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Journal of Virology, October 1998, p. 7916-7925, Vol. 72, No. 10
Cancer Research Campaign, Section of
Molecular Genetics, Paterson Institute for Cancer Research,
Christie Hospital, Manchester M20 4BX, United Kingdom
Received 11 May 1998/Accepted 24 June 1998
Adeno-associated virus (AAV) is a human parvovirus of the genus
Dependovirus. AAV replication is largely restricted to
cells which are coinfected with a helper virus. In the absence of a helper virus, the AAV genome can integrate into a specific chromosomal site where it remains latent until reactivated by superinfection of the
host cell with an appropriate helper virus. Replication functions of
AAV have been mapped to the Rep68 and Rep78 gene products. Rep proteins
demonstrate DNA binding, endonuclease, and helicase activities and are
involved in regulation of transcription from both AAV and heterologous
promoters. AAV has been associated with suppression of oncogenicity in
a range of viral and nonviral tumors. In this study we sought to
identify and study cellular protein targets of AAV Rep, in order to
develop a better understanding of the various activities of Rep. We
used the yeast two-hybrid system to identify HeLa cell proteins that
interact with AAV type 2 Rep78. We isolated several strongly
interacting clones which were subsequently identified as PRKX
(previously named PKX1), a recently described homolog of the protein
kinase A (PKA) catalytic subunit (PKAc). The interaction
was confirmed in vitro by using pMal-Rep pull-down assays. The region
of Rep78 which interacts was mapped to a C-terminal zinc finger-like
domain; Rep68, which lacks this domain, did not interact with PRKX.
PRKX demonstrated autophosphorylation and kinase activity towards
histone H1 and a PKA oligopeptide target. Autophosphorylation was
inhibited by interaction with Rep78. In transfection assays, a PRKX
expression vector was shown to be capable of activating CREB-dependent
transcription. This activation was suppressed by Rep78 but not by
Rep68. Since PRKX is a close homolog of PKAc, we
investigated whether Rep78 could interact directly with
PKAc. pMal-Rep78 was found to associate with purified
PKAc and inhibited its kinase activity. Cotransfection experiments demonstrated that Rep78 could block the activation of CREB
by a PKAc expression vector. These experiments suggest that
AAV may perturb normal cyclic AMP response pathways in
infected cells.
Adeno-associated virus (AAV) is a
human parvovirus that, for its replication, usually requires that its
host cell is coinfected with a helper virus, usually an adenovirus or
herpesvirus. Infection with AAV in the absence of a helper virus can
result in integration of the viral genome into a specific site on
chromosome 19. The provirus then enters a latent state until it is
reactivated by superinfection of the host cell with a helper virus or
by genotoxic stress (for a review, see reference 5).
AAV appears to be nonpathogenic in humans; in fact, seropositivity to
AAV has been shown epidemiologically to be a protective factor against
the development of carcinoma of the uterine cervix (14, 36).
Recent data suggest that the cervical neoplasia-associated human
papillomaviruses may act as helper viruses for AAV in vivo
(53).
The AAV type 2 (AAV2) genome comprises a single-stranded DNA
molecule of approximately 4.7 kb which can be divided into early (Rep)
and late (Cap) regions (49a). The genome is bounded by inverted terminal repeats (ITRs) which provide the viral origins of
replication. The Rep region encodes four related proteins through usage
of two promoters and differential splicing. The p5 promoter drives the
expression of Rep78 and Rep68, which differ at their C termini due to
differential splicing. An internal promoter, p19, directs the
synthesis of Rep52 and Rep40, which correspond to the C-terminal
regions of Rep78 and Rep68, respectively. The Rep68/78 proteins are
essential for the replication of AAV and possess ATP-dependent DNA
helicase, site-specific endonuclease, and viral origin of
replication binding activities (2, 23, 38, 58).
Rep68/78 proteins also bind to the chromosome 19 integration sites
and mediate the integration of AAV into the chromosome (27, 35,
57). The Rep40/52 proteins do not bind DNA directly but appear to
be required for the accumulation and encapsidation of single-stranded
genomes.
Rep proteins also have roles in regulating AAV gene expression.
In addition to binding the viral ITRs, a Rep68/78-specific binding site
occurs in the p5 promoter (37). In the absence of a
helper virus infection, Rep synthesis is tightly repressed; however, in the presence of a helper, both Rep and Cap gene expression is induced. This switch appears to be integrated through the
activities of the Rep proteins (32). In the absence of a
helper virus, Rep68/78 binding to the p5 promoter site may inhibit
transcription by physical occlusion of promoter elements
(30). Rep can also inhibit transcription from the p19
promoter in the absence of direct binding to promoter-proximal
elements, in a manner that requires an intact Rep nucleotide binding
site (22, 29). This suggests that Rep suppression of the p19
promoter is probably mediated through protein-protein interactions.
