been used along with antibodies to sites of histone modifications to further investigate the state of viral chromatin and its dependence on the T antigens. Small T but not middle T was important in hyperacetylation at major sites in H3 and H4. Mutants blocked in middle T signaling pathways but encoding normal small T showed a hyperacetylated pattern similar to that of wild-type virus. The hyperacetylation defect of hr-t mutant NG59 was partially complemented by growth of the mutant in cells expressing wild-type small T. In contrast to the hypoacetylated state of NG59, NG59 minichromosomes were hypermethylated at specific lysines in H3 and also showed a higher level of phosphorylation at H3ser10, a modification associated with the late G2 and M phases of the cell cycle. Comparisons of virus growth kinetics and cell cycle progression in wild-type- and NG59-infected cells showed a correlation between the phase of the cell cycle at which virus assembly occurred and histone modifications in the progeny virus. Replication and assembly of wild-type virus were completed largely during S phase. Growth of NG59 was delayed by about 12 h with assembly occurring predominately in G2. These results suggest that small T affects modifications of viral chromatin by altering the temporal coordination of virus growth and the cell cycle.


2004 ◽  
Vol 15 (12) ◽  
pp. 5659-5669 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael Shapira ◽  
Eran Segal ◽  
David Botstein

The effects of oxidative stress on yeast cell cycle depend on the stress-exerting agent. We studied the effects of two oxidative stress agents, hydrogen peroxide (HP) and the superoxide-generating agent menadione (MD). We found that two small coexpressed groups of genes regulated by the Mcm1-Fkh2-Ndd1 transcription regulatory complex are sufficient to account for the difference in the effects of HP and MD on the progress of the cell cycle, namely, G1 arrest with MD and an S phase delay followed by a G2/M arrest with HP. Support for this hypothesis is provided by fkh1fkh2 double mutants, which are affected by MD as we find HP affects wild-type cells. The apparent involvement of a forkhead protein in HP-induced cell cycle arrest, similar to that reported for Caenorhabditis elegans and human, describes a potentially novel stress response pathway in yeast.


1998 ◽  
Vol 72 (5) ◽  
pp. 4250-4264 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lily Yeh Lee ◽  
Priscilla A. Schaffer

ABSTRACT The herpes simplex virus type 1 L/S junction-spanning transcripts (L/STs) are a family of multisized transcripts expressed at high levels in cells infected with mutant viruses that (i) do not express ICP4, (ii) specify forms of ICP4 unable to bind to the consensus ICP4 binding site, or (iii) contain mutations in the ICP4 binding site located at the transcriptional start site of the L/STs. By extension, the failure to detect the L/STs in wild-type virus-infected cells is due to the repressive effect of ICP4 bound to its cognate binding site upstream of the L/ST transcription initiation site. ORF-P, the first and largest open reading frame (ORF) encoded by the L/STs, overlaps >90% of the ORF encoding ORF-34.5, a putative neurovirulence factor, which is transcribed from the opposite DNA strand. Viruses with mutations in the overlapping region of ORF-P and ICP34.5 exhibit premature shutoff of infected-cell protein synthesis and are highly attenuated following intracranial inoculation of juvenile mice. To determine whether the premature protein shutoff and neuroattenuated phenotypes of ORF-P ORF-34.5 double mutants are a consequence of alterations in ORF-P, ORF-34.5, or both, viruses containing mutations only in ORF-P or only in the ICP4 binding site in the L/ST promoter were isolated and characterized. Mutant virus L/ST-n38 contains a single-base-pair transition mutation in ORF-P codon 38, resulting in translational termination of the ORF-P protein (OPP). This mutation does not alter the amino acid sequence of ICP34.5. Expression of a truncated form of OPP by mutant virus L/ST-n38 did not result in premature shutoff of infected-cell protein synthesis and produced no other observable phenotype relative to wild-type virus in in vitro tests. Moreover, the 50% lethal dose (LD50) of L/ST-n38 was comparable to that of wild-type virus following intracranial inoculation of 3-week-old mice, as were the latency and reactivation phenotypes of the virus. These properties of L/ST-n38 indicate that the attenuated phenotype of ORF-P ORF-34.5 double mutants is a consequence of mutations that affect the function of ICP34.5 and not the function of OPP. Mutant virus L/ST-4BS contains four single-base-pair substitutions in the ICP4 binding site in the L/ST promoter that abrogate the binding of ICP4 to this site, leading to high-level expression of the L/STs and OPP. L/ST-4BS induced premature shutoff of viral and cellular protein synthesis and was slightly growth restricted in cells of neural lineage (SK-N-SH human neuroblastoma cells) but was wild type for these two parameters in cells of nonneural lineage (immortalized primate Vero cells). Of particular interest was the observation that L/ST-4BS exhibited cell-type-specific expression of both the γ134.5 transcripts and the latency-associated transcripts (LATs). Thus, expression of these transcripts was barely detectable in cells of neural lineage (NB41A3 mouse neuroblastoma cells) but was wild type in Vero cells. In vivo, L/ST-4BS was reactivated from mouse trigeminal ganglia with reduced efficiency and delayed kinetics relative to wild-type virus. L/ST-4BS was completely attenuated for neurovirulence (LD50 > 106 PFU) relative to wild-type virus (LD50 < 900 PFU), although the four single-base-pair substitutions lie outside the coding region for the neurovirulence factor, ICP34.5. Collectively, the complex in vitro and in vivo phenotypes of L/ST-4BS can be attributed to (i) disruptions of the ICP4 binding site in the L/ST promoter and subsequent overexpression of the L/STs and OPP; (ii) alterations in ORF-O, which is also mutated in L/ST-4BS; or (iii) alterations in other cryptic genes or cis-acting elements.


