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Journal of Virology, November 1998, p. 8933-8942, Vol. 72, No. 11
0022-538X/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
The Herpes Simplex Virus gE-gI Complex Facilitates
Cell-to-Cell Spread and Binds to Components of Cell Junctions
Kevin S.
Dingwell1,2 and
David C.
Johnson2,*
Department of Biology, McMaster University,
Hamilton, Ontario, Canada L8N 3Z5,1 and
Department of Molecular Immunology, and Microbiology,
Oregon Health Sciences University, Portland, Oregon
972012
Received 22 June 1998/Accepted 5 August 1998
 |
ABSTRACT |
The herpes simplex virus (HSV) glycoprotein complex gE-gI mediates
the spread of viruses between adjacent cells, and this property is
especially evident for cells that form extensive cell junctions, e.g.,
epithelial cells, fibroblasts, and neurons. Mutants lacking gE or gI
are not compromised in their ability to enter cells as extracellular
viruses. Therefore, gE-gI functions specifically in the movement of
virus across cell-cell contacts and, as such, provides a molecular
handle on this poorly understood process. We expressed gE-gI in human
epithelial cells by using replication-defective adenovirus (Ad)
vectors. gE-gI accumulated at lateral surfaces of the epithelial cells,
colocalizing with the adherens junction protein
-catenin but was not
found on either the apical or basal plasma membranes and did not
colocalize with ZO-1, a component of tight junctions. In subconfluent
monolayers, gE-gI was found at cell junctions but was absent from those
lateral surfaces not in contact with another cell, as was the case for
-catenin. Similar localization of gE-gI to cell junctions was
observed in HSV-infected epithelial cells. By contrast, HSV
glycoprotein gD, expressed using a recombinant Ad vectors, was found
primarily along the apical surfaces of cells, with little or no protein
found on the basal or lateral surfaces. Expression of gE-gI without
other HSV polypeptides did not cause redistribution of either ZO-1 or
-catenin or alter tight-junction functions. Together these results
support a model in which gE-gI accumulates at sites of cell-cell
contact by interacting with junctional components. We hypothesize that gE-gI mediates transfer of HSV across cell junctions by virtue of these
interactions with cell junction components.
 |
INTRODUCTION |
Herpes simplex virus (HSV)
replicates in tissues of epithelial origin such as the oral and genital
mucosae and corneal epithelium. HSV spreads efficiently through these
tissues, gaining access to sensory neurons, which eventually become the
site of latency. In epithelial tissues, cells are joined by extensive
cell contacts or junctions, and HSV and other herpesviruses spread
across these cell junctions. By spreading rapidly from cell to cell
through a space that is isolated by tight junctions, HSV races against the mounting immune response and also avoids neutralization by anti-HSV
antibodies. It is well known that HSV can cause secondary lesions in
the mucosae of individuals who produce high titers of anti-HSV
antibodies, and the severity of disease does not correlate with
antibody titers (12). Thus, anti-HSV antibodies do not contain HSV spread in vivo, supporting the hypothesis that in solid
tissues, e.g., epithelium, this form of direct cell-to-cell spread is a
primary mode of virus transmission and an important parameter of HSV
pathogenesis. Release of HSV particles from cells also occurs, although
in most cultured cells the majority of virions remain cell associated.
Extracellular HSV likely plays an important role in dissemination to
other hosts, but in immune individuals experiencing recurrent disease a
large fraction of the exogenous virus may be neutralized.
Spread of HSV by both the extracellular and cell-to-cell routes
requires viral membrane glycoproteins gB, gD, and gH-gL. Mutant HSVs
with deletions affecting gB, gD, gH, or gL cannot enter cells, and if
the mutants are grown on complementing cells (to provide the missing
glycoprotein) the viruses can enter cells but do not subsequently
spread beyond the initially infected cell (8, 16, 27, 43).
Therefore, cell-to-cell spread and entry of extracellular viruses share
essential properties. However, these processes also differ in some
significant aspects. Glycoproteins gE and gI, which form a functional
complex (gE-gI) (24, 25), play an important role in
cell-to-cell spread but do not affect production of infectious virus or
the rate at which extracellular virus particles bind to or enter cells,
whether the virus is applied to the apical or basolateral surfaces of
the cells (2, 14, 17a). Similar results were reported for
the gE and gI homologues of the related alphaherpesvirus pseudorabies
virus (PrV) (57). The reduced cell-to-cell spread of gE or
gI mutant viruses was most evident in plaque assays involving cells
that form extensive cell junctions, i.e., normal human fibroblasts and
epithelial cells, rather than transformed cells. For example, as few as
3 to 7 normal human epithelial cells may become infected by a gE mutant, F-gE
, compared with the 150 to 500 cells that become infected by wild-type HSV serotype 1 (HSV-1) strain F in plaque assays
involving media overlays containing HSV-neutralizing antibodies (13). Similarly, wild-type HSV-1 could infect and spread to approximately four times the number of cultured rat neurons than were
infected by F-gE
(15).
Apparently related to this inability to spread from cell-to-cell is the
fact that gE-gI mutants are also severely attenuated in vivo. In the
corneal epithelium and skin of mice, gE-negative (gE
) and
gI
mutants form small lesions, spreading poorly beyond
the initial site of infection, and over time produce much less
infectious virus than wild-type HSV (2, 14). In addition,
gE
and gI
mutants fail to spread
efficiently into and within the nervous system and cause less
neurological disease than wild-type HSV (2, 14, 15, 26, 35, 40,
41). We have proposed that gE-gI facilitates the movement of HSV