During productive infection, Rep acts as a powerful transactivator of
the p19 and p40 promoters, and displacement of Rep68/78 from the p5
promoter binding site may act to derepress this promoter (30, 32,
45). Rep40/52 proteins may act to derepress the p5 promoter by
entering into complexes with the larger Rep proteins, reducing their
DNA binding activities (45). Rep78, -68, and -52 proteins have the capacity to down regulate gene expression from a
variety of heterologous promoters, most of which do not contain
sequence homologies with the p5 and ITR Rep binding sites (18,
19, 22, 31, 42, 48). It appears that DNA binding of Rep to
specific sites is unlikely to account for transcriptional repression in
such cases, and this again suggests that Rep proteins can mediate
transcriptional silencer effects via protein-protein interactions.
AAV has also been shown to inhibit oncogenic transformation in vitro,
and in many cases this property has been mapped to the Rep proteins.
Cotransfection of Rep78-expressing plasmids inhibited transformation by
adenovirus E1a+ras, simian virus 40, bovine papillomavirus,
and human papillomavirus (17, 19, 25). AAV DNA, when
integrated into HeLa cells, resulted in decreased growth, increased anchorage dependence, and enhanced sensitivity to growth factor withdrawal, tumor necrosis factor alpha, or genotoxic agents (51, 52). There is evidence for AAV-induced cell cycle
blocks at both the G1 and G2 phases of the cell
cycle (3, 62). Cells arrested by AAV contain
hypophosphorylated Rb and express elevated levels of p21/waf-1/cip-1
protein, which is induced in a p53-independent manner. It is not yet
clear whether the up regulation of p21 is a function of the Rep
proteins (16). The molecular mechanisms and cellular targets
of oncosuppression by AAV are not well understood.
The helper virus functions which are required for AAV replication
have been identified for adenovirus and herpes simplex virus (HSV) type 2. The adenovirus E1a, E1b, E2a, E4, and VA genes are sufficient for helper virus function (60). For HSV type 1 the ICP4 transactivator, DNA polymerase, ICP8, origin binding
protein, and helicase-primase complex have been implicated
(40, 56). During its replication cycle, AAV can inhibit
production of its helper virus (4, 8, 9). The mechanisms
underlying interference with helper virus replication have not been
determined. One report indicated that posttranscriptional down
regulation of adenovirus E1b may be involved (43).
The various activities of AAV Rep are likely mediated in part through
contacts between the Rep proteins and host cell proteins. It has been
shown previously that Rep can interact with itself to form higher-order
structures, probably hexamers (20, 49). Recently it has been
shown that Rep can bind to the transcription factor Sp1, and this may
in part account for its ability to regulate transcription of AAV and
heterologous promoters (21, 45). Rep has also been found to
associate with the high-mobility group 1 protein, an interaction which
enhances the DNA binding, helicase, and endonuclease activities of
Rep (11).
In this paper we describe the use of the yeast two-hybrid system
to identify cellular proteins that interact with AAV2 Rep78. We found
that Rep78 but not Rep68 interacts with PRKX, a recently described
homolog of the cyclic AMP (cAMP)-dependent protein kinase A (PKA)
catalytic subunit (PKAc). Subsequently, we found that Rep78
also interacts with PKAc itself. Interaction with Rep78 was
found to inhibit the kinase activities of both PRKX and
PKAc. Rep78, but not Rep68, was able to block the
induction of CREB-dependent transcription in HeLa cells. These
observations suggest that AAV may utilize Rep to subvert cAMP-dependent
regulatory pathways in infected cells. The inhibition of these pathways
may influence the balance between AAV and helper virus
replication.
Construction of plasmid vectors.
A maltose binding
protein (MBP) fusion construct containing AAV2 Rep68 (pMALcRep68)
and a clone containing the entire genome of AAV2 (pAV2) were
gifts from Ken Berns. pGBT9-Rep68 was constructed by cloning the Rep68
open reading frame (ORF) from pMALcRep68 into pGBT9
(Clontech) by using the EcoRI and XhoI sites
present in both vectors. pGBT9-Rep78 was generated by subcloning an
AatII-XhoI fragment comprising nucleotides (nt)
1868 to 2233 of AAV2 (numbering is as for the sequence under GenBank
accession no. J01901) from pAV2 into
AatII-XhoI-digested pGBT9-Rep68.
pGBT9-Rep78-Cterm was generated by eliminating an EcoRI
fragment (nt 321 to 1767) from pGBT9-Rep78.