2008 ◽  
Vol 82 (17) ◽  
pp. 8500-8508 ◽  
Author(s):  
Haiyan Li ◽  
Kazufumi Ikuta ◽  
John W. Sixbey ◽  
Scott A. Tibbetts

ABSTRACT Murine gammaherpesvirus 68 (γHV68 or MHV68) is genetically related to the human gammaherpesviruses Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) and Kaposi's sarcoma-associated herpesvirus (KSHV), providing a useful system for in vivo studies of the virus-host relationship. To begin to address fundamental questions about the mechanisms of the establishment of gammaherpesvirus latency, we previously generated a replication-defective γHV68 lacking the expression of the single-stranded DNA binding protein encoded by orf6. In work presented here, we demonstrate that this mutant virus established a long-term infection in vivo that was molecularly identical to wild-type virus latency. Thus, despite the absence of an acute phase of lytic replication, the mutant virus established a chronic infection in which the viral genome (i) was maintained as an episome and (ii) expressed latency-associated, but not lytic replication-associated, genes. Macrophages purified from mice infected with the replication-defective virus harbored viral genome at a frequency that was nearly identical to that of wild-type γHV68; however, the frequency of B cells harboring viral genome was greatly reduced in the absence of lytic replication. Thus, this replication-defective gammaherpesvirus efficiently established in vivo infection in macrophages that was molecularly indistinguishable from wild-type virus latency. These data point to a critical role for lytic replication or reactivation in the establishment or maintenance of latent infection in B cells.


1994 ◽  
Vol 125 (3) ◽  
pp. 625-638 ◽  
Author(s):  
J Lukas ◽  
H Müller ◽  
J Bartkova ◽  
D Spitkovsky ◽  
A A Kjerulff ◽  
...  

The retinoblastoma gene product (pRB) participates in the regulation of the cell division cycle through complex formation with numerous cellular regulatory proteins including the potentially oncogenic cyclin D1. Extending the current view of the emerging functional interplay between pRB and D-type cyclins, we now report that cyclin D1 expression is positively regulated by pRB. Cyclin D1 mRNA and protein is specifically downregulated in cells expressing SV40 large T antigen, adenovirus E1A, and papillomavirus E7/E6 oncogene products and this effect requires intact RB-binding, CR2 domain of E1A. Exceptionally low expression of cyclin D1 is also seen in genetically RB-deficient cell lines, in which ectopically expressed wild-type pRB results in specific induction of this G1 cyclin. At the functional level, antibody-mediated cyclin D1 knockout experiments demonstrate that the cyclin D1 protein, normally required for G1 progression, is dispensable for passage through the cell cycle in cell lines whose pRB is inactivated through complex formation with T antigen, E1A, or E7 oncoproteins as well as in cells which have suffered loss-of-function mutations of the RB gene. The requirement for cyclin D1 function is not regained upon experimental elevation of cyclin D1 expression in cells with mutant RB, while reintroduction of wild-type RB into RB-deficient cells leads to restoration of the cyclin D1 checkpoint. These results strongly suggest that pRB serves as a major target of cyclin D1 whose cell cycle regulatory function becomes dispensable in cells lacking functional RB. Based on available data including this study, we propose a model for an autoregulatory feedback loop mechanism that regulates both the expression of the cyclin D1 gene and the activity of pRB, thereby contributing to a G1 phase checkpoint control in cycling mammalian cells.