across the extensive junctions formed between epithelial cells,
fibroblasts, and neurons in vivo (15). However, there is
also evidence that PrV gE-gI may function in a more complex fashion in
the nervous system, mediating entry into some neuronal circuits but not
others and affecting neurovirulence (11, 48).
The process by which enveloped viruses spread from cell to cell in
solid tissues such as skin or mucosa is poorly understood, yet several
virus families, herpesviruses and poxviruses being examples (44,
52), rely heavily on direct cell-to-cell spread. Since HSV gE-gI
appears to function in cell-to-cell spread but not in entry of
extracellular virus, this glycoprotein complex provides an important
molecular tool with which to study cell-to-cell spread. We expressed gE
and gI by using adenovirus (Ad) vectors in human epithelial cells,
cells that are particularly important in terms of the biology of HSV,
in order to study the subcellular localization of gE-gI and effects of
these glycoproteins on cells without the pleiotropic effects of other
HSV polypeptides. The gE-gI complex accumulated specifically on those
lateral surfaces of epithelial cells that were forming cell junctions
but was not found on those lateral surfaces that were not in contact
with another cell. By contrast, another HSV glycoprotein, gD, was found predominantly on the apical surfaces of the cells. These results support the hypothesis that gE-gI binds to components of epithelial cell junctions.
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Cells and viruses.
HEC-1A endometrial epithelial cells
(4) (a gift of Jay Nelson, Oregon Health Sciences
University) were grown in RPMI medium (BioWhittaker Inc., Walkersville,
Md.) supplemented with 10% (vol/vol) heat-inactivated fetal bovine
serum (FBS; BioWhittaker). 293 cells (17) and Vero cells
were grown in Dulbecco's modified minimal essential medium (DMEM;
BioWhittaker) supplemented with 10 and 5% FBS, respectively. HSV-1
strains F (obtained from P. G. Spear, Northwestern University
Medical School, Chicago, Ill.), F-US7kan (25), and F-gE
(14) were propagated on, and their titers were determined
on, Vero cells. Two replication-competent Ad vectors, AdgE and AdgI,
that were described previously (19) will be denoted Ad(E1+)gE and Ad(E1+)gI here.
Ad(E1
)gE, Ad(E1
)gI, AdgD1(E1
)
(7), and AddlE1, which contains no HSV sequences, are all replication-defective (E1
) Ad vectors, and they were
propagated on, and their titers were determined on, 293 cells.
Antibodies.
Monoclonal antibody (MAb) 3104, specific for gI,
and MAb 3114, specific for gE (25), were gifts of Anne Cross
and Nigel Stow (Institute of Virology, Glasgow, United Kingdom). MAb
II-481, specific for gE, was a gift of Patricia Spear (Northwestern
University Medical School). MAb DL-6, specific for gD (22),
was a gift of Gary Cohen and Roselyn Eisenberg (University of
Pennsylvania, Philadelphia). A mouse MAb directed against
-catenin
and a mouse MAb specific for E-cadherin were obtained from Transduction
Laboratories (Lexington, Ky.), and rabbit polyclonal antibodies
directed against
-catenin were from Sigma. A rabbit anti-ZO-1 serum
was obtained from Zymed Laboratories (South San Francisco, Ca.). Texas
red-coupled goat anti-rabbit immunoglobulin G (IgG) and fluorescein
isothiocyanate (FITC)- and Cy3-coupled goat anti-mouse IgG were
obtained from Jackson ImmunoResearch Labs Inc. (West Grove, Pa.).
BODIPY-coupled goat anti-FITC IgG was obtained from Molecular Probes
(Eugene, Oreg.). The FITC analogue Oregon green was directly coupled to MAb 3114 by using a FluoReporter Oregon green-488 protein labelling kit
(Molecular Probes) as described by the manufacturer. Horseradish peroxidase-conjugated goat anti-mouse IgG was obtained from Amersham Life Sciences, Inc. (Arlington Heights, Ill.).
Construction of replication-defective recombinant Ad vectors
expressing either gE or gI.
All restriction and DNA modification
enzymes were obtained from New England Biolabs (Beverly, Mass.).
Plasmid DNA was prepared by using Qiagen 500 columns (Qiagen Inc.,
Chatsworth, Calif.). The full-length gE and gI genes were excised from
plasmids pSV2X3gE and pSV2X3gI (19), respectively, and
subcloned into plasmid pCA3 (20) by using the restriction
enzymes EcoRI and XbaI. The resulting plasmids,
pCA3gE and pCA3gI, respectively, contained either the gE or gI gene
coupled to the human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) immediate-early promoter
and followed by a simian virus 40 (SV40) poly(A) sequence. Recombinant
Ads expressing either gE [Ad(E1
)gE] or gI
[Ad(E1
)gI] were obtained following cotransfection of
either pCA3gE or pCA3gI with pBHG10 (6) into 293 cells by
the calcium phosphate technique as previously described
(20). Recombinant viruses were plaque purified three times.
Labelling of cells with
[35S]methionine-[35S]cysteine,
immunoprecipitation of proteins, gel electrophoresis, and Western
blotting.
Monolayers of HEC-1A cells grown in 35-mm-diameter
dishes were infected either with 20 PFU of HSV-1 (strain F) per cell or with 400 PFU of either Ad(E1
)gE or Ad(E1
)gI
per cell, were coinfected with Ad(E1
)gE and
Ad(E1
)gE (400 PFU of each per cell), or left uninfected.
Six hours after infection with HSV or 48 h after infection with Ad
vector, the cells were washed twice with DMEM lacking methionine and
cysteine and containing 1% dialyzed FBS and then labelled with
[35S]methionine and [35S]cysteine (150 µCi/ml; NEN) in DMEM lacking methionine and cysteine for 3 h.
Cells were lysed in Nonidet P-40 (NP-40)-deoxycholate (DOC) extraction
buffer (1% NP-40, 0.5% DOC, 50 mM Tris-Cl [pH 7.5], 100 mM NaCl)
containing 2 mg of bovine serum albumin per ml and 1 mM
phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride and stored at
70°C. Lysates were
thawed, centrifuged at 50,000 to 100,000 × g for 45 to
60 min, and mixed with anti-gE MAb 3114 or anti-gI MAb 3104 for 2 h at 4°C. Protein A-Sepharose (Pharmacia, Dorval, Quebec, Canada) was
added to the lysates, which were then incubated for an additional