0022-538X/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Adeno-Associated Virus Rep78 Protein Interacts with Protein
Kinase A and Its Homolog PRKX and Inhibits CREB-Dependent
Transcriptional Activation
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ABSTRACT
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials & Methods
Results
Discussion
References
![]()
INTRODUCTION
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials & Methods
Results
Discussion
References
![]()
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials & Methods
Results
Discussion
References
Yeast two-hybrid system library screening.
Two-hybrid
screening was done in Saccharomyces cerevisiae by using the
Clontech Matchmaker system. Briefly, strain HF7c was transformed with
pGBT9-Rep78, and the resulting clone was retransformed with a
previously amplified HeLa cell cDNA library in the vector pGAD-GH
(Clontech). Transformant yeast cells were selected on Trp-Leu-His
dropout medium containing 20 mM 3-aminotriazole (3-AT). Approximately 400 colonies were obtained from a screening of
approximately 106 independent clones. All 400 colonies were
assayed for
-galactosidase activity by using a filter assay. Plasmid
DNA from positive clones was rescued and used to transform
Escherichia coli XL-1 Blue (Stratagene). Clones from
the pGAD-GH library were selected, and the plasmids were
retransformed into yeast strain SFY526 along with pGBT9-Rep78 or pGBT9.
Resultant clones were assayed for
-galactosidase activity by using a
quantitative solution-based ONPG
(o-nitrophenyl-
-D-galactopyranoside) assay as
described by the manufacturer (Clontech). Plasmids from clones which
were positive in this assay were analyzed further by DNA sequencing.
pMal-Rep pull-down experiments.
MBP (New England
Biolabs) and GST (Pharmacia) fusion proteins were expressed in E. coli BLR (Novagen), and proteins were purified according to
the manufacturers' instructions. However, for the production of
GST-C-terminal protein, the incubation temperature after IPTG
(isopropyl-
-D-thiogalactopyranoside) induction was 30°C. Fusion proteins were immobilized on amylose- or
glutathione-Sepharose beads as appropriate, and the protein
concentrations were estimated by the Bradford protein assay
(Pierce) and Coomassie blue staining of sodium dodecyl sulfate
(SDS)-polyacrylamide gels.
PKA assays. One hundred units of purified PKAc (Promega) was incubated with 0.5 to 1 µg of MBP or GST fusion proteins, immobilized on beads as described above, in a final volume of 50 µl in PBS at 4°C for 10 min, followed by extensive rinsing with PBS. Immobilized PKA activity was then determined by using a kemptide phosphorylation assay (PepTag; Promega) as follows. The beads were resuspended in 25 µl of kinase assay buffer containing kemptide substrate, followed by incubation for 30 min at room temperature. The reaction was terminated by boiling, and the products were examined by 0.8% agarose gel electrophoresis. For experiments on Rep inhibition of PKA activity, the amount of PKAc required to obtain approximately 50% phosphorylation of substrate peptide in a 10-min reaction was first determined empirically. The assay was then performed with this amount of PKAc held constant, while increasing amounts of amylose- or glutathione-eluted MBP, MBP-Rep, or GST and GST-C-terminal proteins were added to the reaction mixture. Phosphorylation of the kemptide substrate was then determined as described above.
Histone H1 kinase assay.
Unlabelled PRKX was immobilized on
S beads as described above. Ten microliters of S beads was incubated at
room temperature in kinase assay buffer (20 mM Tris-HCl [pH 7.4], 10 mM MgCl2) containing 20 nCi of
[
-32P]ATP, with or without 0.5 µg of histone H1, in
a final volume of 30 µl. For autophosphorylation-inhibition assays,
0.3 or 0.6 µg of MBP or Rep-MBP fusion proteins was added prior
to a 45-min incubation.
Cell culture and transfection. HeLa cells were plated at 5 × 105/well on six-well plates 24 h prior to transfection. Cells were transfected with 30 µl of DOTAP (Boehringer Mannheim) per well with 1 µg of pFR-Luc, 1 µg of pFA-CREB, and 1 µg of pcDNA-PRKX, pCIS-PRKX, pFC-PKA, or pCI. Samples were additionally transfected with 2 µg of pKex68, pKex78, or pCI. Cells were harvested 48 h posttransfection and then lysed and assayed for protein content and luciferase activity. Results were expressed as normalized luciferase activity relative to that of the pFR-Luc/pCI/pCI control. The data presented were taken from a minimum of three independent experiments, each conducted in duplicate.