1999 ◽  
Vol 340 (1) ◽  
pp. 135-141 ◽  
Author(s):  
Parisa DANAIE ◽  
Michael ALTMANN ◽  
Michael N. HALL ◽  
Hans TRACHSEL ◽  
Stephen B. HELLIWELL

The essential cap-binding protein (eIF4E) of Saccharomycescerevisiae is encoded by the CDC33 (wild-type) gene, originally isolated as a mutant, cdc33-1, which arrests growth in the G1 phase of the cell cycle at 37 °C. We show that other cdc33 mutants also arrest in G1. One of the first events required for G1-to-S-phase progression is the increased expression of cyclin 3. Constructs carrying the 5ʹ-untranslated region of CLN3 fused to lacZ exhibit weak reporter activity, which is significantly decreased in a cdc33-1 mutant, implying that CLN3 mRNA is an inefficiently translated mRNA that is sensitive to perturbations in the translation machinery. A cdc33-1 strain expressing either stable Cln3p (Cln3-1p) or a hybrid UBI4 5ʹ-CLN3 mRNA, whose translation displays decreased dependence on eIF4E, arrested randomly in the cell cycle. In these cells CLN2 mRNA levels remained high, indicating that Cln3p activity is maintained. Induction of a hybrid UBI4 5ʹ-CLN3 message in a cdc33-1 mutant previously arrested in G1 also caused entry into a new cell cycle. We conclude that eIF4E activity in the G1-phase is critical in allowing sufficient Cln3p activity to enable yeast cells to enter a new cell cycle.


2000 ◽  
Vol 74 (7) ◽  
pp. 3353-3365 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chi-Long Lin ◽  
Che-Sheng Chung ◽  
Hans G. Heine ◽  
Wen Chang

ABSTRACT An immunodominant antigen, p35, is expressed on the envelope of intracellular mature virions (IMV) of vaccinia virus. p35 is encoded by the viral late gene H3L, but its role in the virus life cycle is not known. This report demonstrates that soluble H3L protein binds to heparan sulfate on the cell surface and competes with the binding of vaccinia virus, indicating a role for H3L protein in IMV adsorption to mammalian cells. A mutant virus defective in expression of H3L (H3L−) was constructed; the mutant virus has a small plaque phenotype and 10-fold lower IMV and extracellular enveloped virion titers than the wild-type virus. Virion morphogenesis is severely blocked and intermediate viral structures such as viral factories and crescents accumulate in cells infected with the H3L− mutant virus. IMV from the H3L− mutant virus are somewhat altered and less infectious than wild-type virions. However, cells infected by the mutant virus form multinucleated syncytia after low pH treatment, suggesting that H3L protein is not required for cell fusion. Mice inoculated intranasally with wild-type virus show high mortality and severe weight loss, whereas mice infected with H3L− mutant virus survive and recover faster, indicating that inactivation of the H3L gene attenuates virus virulence in vivo. In summary, these data indicate that H3L protein mediates vaccinia virus adsorption to cell surface heparan sulfate and is important for vaccinia virus infection in vitro and in vivo. In addition, H3L protein plays a role in virion assembly.