2 h; subsequently, the protein A-Sepharose was washed with
NP-40-DOC extraction buffer, and immunoprecipitated proteins were
subjected to electrophoresis on 12% polyacrylamide gels
(14). The gels were fixed, enhanced with Enlightning
(Dupont), dried, and then exposed to X-ray film. For Western blotting,
proteins were transferred to Imobilon membranes (Millipore, Bedford,
Mass.), the membranes were air dried and then incubated with 5% nonfat skim milk in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) containing 0.1% Tween 20 (W buffer). The blots were then incubated with MAb II-481 or an MAb
specific for E-cadherin for 1 h; then they were washed, incubated
with horseradish peroxidase-conjugated goat anti-mouse IgG, and washed
again, and proteins were detected by enhanced chemiluminescence (ECL
kit; Amersham).
Immunofluorescence of HSV- or Ad-infected HEC-1A cells.
HEC-1A cells grown on glass Transwell slides (Lab Tek, Naperville,
Ill.) either were left uninfected or were infected apically with either
20 PFU of HSV-1 strain F per cell, 400 PFU of Ad(E1
)gE or
Ad(E1
)gI per cell, or 400 PFU each of both
Ad(E1
)gE and Ad(E1
)gI per cell. After
either 8 or 11 h of infection with HSV-1 or after 48 h of
infection with Ad vector, cells were fixed in 4% (wt/vol)
paraformaldehyde in PBS and then, in some cases, permeabilized with
0.2% Triton X-100 (TX100) for 5 min. Samples were incubated with
blocking buffer (PBS with 2% normal goat serum, 2% bovine serum
albumin, and 0.02% Tween 20) for 30 min. Staining for gE and
-catenin involved (i) incubation with anti-
-catenin mouse MAb for
1 h, (ii) a wash step, (iii) incubation with Cy3-coupled anti-mouse IgG for 1 h, (iv) another wash step, (v) incubation with
Oregon Green-coupled MAb 3114 (specific for gE) for 1 h, (vi) a
third wash step, and (vii) incubation with BODIPY-coupled anti-FITC
(which reacts with Oregon Green) antibodies for 1 h. Staining for
gD and
-catenin involved incubating cells simultaneously with
anti-gD MAb DL6 and rabbit polyclonal antibodies specific for
-catenin, washing the cells, and then incubating the cells with
FITC-coupled goat anti-mouse IgG antibodies and Texas Red-conjugated goat anti-rabbit IgG antibodies. Cells were stained for ZO-1 and either
gE, gI, or gD by simultaneously incubating them with rabbit anti-ZO-1
antibodies and either anti-gE MAb 3114, anti-gI MAb 3104, or anti-gD
MAb DL6 for 1 h; the cells were subsequently washed and then
incubated with FITC-coupled goat anti-mouse IgG antibodies and Texas
Red-coupled goat anti-rabbit antibodies for 1 h. Samples were
mounted on microscope slides by using Vectashield (Vector Laboratories,
Burlingame, Calif.) and viewed with a Leica confocal microscope.
TER and paracellular permeability.
HEC-1A cells (5 × 105 per insert) were grown for approximately 4 to 5 days on
membrane filter inserts (12-mm diameter, 0.4-µm pore size; Millipore)
precoated with rat tail collagen (Boehringer Mannheim) until the
transepithelial resistance (TER; net resistance = total
resistance × resistance of membrane alone) reached at least 400
cm2. TER was measured with a Millipore Voltohmmeter.
Monolayers were infected with Ad(E1
)gE and
Ad(E1
)gI (400 PFU of each/cell) or AddlE1 (800 PFU/cell)
or were left uninfected; then, 48 h later, the TER was measured.
Similarly, cells were either infected with Ad vector or left
uninfected, and after 48 h, paracellular permeability was measured
by adding 1 µCi of [14C]inulin/ml in 200 µl of RPMI
medium to the upper chamber. At 20-min intervals, the inserts were
transferred to fresh wells and the quantity of radioactivity that had
accumulated in the lower compartment was measured with a
-counter.
Determination of TX100 insolubility of gE.
HEC-1A cells in
12-well dishes were coinfected with Ad(E1
)gE and
Ad(E1
)gI (400 PFU of each/cell) for 48 h or were
left uninfected. The cells were washed twice with Tris-saline (15 mM
Tris-Cl [pH 7.5], 150 mM NaCl) and then extracted with 300 µl of
ice-cold extraction buffer (1 mM CaCl2, 1 mM
MgCl2, 15 mM Tris-Cl [pH 7.5], and 150 mM NaCl)
containing a TX100 concentration of 0, 0.05, 0.1, 0.2, 0.4, 0.5, 0.75, or 1% (wt/vol) for 10 min. The cells were then scraped into the
extraction buffer, transferred to 1.5-ml centrifuge tubes, and
centrifuged at 20,000 × g for 30 min at 4°C.
Supernatants were transferred to fresh tubes, and sodium dodecyl
sulfate (SDS) and
-mercaptoethanol were added to 2% each. The
pellets were resuspended in 400 µl of 50 mM Tris-HCl, pH 6.8, containing 2% SDS and 2%
-mercaptoethanol. The samples were boiled
and subjected to electrophoresis on 7.5% polyacrylamide gels, and then
proteins were detected by Western blotting.
 |
RESULTS |
Construction of replication-defective Ad vectors expressing gE or
gI.
In order to study the subcellular localization of gE-gI and
effects of this protein in epithelial cells, it was useful to express
the glycoproteins without other HSV polypeptides. HSV infection
inhibits host protein synthesis and leads to alterations in the
cytoskeleton, cell rounding, and changes in host membranes, including
disruption of the Golgi apparatus (9). We chose to construct
replication-defective (E1
) Ad vectors expressing gE and
gI. Such vectors have advantages in that Ad proteins are not expressed
at significant levels and foreign proteins can be expressed at high
levels and in combination in different cells. The complete coding
sequences of gE and gI, derived from HSV-1 strain KOS, were excised
from plasmids pSV2X3gE and PSV2X3gI (19), respectively,
using the restriction enzymes EcoRI and XbaI and
inserted into the shuttle vector pCA3 (20), so that the gE
and gI genes were inserted between the HCMV immediate-early promoter
and the SV40 polyadenylation sequence in a right-to-left orientation
with respect to the flanking Ad E1 sequences (Fig. 1). 293 cells (which supply E1) were
cotransfected with either pCA3gE or pCA3gI and a second plasmid,
pBHG10, which supplies the right end of the Ad genome, and viruses
Ad(E1
)gE and Ad(E1
)gI were produced,
respectively.