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RESULTS |
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Identification of PRKX as a Rep78-interacting protein by
using the yeast two-hybrid system.
The Rep78 gene from AAV2
was cloned into the yeast shuttle vector pGBT to generate pGBT-Rep78,
in which the Rep78 gene was fused to the Gal4 DNA binding domain.
Transformation of pGBT-Rep78 into S. cerevisiae HF7c either
alone or in combination with the Gal4 activation domain vector
(pGAD424) resulted in growth on His dropout medium, indicating that
Rep78 has an intrinsic transcriptional transactivation activity in this
system. However supplementation of the medium with 20 mM 3-AT, an
inhibitor of histidine biosynthesis, effectively suppressed the
transactivation by Rep78 (data not shown), and this concentration of
3-AT was used subsequently for library screening. The vector pGBT-Rep78
was used as bait to screen a HeLa cell-derived cDNA library cloned
in the vector pGAD-GH. Screening was initially done for growth on His
dropout medium; this was followed by a
-galactosidase filter assay.
Eleven clones that were positive in both assays were isolated. In order
to conduct a quantitative assessment of the putative
interactions, yeast strain SFY526, which contains the
lacZ gene driven by a Gal4-responsive promoter, was
transformed with pGBT-Rep78 or pGBT. Both of these clones were
subsequently retransformed individually with the 11 pGAD clones
isolated from the library. The resulting clones were assayed for
-galactosidase production by using a solution-based ONPG assay. For
a positive control, a clone containing the pocket protein p130 fused to
the DNA binding domain (pGBTp130) and the human papillomavirus E7
protein fused to the activation domain (pGAD-HPV16-E7) was used.
As shown in Fig. 1, three of the clones (pGAD6, -12, and -162) in combination with pGBT-Rep78 produced
-galactosidase at levels approximately 10-fold higher than
that of the negative control (pGBT-Rep78 plus pGAD424) and comparable to that of the positive control (pGBTp130 plus pGAD-HPV16-E7). Activity of these clones was dependent on the presence of Rep78 sequences fused to the DNA binding domain, since negligible
-galactosidase activity was observed when pGAD6, -12, or -162 was
assayed in combination with the empty vector pGBT9 (not shown). We
concluded that clones pGAD6, -12, and -162 encoded proteins which
interacted specifically with Rep78.
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Rep68 does not interact with PRKX.
Rep68 is a spliced
variant of Rep78 in which amino acids 530 to 621 are absent and are
replaced with the sequence LARGHSL (Fig.
2a). Rep78 thus contains a unique
C-terminal domain comprising six CXXH or CXXC motifs, which are typical
of zinc finger domains found in a number of transcription factors.
In order to investigate whether Rep68 could interact with PRKX, the
Rep68 gene was first cloned into pGBT9 to produce pGBT-Rep68.
This construct was transformed in combination with pGAD-PRKX, followed
by determination of
-galactosidase production (Fig. 2b). The
combination of Rep78 and PRKX produced high levels of
-galactosidase
activity, as expected, while activity of the negative control Rep78
plus pGAD424 was low but detectable, consistent with the previously
observed transactivation activity of Rep78. On the other hand, Rep68
showed no detectable
-galactosidase activity in combination with
either pGAD-PRKX or the pGAD424 control vector. We concluded that Rep68
does not interact with PRKX in the yeast two-hybrid system. Moreover,
this showed that Rep78, but not Rep68, displays intrinsic
transactivation activity in this system. The positive control
comprising pGBT-p107 and pGAD-HPV16-E7 showed rather low activity
compared to the Rep78/PRKX and to the p130/HPV-16-E7 (Fig. 1)
combinations. This may be due to poor expression or low tolerance for
p107 in this system.
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The C-terminal region of Rep78 interacts with PRKX.
Since
the interaction between Rep and PRKX was restricted to Rep78,
we examined whether the Rep78 C-terminal region alone was
sufficient for interaction with PRKX. A pGBT vector encoding only the
C-terminal 139 amino acids from Rep78 was produced (Fig. 2a), and the
resulting clone, pGBT-Cterm, was assayed for
-galactosidase activity
as described above. In combination with pGAD-PRKX, the Rep78 C-terminal
clone showed
-galactosidase activity approaching that of the
full-length Rep78 clone, indicating that the Rep78 C-terminal region
interacted with PRKX (Fig. 2b). pGBT-Cterm in combination with the
empty binding domain vector pGAD-424 also showed clearly detectable
activity. This confirmed that the C-terminal region possesses intrinsic
transcriptional transactivation abilities and suggests an involvement
of the zinc binding domain in this phenomenon. The levels of
-galactosidase activity observed with the C-terminal domain
constructs were consistently lower than those obtained with the
full-length Rep78 clone (Fig. 2b and data not shown). While it is clear
from these experiments that the C-terminal region of Rep78 is essential
for the interaction with PRKX, regions outside the C-terminal region
may contribute to the strength of the interaction.