2016 ◽  
Vol 90 (6) ◽  
pp. 3229-3242 ◽  
Author(s):  
Young-Eui Kim ◽  
Se Eun Oh ◽  
Ki Mun Kwon ◽  
Chan Hee Lee ◽  
Jin-Hyun Ahn

ABSTRACTHuman cytomegalovirus (HCMV) protein pUL48 is closely associated with the capsid and has a deubiquitinating protease (DUB) activity in its N-terminal region. Although this DUB activity moderately increases virus replication in cultured fibroblast cells, the requirements of the N-terminal region of pUL48 in the viral replication cycle are not fully understood. In this study, we characterized the recombinant viruses encoding UL48(ΔDUB/NLS), which lacks the DUB domain and the adjacent nuclear localization signal (NLS), UL48(ΔDUB), which lacks only the DUB, and UL48(Δ360–1200), which lacks the internal region (amino acids 360 to 1200) downstream of the DUB/NLS. While ΔDUB/NLS and Δ360–1200 mutant viruses did not grow in fibroblasts, the ΔDUB virus replicated to titers 100-fold lower than those for wild-type virus and showed substantially reduced viral gene expression at low multiplicities of infection. The DUB domain contained ubiquitination sites, and DUB activity reduced its own proteasomal degradation intrans. Deletion of the DUB domain did not affect the nuclear and cytoplasmic localization of pUL48, whereas the internal region (360–1200) was necessary for cytoplasmic distribution. In coimmunoprecipitation assays, pUL48 interacted with three tegument proteins (pUL47, pUL45, and pUL88) and two capsid proteins (pUL77 and pUL85) but the DUB domain contributed to only pUL85 binding. Furthermore, we found that the ΔDUB virus showed reduced virion stability and less efficiently delivered its genome into the cell than the wild-type virus. Collectively, our results demonstrate that the N-terminal DUB domain of pUL48 contributes to efficient viral growth by regulating its own stability and promoting virion stabilization and virus entry.IMPORTANCEHCMV pUL48 and its herpesvirus homologs play key roles in virus entry, regulation of immune signaling pathways, and virion assembly. The N terminus of pUL48 contains the DUB domain, which is well conserved among all herpesviruses. Although studies using the active-site mutant viruses revealed that the DUB activity promotes viral growth, the exact role of this region in the viral life cycle is not fully understood. In this study, using the mutant virus lacking the entire DUB domain, we demonstrate that the DUB domain of pUL48 contributes to viral growth by regulating its own stability via autodeubiquitination and promoting virion stability and virus entry. This report is the first to demonstrate the characteristics of the mutant virus with the entire DUB domain deleted, which, along with information on the functions of this region, is useful in dissecting the functions associated with pUL48.


2015 ◽  
Vol 90 (3) ◽  
pp. 1169-1177 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jason Porta ◽  
Vidya Mangala Prasad ◽  
Cheng-I Wang ◽  
Wataru Akahata ◽  
Lisa F. P. Ng ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTChikungunya virus is a positive-stranded RNA alphavirus. Structures of chikungunya virus-like particles in complex with strongly neutralizing antibody Fab fragments (8B10 and 5F10) were determined using cryo-electron microscopy and X-ray crystallography. By fitting the crystallographically determined structures of these Fab fragments into the cryo-electron density maps, we show that Fab fragments of antibody 8B10 extend radially from the viral surface and block receptor binding on the E2 glycoprotein. In contrast, Fab fragments of antibody 5F10 bind the tip of the E2 B domain and lie tangentially on the viral surface. Fab 5F10 fixes the B domain rigidly to the surface of the virus, blocking exposure of the fusion loop on glycoprotein E1 and therefore preventing the virus from becoming fusogenic. Although Fab 5F10 can neutralize the wild-type virus, it can also bind to a mutant virus without inhibiting fusion or attachment. Although the mutant virus is no longer able to propagate by extracellular budding, it can, however, enter the next cell by traveling through junctional complexes without being intercepted by a neutralizing antibody to the wild-type virus, thus clarifying how cell-to-cell transmission can occur.IMPORTANCEAlphaviral infections are transmitted mainly by mosquitoes. Chikungunya virus (CHIKV), which belongs to theAlphavirusgenus, has a wide distribution in the Old World that has expanded in recent years into the Americas. There are currently no vaccines or drugs against alphaviral infections. Therefore, a better understanding of CHIKV and its associated neutralizing antibodies will aid in the development of effective treatments.


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