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FIG. 1.
Construction of replication-defective (E1 )
Ad vectors expressing gE or gI. The full-length gE and gI genes were
subcloned into the Ad shuttle plasmid pCA3, which contains the left end
of the Ad type 5 genome. In pCA3gE and pCA3gI, the gE and gI genes,
respectively, were flanked by the HCMV immediate-early promoter and the
SV40 poly(A) sequence, so that transcription was in the leftward
direction, opposite the direction of E1 transcription. Recombinant Ads
expressing either gE [Ad(E1 )gE] or gI
[Ad(E1 )gI]) were obtained by cotransfecting 293 cells
with pBHG10 and either pCA3gE or pCA3gI by the calcium phosphate
technique. mu, map units.
|
|
Expression of gE and gI was examined after infection of HEC-1A human
epithelial cells with either Ad(E1

)gE or
Ad(E1

)gI, with both Ad(E1

)gE and
Ad(E1

)gI, or with HSV-1. Under these conditions, the Ad
vectors did
not cause obvious cell toxicity or alter cellular
metabolism,
protein synthesis, or morphology. The cells were labelled
with
[
35S]methionine-[
35S]cysteine,
beginning 48 h after infection with Ad vector or 8
h after
infection with HSV-1. gE and gI were immunoprecipitated
from extracts
of cells by using MAbs 3114 and 3104, respectively.
The gE-specific MAb
3114 and the gI-specific MAb 3104 each precipitated
two protein species
from either Ad(E1

)gE- or Ad(E1

)gI-infected
cell extract which corresponded to the immature and
mature form of
either gE or gI, respectively (Fig.
2A).
The gE-gI
complex could be precipitated from extracts of cells
coinfected
with both Ad(E1

)gE and Ad(E1

)gI
by using MAb 3104, and the quantities of labelled gE-gI complex
produced in the cells were similar to those produced in cells
infected
with HSV-1 (Fig.
2A). Western blot analysis indicated
that the quantity
of gE that accumulated by 36 or 48 h of infection
with
Ad(E1

)gE and Ad(E1

)gI was greater than that
observed in HSV-infected cells, 8 h
after infection (Fig.
2B).

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FIG. 2.
Expression of gE and gI by recombinant Ad vectors. (A)
Human HEC-1A epithelial cells were left uninfected (mock) or were
infected with 400 PFU of either Ad(E1 )gE or
Ad(E1 )gI per cell, with both Ad(E1 )gE and
Ad(E1 )gI, each at 400 PFU/cell, or with HSV-1 at 20 PFU/cell. The cells were labelled with [35S]methionine
and [35S]cysteine for 3 h, beginning 48 h after
infection with Ad vector or 8 h after infection with HSV.
Detergent extracts of the cells were mixed with MAbs specific for gE
(3114) or gI (3104) to immunoprecipitate these proteins. Positions of
molecular size markers in kilodaltons are shown on the left. (B) HEC-1A
cells were either infected with HSV-1 or coinfected with
Ad(E1 )gE and Ad(E1 )gI. After 8 h of
infection with HSV-1 or after 36 or 48 h of infection with the Ad
vectors, the cell monolayers were scraped into SDS gel electrophoresis
buffer. Samples were boiled, and the proteins were separated by
polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and then transferred to nylon
membranes. gE was detected by incubating the blots with MAb II-481. The
blots were washed and then incubated with horseradish
peroxidase-coupled anti-mouse antibodies, and these antibodies were
detected by enhanced chemiluminescence.
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|
Cell surface transport of gE requires gI in epithelial cells.
Nonpolarized cell lines (e.g., Vero, Hep-2, and R970 cells) have been
used extensively to examine the functions of HSV glycoproteins during
viral replication. However, the effects of gE-gI on cell-to-cell spread
are less evident in these nonpolarized cells and much more evident in
primary fibroblasts or epithelial cells. Therefore, we studied the
subcellular localization of and effects of expressing gE-gI in HEC-1A
cells, human mucosal epithelial cells that display all of the
functional characteristics of fully polarized epithelial cells: (i)
high TER; (ii) asymmetrical budding of influenza virus and vesicular
stomatitis virus from the apical and basolateral domains, respectively;
and (iii) polarized distribution of endogenous cellular proteins (e.g.,
polyimmunoglobulin receptor) (4).
When HEC-1A cells were infected with Ad(E1

)gE, gE was
predominantly found in a perinuclear region, often localized to one
side of the nucleus, and did not appear to be present on the plasma
membrane (Fig.
3A). When cells were
coinfected with Ad(E1

)gE and Ad(E1

)gI, the
staining pattern of gE changed dramatically; gE staining
was primarily
found at boundaries of cells, in a ring-like pattern
separating
adjoining cells, and there was little perinuclear staining
(Fig.
3B).
However, regardless of whether gI was expressed, gE
could not be
detected on the apical surfaces of the cells; i.e.,
the glycoprotein
was not detected if the cell monolayer was not
permeabilized with
detergent to allow access of antibodies to
the cytoplasm and
basolateral plasma membrane (Fig.
3D and E).
Similar results were
observed when HEC-1A cells were infected
with replication-competent
(E1
+) Ad vectors expressing gE or gE plus gI
(
19). In this case,
lower multiplicities of infection (20 PFU/cell) were used and
gE-gI expression was observed early (18 h)
after infection, but
again, when gE was expressed alone (without gI),
the glycoprotein
was retained in a perinuclear region of the cytoplasm
(data not
shown). Another HSV glycoprotein, gD, expressed by using a
replication-defective
(E1

) Ad vector,
Ad(E1

)gD, was readily detected by anti-gD antibodies
without permeabilization
of the cells and was thus on the apical
surfaces of the cells
(Fig.
3F). Therefore, transport of gE to the cell
surface in these
polarized epithelial cells requires coexpression of
gI, and gE-gI
accumulates on the basolateral plasma membrane and not on
the
apical surface. These results were in contrast to our previous
observations with human R970 cells, highly transformed, nonepithelial
cells that do not form extensive cell junctions (
19). When
gE
was expressed without gI in R970 cells (using the E1
+ Ad
vectors), gE was largely processed to the mature form, could
be
iodinated on the cell surface by using lactoperoxidase, and
bound
IgG-coated red blood cells on the cell surface.