Interaction between a pMal-Rep78 fusion protein and PRKX in vitro. In order to determine whether Rep78 and PRKX interact directly in vitro, pull-down experiments were conducted. The Rep78- and Rep68-coding sequences were expressed as MBP fusions in E. coli, and the proteins were purified by immobilization on amylose beads. The PRKX fragment from pGAD-PRKX was cloned into the T7 promoter-driven vector pCITE4a, and the PRKX protein was expressed and metabolically labelled in RRL. The Rep68 and luciferase proteins were also metabolically labelled in RRL for use as controls (Fig. 3b). The labelled proteins were then used in pull-down reactions in combination with equalized amounts of the immobilized MBP fusions described above, and the amounts of labelled protein associated with the beads were determined by SDS-PAGE. As shown in Fig. 3a, MBP-Rep78 did not associate with labelled luciferase; however, a strong interaction was observed upon incubation with labelled PRKX, as evidenced by the appearance of a cluster of bands of approximately 43 to 46 kDa. Labelled PRKX did not interact with MBP alone. MBP-Rep68 was not able to associate with labelled PRKX, consistent with the previous observation with the yeast two-hybrid system. In order to ensure that the MBP-Rep68 was competent for protein-protein interaction, we incubated the MBP-Rep68 with RRL-labelled Rep68 generated from a T7-driven Rep68 expression vector (p68-myc/his). MBP-Rep68 was found to self-associate by using this method, confirming and extending a previous observation made for Rep78 (22, 49).
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PRKX demonstrates autophosphorylation and histone H1 kinase
activity.
Although PRKX shows high degrees of homology to the
kinase domain of mammalian PKAc subunits, kinase activity
of PRKX has not been demonstrated previously. We sought to demonstrate
a kinase activity for PRKX, initially with histone H1 as a substrate.
Unlabelled, S-tagged PRKX was synthesized in RRL and
immobilized on S beads. After washing, the protein was incubated in
kinase buffer containing [
-32P]ATP with or without
histone H1. Surprisingly, when PRKX alone was incubated with kinase
buffer without histone H1, a 32P-labelled band was
visualized at approximately 46 kDa, corresponding to the size of PRKX
itself (Fig. 4a, lane 2). Silver staining showed that the only detectable protein present was PRKX (not shown).
These data suggested that PRKX was capable of autophosphorylation. In
order to ensure that this activity was associated with PRKX and not a
contaminant carried over from the RRL, S beads were incubated with RRL
containing luciferase and then were washed and used in the kinase
assay. No phosphorylated proteins were detected in this control (Fig.
4a, lane 1). Additional control experiments using a full-length,
untagged PRKX clone confirmed that the N-terminal S tag carried on
PRKX was not the substrate for autophosphorylation (not shown).
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1; thus, the unphosphorylated and phosphorylated forms run in
opposite directions in agarose gel electrophoresis. The relative
amounts of peptide in each form are then observed by UV
fluorescence. As shown in Fig. 4c, samples of S-tag-purified PRKX from
RRL were able to phosphorylate the kemptide substrate, whereas S beads
which had been incubated with luciferase-containing RRL did not
have associated kemptide kinase activity.
A possible consequence of PRKX interaction with Rep78 might be an
inhibition of kinase activity. The ability of MBP-Rep fusion proteins
to inhibit PRKX autophosphorylation activity was therefore investigated (Fig. 4d). Incubation of S-tag-purified, RRL-derived PRKX with [
-32P]ATP resulted in
autophosphorylation, an observed previously (lane 1). Addition of
increasing amounts of purified, maltose-eluted MBP had no effect on the
kinase activity (lanes 3 and 4). However addition of increasing amounts
of MBP-Rep78 fusion protein substantially inhibited the PRKX kinase
activity (lanes 7 and 8). MBP-Rep68 also inhibited kinase activity, but
to a lesser extent. The reasons for this last observation are not yet
clear.
PRKX can activate CREB-dependent transcription. The close homology between PRKX and PKAc, combined with the observation that PRKX could phosphorylate the PKA kemptide substrate, suggested that PRKX might be capable of modulating PKA-responsive transcriptional regulatory pathways through activation of CREB. We investigated whether PRKX could active CREB-dependent transcription by utilizing a transient-cotransfection model. In this system, a CREB activation domain/Gal4 DNA binding domain fusion protein is used to activate a luciferase reporter controlled by the Gal1 upstream activating sequence. Thus, when CREB is phosphorylated by activation of the PKA pathway, luciferase expression is strongly induced.
HeLa cells were cotransfected with the CREB/Gal4 fusion construct pFA-CREB and reporter plasmid pFR-Luc. In order to investigate the ability of PRKX to activate CREB, a full-length cDNA of PRKX was cloned under the control of the CMV promoter to produce pcDNA-PRKX. Cotransfection of pcDNA-PRKX with pFA-CREB and pFR-Luc resulted in induction of luciferase activity, indicating that PRKX could activate CREB-dependent transcription (Fig. 5, first two bars). The degree of induction (approximately 8-fold) was much less than the approximately 80-fold induction observed when a PKAc expression vector was used (see below). This suggested that PRKX might be less efficient than PKA in activating this pathway. However, the natural context of the PRKX start codon (26) is a poor match with the Kozak consensus for optimal translational initiation. We also cloned the S-tagged fragment encompassing amino acids 29 to 358 of PRKX from pCITE-PRKX into pCI, producing a construct (pCIS-PRKX) in which the AUG is in a strong Kozak context. Cotransfection experiments using pCIS-PRKX demonstrated a mean 23.5-fold activation of CREB (not shown).
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Rep78, but not Rep68, inhibits activation of CREB-dependent transcription by PRKX. The effects of Rep proteins on CREB-dependent transcriptional activation were studied by using the cotransfection system described above. When a clone expressing exclusively Rep78 (pKex78) (22) was cotransfected into HeLa cells along with pFA-CREB, pFR-Luc, and pcDNA-PRKX, reduced activation of luciferase activity was observed (Fig. 5, third bar). This suppression was not observed when pKex68, which expresses exclusively Rep68, was used (fourth bar). This suggests that Rep78 interacts with and inhibits PRKX in cells; however, we cannot exclude the possibility that effects of Rep78 on transcription may contribute to the observed inhibition of CREB-dependent activation (see Discussion).
Rep78 interacts directly with PKAc and inhibits its catalytic activity. Since PRKX is a close homolog of PKAc, we investigated whether PKAc might also interact with Rep78, notwithstanding the fact that PKAc was not isolated from the yeast two-hybrid library screen. Purified PKAc (100 U) was mixed with purified MBP-Rep78, MBP-Rep68, or MBP immobilized on amylose beads. After extensive washing, protein associated with the beads was assayed for kinase activity by using the PKA-specific kemptide target. As shown in Fig. 6a, immobilized kinase activity was associated with MBP-Rep78 but not with MBP-Rep68 or MBP alone. In the absence of preincubation with PKAc, MBP-Rep78 did not demonstrate any kinase activity (not shown). We concluded that Rep78 interacts with PKAc in vitro and that, since both the Rep78 and the PKAc were present as purified proteins, the interaction most probably involves a direct physical contact between the two proteins.
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Rep78, but not Rep68, inhibits activation of CREB-dependent transcription by PKAc. We used the CREB-dependent transcription system to investigate whether Rep78 proteins could block downstream functions in the PKA pathway. HeLa cells were cotransfected with pFA-CREB, pFR-LUC, and pFC-PKA, in addition to either pKex78, pKex68, or an equal amount of pCI vector. As shown in Fig. 7, reporter gene activity was greatly induced by the cotransfection of pFC-PKA. Addition of pKex78 to the assay resulted in severe repression of the CREB-dependent promoter activation. Little or no repression was observed when pKex68 was used. These data indicated that Rep78 can block PKA induction of CREB-dependent transcription in cells. While direct effects of Rep78 on transcription may contribute, these observations strongly suggest that Rep78 can block CREB activation by binding to and inhibiting the kinase activity of PKAc.
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DISCUSSION |
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In this study we have identified the catalytic subunit of the cAMP-dependent PKA and its X-linked homolog PRKX as cellular targets for AAV Rep78. The interaction was demonstrated in the yeast two-hybrid system, in vitro, and in mammalian cells with a CREB-dependent transcription system. In the case of PKAc, a direct interaction between the purified proteins was demonstrated. We consider it likely, therefore, that this represents a physiological interaction which occurs during AAV infection or replication.