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FIG. 3.
gE requires gI to reach the surface of epithelial cells.
HEC-1A cells were infected with either Ad(E1 )gE (A and
D), Ad(E1 )gE plus Ad(E1 )gI (B and E), or
Ad(E1 )gD (C and F) for 48 h. The cells were fixed
with paraformaldehyde, either permeabilized with 0.2% TX100 (A to C)
or left unpermeabilized (D to F), and then incubated with MAb 3114, specific for gE (A, B, D, and E), or MAb DL-6, specific for gD (C and
F). The cells were washed, incubated with FITC-coupled goat anti-mouse
antibodies, washed again, mounted on coverslips, and viewed under a
Nikon epifluorescence microscope.
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gE and gI expressed by Ad vectors accumulates along lateral but not
basal or apical surfaces of epithelial cells.
Confocal microscopy
was used to examine the distribution of gE in more detail. HEC-1A cells
were coinfected with Ad(E1
)gE and Ad(E1
)gI
and stained simultaneously for gE and either ZO-1 or
-catenin. ZO-1
is a cytoplasmic protein and a component of tight junctions that is
important for tight-junction integrity (reviewed in reference 3). Tight junctions are localized just below the
apical membranes of epithelial cells and are responsible for polarizing
the apical and basolateral domains of the plasma membrane and for
restricting the movement of solutes from the apical to the basolateral
compartments.
-Catenin is a cytoplasmic protein and a component of
adherens junctions, cell junctions that are located more uniformly
along the lateral plasma membrane beginning just below tight junctions and extending to the basal surface. Adherens junctions are formed through homophilic binding of cadherins proteins, Ca-dependent cell
adhesion molecules (CAMs) which are linked to the cytoskeleton by
-
and
-catenins (reviewed in reference 54).
Extensive colocalization of gE and

-catenin was observed along the
entire lateral plasma membrane of the HEC-1A cell, beginning
just below
the level of the tight junctions. Representative images
of a section
near the middle of the lateral surface of a HEC-1A
cell, with gE in
green and

-catenin in red, are shown in Fig.
4A to
C, but a similar pattern was observed
along the entire lateral
surface, except near the apical surface. At
these subapical domains,
there was intense staining by anti-ZO-1
antibodies but not by
anti-gE antibodies (Fig.
4D to F). There was also
little or no
gE in the cytoplasm or on the apical or basal surfaces.

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FIG. 4.
Subcellular (confocal) localization of gE, gI, and gD in
polarized epithelial cells. HEC-1A cells were coinfected with
Ad(E1 )gE and Ad(E1 )gI (A to H) or infected
with Ad(E1 )gD (I) for 48 h or were infected with
HSV-1 for 8 h (J to L) or for 11 h (M to R). The cells were
fixed with paraformaldehyde, permeabilized with 0.2% TX100, washed,
and then incubated with various antibodies as follows. (A to C)
Anti- -catenin MAb (red) followed by Cy3-coupled anti-mouse
antibodies and then with anti-gE MAb 3114 (green) coupled directly to
Oregon Green followed by BODIPY-coupled anti-FITC antibodies (which
react with Oregon Green); (D to G) rabbit anti-ZO-1 (red) and,
simultaneously, anti-gE MAb 3114 (green) followed by FITC-coupled
anti-mouse IgG antibodies and Texas Red-coupled anti-rabbit antibodies;
(H) rabbit anti-ZO-1 (red) and, simultaneously, anti-gI MAb 3104 (green) followed by FITC-coupled antimouse IgG antibodies and Texas
Red-coupled anti-rabbit antibodies; (I) rabbit anti-ZO-1 (red) and,
simultaneously, anti-gD MAb DL6 followed by Texas Red-coupled
anti-rabbit antibodies and FITC-coupled anti-mouse IgG antibodies; (J
to O) as in A to C, anti- -catenin MAb (red) followed by anti-gE MAb
(green); (P to R) rabbit anti- -catenin (red) and, simultaneously,
anti-gD MAb DL6 followed by FITC-conjugated anti-mouse and Texas
Red-coupled anti-rabbit antibodies. The left panels show HSV gE or gD
in green, the same image with -catenin or ZO-1 stained in red in the
middle panels, and the two signals are combined in the right panels,
except in panels G to I, which show combined signals of ZO-1 and either
gE (G), gI (H), or gD (I). The arrows indicate borders of cells not in
contact with other cells and without gE-gI and -catenin.
|
|
Confocal sections were also taken through the
z axis of
cells expressing gE-gI, i.e., on a plane perpendicular to the images
in
Fig.
4A to F, so that the view is from the side of the monolayer
and
the apical membrane extends horizontally along the top of
the image.
z-axis images showed clearly that gE (green) accumulated
along most of the lateral borders between cells, extending from
the
bottom of the image (basal membrane) to near the apical membrane
(Fig.
4G). There was little or no gE found on either the apical
or basal
surfaces, and gE was excluded from tight junctions, which
were stained
by anti-ZO-1 antibodies (red). Moreover, gI was distributed
in
Ad(E1

)gE- and Ad(E1

)gI-infected HEC-1A
cells in a manner similar to gE, predominantly
along the lateral plasma
membrane, below the level of the tight
junction (Fig.
4H), and
extensively colocalized with

-catenin
(data not shown). gE and gI
also accumulated along the lateral
plasma membranes after expression
with replication-competent (E1
+) Ad vectors (data not
shown). By contrast, HSV glycoprotein gD,
expressed by
Ad(E1

)gD, accumulated primarily along the apical plasma
membranes of
HEC-1A cells (Fig.
4I). The observations that gE-gI was
exclusively
along the lateral surface and that gD was primarily on the
apical
surface extended to MDCK canine epithelial cells and A431 human
epithelial cells (data not shown).
Subcellular distribution of gE-gI and gD in HSV-infected epithelial
cells.
As with epithelial cells in which gE and gI were expressed
by Ad vectors, gE-gI accumulated along the lateral plasma membranes of
HSV-1-infected HEC-1A cells. After 8 h of infection with HSV-1, gE
largely accumulated in the lateral membranes, often being restricted to
patches in the central region of the membrane, but there was also a
small fraction of gE present in cytoplasmic membranes (Fig. 4J to L).
By 11 h, gE was distributed more uniformly along and across the
lateral plasma membranes, and there was little or no gE found in the
cytoplasm (Fig. 4M to O). As with cells infected with the Ad vectors,
there was no gE on the apical surfaces of HSV-infected cells. A pattern
similar to this was observed for gI, and the viral inoculum did not
contribute to this pattern of glycoprotein expression (data not shown).
By contrast, gD was found more widely distributed on all plasma
membrane surfaces, including the apical surfaces, and within the
cytoplasm of HSV-infected HEC-1A cells, and although there was also
some gD colocalizing with
-catenin on the lateral surfaces, gD did
not accumulate at sites of cell-cell contact to the extent that was
observed for gE-gI (Fig. 4P to R). Therefore, gE-gI, produced in Ad- or HSV-infected cells, accumulates along the lateral surfaces of epithelial cells, below the level of the tight junctions, whereas gD is
primarily present on the apical plasma membrane, as well as in the
cytoplasm.
gE accumulates at cell junctions but not on lateral surfaces that
are not forming junctions.
In subconfluent monolayers of HEC-1A
cells,
-catenin was concentrated at cell junctions but was not found
on those lateral membranes that were not in contact with another cell
(Fig. 4B). The white arrows in Fig. 4 indicate cell borders where cells
are not in contact with other cells. This was to be expected because cadherins and adherens junctions form only at sites at which cells contact one another. In both AdgE/gI- and HSV-infected cells, gE was
found only at sites of cell-cell contact and was absent from those
lateral surfaces not in contact with an opposing cell (Fig. 4A and M).
This observation has important implications because the specific
accumulation of gE-gI at cell junctions was independent of cell
polarization; there was no requirement that tight junctions and other
cell junctions must encircle the cells. Therefore, targeting of gE-gI
to the basolateral membrane and its retention there by virtue of the
barrier imposed by tight junctions cannot account for the accumulation
of gE-gI along the lateral surfaces of epithelial cells.
Solubility of gE-gI in nonionic detergent.
In polarized
epithelial cells, the accumulation of cellular proteins at cell
junctions often involves binding to components of the cytoskeleton
(reviewed in reference 31). For example, the
Na+,K+-ATPase and E-cadherin bind to components
of the cortical cytoskeleton, and this correlates with an increase in
resistance to extraction with nonionic detergents (e.g., TX100) at
concentrations greater than 0.5% (18, 34, 36). It was of
interest to determine whether gE-gI would resist extraction with low
concentrations of TX100, providing evidence that gE-gI was bound to the
cytoskeleton. HEC-1A cells were coinfected with Ad(E1
)gE
and Ad(E1
)gI, and cell extracts were made by using
increasing concentrations of TX100, from 0 to 1% (wt/vol). The
extracts were centrifuged to pellet the insoluble cytoskeletal
fraction, and then gE or E-cadherin was detected by Western blotting.
As shown in Fig. 5, a substantial
fraction of the gE could be solubilized with 0.05% TX100, and the
majority of the glycoprotein could be solubilized with 0.1% TX100. By
contrast, little of the E-cadherin was solubilized with 0.05% TX100,
and only a fraction of the protein was solubilized with 0.1% TX100.
There were significant fractions of the total E-cadherin that were not
solubilized with 0.2, 0.4, or 0.75% TX100, conditions under which the
majority of gE was solubilized. These results suggest either that gE-gI
does not bind tightly to the cytoskeleton or that its interaction with
the cytoskeleton is disrupted by relatively low concentrations of
TX100.

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FIG. 5.
Solubility of gE in the nonionic detergent TX100. HEC-1A
cells were infected with both Ad(E1 )gE and
Ad(E1 )gI for 48 h, washed with Tris-saline, and then
scraped into extraction buffer containing 0.1% TX100. Cell extracts
were centrifuged at 20,000 × g for 30 min. Proteins in
the pellets (P) and supernatants (S) were denatured in buffer
containing 2% SDS and 2% -mercaptoethanol; then the proteins were
boiled, subjected to electrophoresis, and transferred to
nitrocellulose. gE was detected by incubating the blots with MAb
II-481, and E-cadherin was detected with an anti-E-cadherin MAb; in
each case, this was followed by incubation with horseradish
peroxidase-coupled anti-mouse IgG antibodies and ECL (Amersham).
|
|
Expression of gE does not disrupt epithelial cell junctions.
Previously, it was reported that there was a redistribution of the cell
junction markers ZO-1, B-cadherin, and
-catenin in HSV-infected
human retinal epithelial cells (28). It was suggested that
gE-gI might contribute to this phenomenon, leading to increases in
paracellular permeability (28). In our experiments, gE-gI expression did not cause an obvious redistribution of either ZO-1 or
-catenin in HEC-1A, MDCK, or A431 epithelial cells, and there were
no obvious alterations in the cell junctions as determined by light
microscopy. Cell rounding and redistribution of junctions were observed
after HSV infection, but only late (16 to 18 h) after infection,
and there were no obvious differences when gE or gI was absent (mutants
F-gE
and F-US7kan, respectively) (data not shown).
To assess the integrity of tight junctions, we examined the resistance
of epithelial monolayers (TER). HEC-1A cells were grown
on filter
supports until a polarized monolayer was established,
and then the
cells were infected with Ad(E1

)gE and
Ad(E1

)gI or with a replication-defective control vector,
AddlE1, that
does not express gE or gI. More than 90% of the cells
grown on
filters and infected with Ad(E1

)gE and
Ad(E1

)gI stained positive for gE and gI (data not shown),
and the quantity
of gE-gI expressed in the ("mock") cells was
larger than that
in HSV-1-infected cells (Fig.
2B). There were no
significant differences
in TER when uninfected cells or cells infected
with AddlE1 were
compared to cells infected with Ad(E1

)gE
and Ad(E1

)gI; in all cases, the resistance of the cell
monolayer was greater
than 400

cm
2 (Fig.
6A).