PRKX was identified originally by positional cloning as a candidate for the chondrodysplasia punctata gene (26). It was shown that the mRNA was expressed in a wide range of adult and fetal tissues and that the gene is associated with a site of chromosomal instability. Little characterization of the protein encoded by PRKX has been conducted. Although PRKX is a close homolog of PKAc, it is not a PKA isoform. The homology between isoforms is typically greater than 90% identity in the catalytic domain, whereas the identity with PRKX in this region is only 49 to 55%. The closest known homolog of PRKX is Drosophila DC2 (24). The major Drosophila homolog of PKAc is DC0, and DC2 is unable to complement DC0 mutants, suggesting that their functions differ (39). By analogy, these observations suggest that PRKX and PKA might have related but separable functions.
We show here that PRKX exhibits kinase activity towards histone H1 and a peptide containing the PKA consensus recognition sequence. We further showed that a PRKX expression vector can induce CREB-dependent transcriptional activation, presumably by in vivo phosphorylation of CREB. In these respects, PRKX appears to function similarly to PKAc. However, some of the evidence suggests that PKA and PRKX may not be functionally analogous. First, PRKX was found to undergo autophosphorylation in vitro, whereas autophosphorylation of PKAc does not occur. Histone H1 kinase activity of PRKX was detected only after prolonged incubation of the kinase assay mixture. The observation that autophosphorylation occurred preferentially in the presence of excess histone H1 suggests that the autophosphorylation event might be involved in the activation of PRKX activity towards heterologous substrates. Moreover, although PRKX could activate CREB-dependent transcription, the degree of activation was far less than that achieved with a PKAc expression vector. This effect may be partly due to differences in PKA and PRKX expression levels, because the natural start codon of PRKX is in a weak Kozak consensus context (26). Replacement of the start codon with one close to the consensus increased the activation of CREB-dependent transcription to approximately 20-fold (data not shown), which is more than the 8-fold induction observed with the natural start codon (Fig. 5) but still less than the 80-fold induction typically observed with the PKAc expression vector (Fig. 7). Taken together, these observations suggest that the substrate preferences and regulatory mechanisms of PRKX and PKA may differ and that a rigorous comparison of PRKX and PKA activities is warranted.
PKA is a relatively ubiquitous enzyme, so the question arises as to why PKA did not emerge from the yeast two-hybrid system screen. Similarly, we did not detect interactions involving the HMG-1 and Sp1 proteins, which have been shown, by other methods, to interact with AAV Rep (11, 21, 45). Screening of the yeast two-hybrid library was difficult because of an endogenous transactivation activity of Rep78 and because yeast clones containing Rep78 grew very poorly. Therefore, the number of potential interactions screened was suboptimal, and there may be other Rep-interacting proteins which have not yet been identified in the screen, which is continuing.
In yeast, both the transactivation activity and growth inhibition phenotypes were localized to the C-terminal region of Rep78 (Fig. 2 and data not shown). The interaction with PRKX and PKA was clearly mapped to this C-terminal domain, which distinguishes Rep78 from Rep68. This domain contains motifs which may be involved in the formation of three zinc fingers and contains other sequence elements which have been implicated in the transactivation functions of adenovirus E1a (22, 55). Few studies have been able to address differences between Rep78 and Rep68 functions, partly because vectors expressing exclusively individual Rep proteins have only recently become available. For Rep68, a slightly reduced capacity to down regulate heterologous promoters has been noted, although the major sequences required for promoter down regulation are located in the N-terminal region (22). Rep68-MBP fusion protein produced in E. coli has been shown to be sufficient to sponsor AAV replication in vitro (54). Recently it has been shown that Rep78 proteins can self-associate (20, 49). As shown in the present paper, self-association can also be observed for Rep68 (Fig. 3). Therefore, a biological function which is specific only to Rep78 remains to be clarified. The Rep78 C-terminal domain which interacts with PRKX and PKAc is shared by the p19-derived Rep52 protein. This suggests that Rep52 also may interact with these cellular targets; however, this interaction has yet to be demonstrated experimentally.
PKA activity could be detected by a pull-down assay with MBP-Rep78 (Fig. 6a); however, Rep78 was also found to inhibit kinase activity (Fig. 6c and d). In the pull-down assays, PKAc was present in excess, and the duration of the kinase assay was longer than that in the inhibition assays. The kinase activity detected in the pull-down assays probably results from free PKAc which dissociated from the complexes during the kinase assay, suggesting that inhibition may be reversible. In the in vitro assays, we sometimes observed that Rep68 could inhibit phosphorylation, although to a much lesser extent. This suggests that, although Rep68 clearly cannot bind PRKX and PKA, domains outside the amino acid 529 to 621 intro region might contribute to inhibition of kinase activity. These domains might have a weak effect in in vitro assays where high concentrations of purified Rep68 proteins are present and the requirement for tight binding is reduced. A detailed analysis of the structural requirements of both PKA and Rep proteins for binding and kinase inhibition is in progress.
In cotransfection assays, Rep78 clearly inhibited CREB-dependent transcriptional activation; however, the mechanism by which this is achieved is not certain. The in vitro data suggest that inhibition of PRKX and PKA kinase activities makes the major contribution, since the system is highly dependent on CREB phosphorylation. However one must also consider that Rep has suppressive activities on heterologous promoters (18, 19, 31, 42). The CREB, PRKX, PKA, and Rep expression constructs used in this system all utilized the CMV immediate-early promoter-enhancer, which is relatively insensitive to Rep suppression (1). The suppression of heterologous promoters by Rep has been shown to be mediated, at lest in some cases, through Sp1 sites (21). The Gal4-CREB-responsive promoter in the reporter construct pFR-Luc is very simple, comprising the Gal upstream activating sequence and the TATA box from adenovirus E1b. The E1b promoter Sp1 site is not present in the pFR-Luc construct; therefore, direct effects of Rep on transcription from this promoter should be minimal. This view is supported by the observations that Rep68 was unable to suppress CREB-dependent transcriptional activation from this promoter (Fig. 5 and 7). Accordingly, we favor the interpretation that Rep78 inhibits the kinase activity of PRKX and PKA in cells, thereby reducing CREB phosphorylation and consequently suppressing reporter gene activation.
What might be the functional consequences of the interaction between Rep78 and PKA or PRKX? One possibility is that the Rep78 is a substrate for PRKX and/or PKA. AAV Rep proteins are known to be phosphorylated, and their phosphorylation state changes during the replication cycle (10). However, we have not been able to demonstrate phosphorylation of MBP-Rep fusion proteins by either PRKX or PKA (data not shown).
A number of viruses have subsumed PKA/CREB pathways to regulate their gene expression; examples include human T-cell leukemia virus type 1, human immunodeficiency virus type 1, adenovirus, HSV, and Epstein-Barr virus (12, 15, 28, 33, 41, 47, 50, 59, 63). The cAMP response pathway components are frequently used to control switches from early to late or latent to lytic replication modes. For example, adenovirus E1a protein can transactivate genes containing CREs via an interaction with CBP/p300 (44). In addition, the E1a, E3, and E4 promoters of adenovirus contain CREs (34). The HSV latency-associated transcript and UL9 gene promoters are cAMP responsive, and this response has been associated with induction of lytic replication (33). The HSV ICP4 protein has been demonstrated to provide a crucial helper function for both HSV and AAV replication (40, 56). ICP4 is a substrate for PKA, and its phosphorylation promotes HSV lytic replication (59). These observations suggest that one function of AAV Rep78 might be to inhibit the utilization of cAMP pathways by helper viruses and thereby inhibit productive replication of the helper.
Few viruses are known to inhibit cAMP pathways. The hepatitis C virus NS3 protein has been shown to bind to PKAc, inhibiting its catalytic activity and nuclear translocation (6, 7). The poliovirus 3Cpro protease has been shown to cleave CREB (61). The roles of these interactions in the respective virus life cycles are not yet understood. Both AAV2 and the autonomous parvovirus minute virus of mice (MVMp) have CRE elements in the promoters controlling the major nonstructural proteins (13, 46). The function of the AAV2 p5 promoter CRE has not been extensively studied; however, cAMP-dependent stimulation of the CRE of minute virus of mice has a negative regulatory effect (46). This supports a model wherein Rep78 suppression of PRKX/PKA may be involved in an autoregulatory loop controlling Rep gene expression. Accordingly, we suggest that the function of the Rep-PRKX/PKA interaction may be to influence the balance between AAV and helper virus replication.
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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We thank Ken Berns, J. Kleinschmidt, G. Rappold, and Massimo Tommasino for their generous gifts of plasmids and Stephen Lyons for excellent technical assistance.
This work was supported by the Cancer Research Campaign and the Association for International Cancer Research.
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FOOTNOTES |
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* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Cancer Research Campaign, Section of Molecular Genetics, Paterson Institute for Cancer Research, Christie Hospital, Wilmslow Rd., Manchester M20 4BX, United Kingdom. Phone: 161-446-3186. Fax: 161-446-3109. E-mail: sstacey{at}picr.man.ac.uk.
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