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|
FIG. 6.
Expression of gE-gI does not disrupt the functional
integrity of tight junctions. HEC-1A cells were grown on membrane
filter supports for 5 days, until the TER exceeded 400 cm2; subsequently, the cells were coinfected with
Ad(E1 )gE and Ad(E1 )gI were infected with
AddlE1 (a control Ad vector) or were left uninfected (Mock) for a
further 2 days. (A) TER was measured with a Millipore Voltohmmeter.
Note that the values shown are resistance values for the cell
monolayers, since the resistance of the membrane support was subtracted
from the total resistance. (B) Paracellular permeability was determined
by introducing [14C]inulin into the upper compartment and
measuring the labelled inulin in the lower chamber at various time
points. In each case, three separate wells were used for each
measurement, and error bars represent the standard deviations.
|
|
We also examined the paracellular transport of
14C-labelled
inulin (a small molecule of ~5,000 Da) across epithelial cell
monolayers,
from the apical to the basolateral compartments. After
HEC-1A
cells were allowed to become polarized, they were infected
either
with AddlE1 or with Ad(E1

)gE plus
Ad(E1

)gI or were left uninfected, and then
14C-labelled inulin was added to the apical compartment of
the monolayer
and the accumulation of radiolabel in the basal
compartment was
measured. With membrane inserts alone, the labelled
inulin was
able to accumulate rapidly in the basal compartment, with
maximum
levels being achieved within 20 min (Fig.
6B). Movement of
[
14C] inulin from one compartment to the other was
markedly reduced
when HEC-1A cells were grown on the membranes (Fig.
6B). Infection
of the cells either with Ad(E1

)gE plus
Ad(E1

)gE or with AddlE1 had no effect. Therefore, the
expression of
gE-gI without other HSV proteins does not cause
redistribution
of junction proteins or affect the function of tight
junctions
in human HEC-1A cells.
 |
DISCUSSION |
Previous work with HSV and the related alphaherpesviruses PrV and
varicella-zoster virus has clearly demonstrated that gE-gI mediates or
facilitates cell-to-cell spread, especially in solid tissues such as
epithelium, in the nervous system, and with certain cultured cells,
e.g., normal fibroblasts, epithelial cells, and neurons, cells that
form extensive cell junctions (2, 24, 25). Other HSV
glycoproteins function similarly in cell-to-cell spread, but unlike
these glycoproteins, gE-gI functions in cell-to-cell spread but not in
the entry of extracellular virions. Therefore, interactions between
gE-gI and cell junctions may provide molecular details of how a
herpesvirus moves directly from cell to cell.
When gE-gI was expressed in HEC-1A cells or in other epithelial cells
by recombinant Ad vectors, the protein accumulated specifically along
the lateral surfaces of cells and was not found on either the apical or
basal surfaces or at tight junctions. Sorting of gE-gI to the
basolateral surfaces of these cells cannot explain the subcellular
localization of gE-gI. This specific accumulation did not include the
basal surface and was observed in subconfluent monolayers of cells,
before the cells became polarized and before tight junctions
encompassed the cell, excluding glycoprotein movement to the apical
surface. This observation has important implications for understanding
how gE-gI mediates cell-to-cell spread. In those epithelial cells that
were not in contact with other cells along one cell border, gE-gI
exclusively accumulated at cell junctions. Thus, glycoproteins
inserted into either lateral membrane should be capable of diffusion to
apical or other basolateral domains, without restriction by tight
junctions. We observed a similar distribution of gE-gI in HSV-infected
HEC-1A cells, but a second HSV glycoprotein expressed by Ad vectors,
gD, predominantly accumulated on the apical surface.
The simplest interpretation of our results is that gE-gI is retained at
epithelial cell junctions by binding to components of the cell
junctions. This is the case for cellular CAMs and other cell junction
components which are found specifically at sites of cell-cell contact
and not at lateral surfaces which are not in contact with other cells.
For example, cadherins are localized to cell junctions by virtue of
homophilic interactions with other cadherins, and without such
interactions the cadherins are rapidly endocytosed (reviewed in
reference 54). Certain cellular proteins accumulate
at cell junctions through interactions with the cytoskeletal elements
(31, 46), but in our experiments involving TX100 extraction,
gE-gI did not appear to be tightly bound to the cytoskeleton. However,
these results must be viewed with some caution because gE-gI may
interact with the cytoskeleton, directly or indirectly, by virtue of
interactions that are sensitive to TX100. The uniform distribution of
gE-gI along the lateral surfaces of cells, underneath the tight
junctions, was similar to that of
-catenin, a component of adherens
junctions; thus, likely candidates for cellular ligands of gE-gI are
the cadherins or other components of adherens junctions. gE and gI
mutants also show defects in cell-to-cell spread in normal human
fibroblasts and neurons (14, 15), cells that form
well-defined cell junctions but over a smaller percentage of the cell
membrane. Therefore, we expect that putative cellular ligands for gE-gI
will not be restricted to epithelial cells.
In other cell types, primarily highly transformed cell lines
e.g.,
Vero or R970 cells
that do not form extensive cell junctions, gE-gI
does not affect cell-cell spread. Previous studies involving nonpolarized cell lines such as L cells, Vero cells, and human R970 and
HeLa cells indicated that gE moved to the cell surface without gI
(5, 19, 45). Here, we found that gE accumulated in
perinuclear, cytoplasmic vesicles in epithelial cells, consistent with
reports that HSV gE and alphaherpesvirus gE homologues require coexpression of gI for efficient transport to the cell surface in some
but not all types of cells (29, 33, 49, 50, 53). Therefore,
there appears to be retention in the endoplasmic reticulum and possibly
misfolding of gE when the glycoprotein is expressed without gI, at
least in some types of cells. These results highlight the importance of
considering gE-gI as a functional and structural complex and of
characterizing gE-gI trafficking and function in cells that closely
approximate those infected in vivo.
Previously, there have been reports that certain HSV-2 glycoproteins
were transported to either the basolateral domain of bovine and monkey
epithelial cells (47) or the apical domains of neuroblastoma
cells (37) when the proteins were expressed by HSV-2
infection. It is not clear why our observations differ from these
previous results; however, we observed accumulation of gE-gI at
junctions with several other epithelial cell types, including canine
MDCK cells and human A431 epithelial cells. Our observation that gE-gI
is not present on the apical surface was interesting in light of
previous reports that gE-gI is present in the virion envelope (25,
39). Therefore, virus particles produced in polarized epithelial
cells may not contain gE-gI; alternatively, there may be very few
virions on the apical surfaces of these cells. This would represent a
striking difference between cells that form extensive cell junctions
and those that do not. Moreover, the finding that gE-gI is not present
on the apical surface complicates the notion that this complex acts as
an Fc receptor (reviewed in reference 55) because,
at least in these cells, gE-gI does not have access to IgG.
The accumulation of gE-gI on the lateral surfaces of epithelial cells
suggests that there are sorting mechanisms that specify transport of
this complex to the basolateral rather than apical membranes.
Basolateral sorting in polarized cells is mediated by a variety of
signals in the cytoplasmic tails of membrane glycoproteins (reviewed in
references 30, 32, and 42). Many
of these sequence motifs are related to or overlap with signals that
cause proteins to be recognized by adaptor proteins and directed to the
trans-Golgi network (TGN) and endosomes or incorporated into
cell surface clathrin-coated pits and endocytosed, e.g., tyrosine-based
motifs and dileucine motifs (21, 30, 32). The cytoplasmic
domain of HSV-1 gE contains a tyrosine motif, YADW, and gI contains a dileucine motif, both of which may affect TGN localization and specific
transport to basolateral surfaces. Similarly, varicella-zoster virus gE
contains a Tyr-based motif and an acidic domain that target the
glycoprotein to the TGN and specify endocytosis (1, 38, 56).
The accumulation of gE-gI at epithelial cell junctions in the absence
of other HSV polypeptides provides important clues as to how gE-gI
facilitates epithelial cell-to-cell spread. We have considered three
models of how gE-gI functions, based on the present observations. The
first model is based on work of Maidji et al. (28), who
suggested that gE-gI could promote cell-to-cell spread by disrupting
cell junctions. In our experiments, expression of gE-gI without other
HSV proteins did not lead to redistribution of
-catenin or ZO-1 or
to alterations in paracellular movement of small molecules in a number
of types of human and animal epithelial cells. In addition, we found no
differences in the kinetics with which cell junctions were disrupted by
wild-type versus gE
HSV-1 when all of the cells in a
monolayer were infected. Therefore, it appears unlikely that gE-gI
alone can disrupt epithelial cell junctions.
Two other models describing how gE-gI could affect cell-to-cell spread
are depicted in Fig. 7. Model A suggests
that gE-gI binds to cellular ligands concentrated at cell junctions
and, as a consequence of these interactions, facilitates transfer of HSV particles into the space between cells, their movement across this
space, or their fusion with the uninfected-cell membrane. It is not
clear at this point whether gE-gI that is part of the virion envelope
(Fig. 7A, top) or part of the plasma membrane (Fig. 7A, bottom)
mediates cell-to-cell spread. Related to this point, PrV mutants in
which gE was expressed, but not incorporated into the virion, formed
relatively small plaques on monolayers of bovine epithelial cells
(48), consistent with the view that gE must be in the virion
envelope in order to facilitate PrV cell-to-cell spread. However, it is
also possible that these mutant PrV gE molecules were mislocalized in
cells. Whether gE-gI acts as part of the virion envelope or the plasma
membrane, it is difficult to explain the accumulation of this complex
at cell junctions without proposing that it binds some cellular
component of junctions. Close apposition between the two plasma
membranes at junctions would allow gE-gI to interact with a cellular
ligand on an adjoining cell, in a similar fashion to CAMs. In this
manner, gE-gI may provide a favorable environment for gB, gD, or gH-gL
to promote entry of virus into the apposing cell. This model is also
consistent with the observation that gI (and perhaps even gE) is
structurally or evolutionarily related to a family of S-component
glycoproteins including gD and gG (31a), and gD is known to
act as a receptor binding protein (10, 23, 51).

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FIG. 7.
Models for how gE-gI facilitates epithelial cell-to-cell
spread. (A) gE-gI (triangles) accumulates at junctions formed between
an infected cell (left) and an uninfected cell (right) by virtue of
interactions with cellular ligands which are expressed in the lateral
membranes of the uninfected cell. Presumably, binding of gE-gI to these
cellular ligands enhances the transfer of virus across cell junctions
so that virus particles can move into the space between the cells and
then fuse with the opposing, uninfected cell membrane. It is not clear
whether gE-gI functions in this capacity as part of the virion envelope
(top) or as a constituent of the plasma membrane of the infected cell
(bottom). (B) Alternatively, gE-gI may act as a trafficking signal to
direct enveloped particles to the lateral plasma membrane rather than
to the apical surface (as with apically sorted proteins). Since there
is some evidence that the cytoplasmic domains of gE and gI have motifs
that affect intracellular transport, it is likely that these cytosolic
domains serve to target virions present within cytoplasmic vesicles to
sites of cell-cell contact.
|
|
The second model (Fig. 7B) suggests that gE-gI acts by sorting virus
particles, so that virions are preferentially transported to lateral
surfaces and cell junctions rather than to the apical plasma membrane.
Since most cytoplasmic virions are within membrane vesicles, it is
likely that this sorting involves the cytoplasmic tails of gE or gI
that are part of these vesicles. Thus, the gE-gI cytoplasmic tails may
interact with the cellular sorting machinery to direct virus particles
to sites of cell-cell contact. To explain the accumulation of gE-gI at
cell junctions in this model, we propose that junctions are the final
destination, so that gE-gI accumulates there after long-term
expression. It is important to note that these two models are not
necessarily mutually exclusive. It will be important to study the
effects of mutating gE and gI on the subcellular trafficking of gE-gI,
its localization to cell junctions, and its cell-to-cell spread.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
We thank Kenneth Fish, Jodi Engstrom, and Sally Hanson for their
patience and help with the confocal microscopy. We are grateful to the
members of the Johnson and Jay Nelson labs for many helpful discussions.
Support for this research was provided by grants from the Medical
Research Council of Canada (MRCC) and the NIH (CA73996). During a
portion of this work, K.S.D. held a research studentship from the MRCC
and D.C.J. was a senior research scholar of the National Cancer
Institute of Canada.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: L-220 Dept. of
Molecular Microbiology and Immunology, Oregon Health Sciences
University, 3181 S.W. Sam Jackson Park Rd., L220, Portland, OR 97201. Phone: (503) 494-0834. Fax: (503) 494-6862. E-mail:
johnsoda{at}ohsu.edu.
 |
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Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
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