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J Virol, February 1998, p. 975-985, Vol. 72, No. 2
0022-538X/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Disruption of the G1/S Transition in
Human Papillomavirus Type 16 E7-Expressing Human Cells Is Associated
with Altered Regulation of Cyclin E
Larry G.
Martin,
G. William
Demers,
and
Denise A.
Galloway*
Program in Cancer Biology, Fred Hutchinson
Cancer Research Center, Seattle, Washington 98104
Received 8 August 1997/Accepted 27 October 1997
 |
ABSTRACT |
The development of neoplasia frequently involves inactivation of
the p53 and retinoblastoma (Rb) tumor suppressor pathways and
disruption of cell cycle checkpoints that monitor the integrity of
replication and cell division. The human papillomavirus type 16 (HPV-16) oncoproteins, E6 and E7, have been shown to bind p53 and Rb,
respectively. To further delineate the mechanisms by which E6 and E7
affect cell cycle control, we examined various aspects of the cell
cycle machinery. The low-risk HPV-6 E6 and E7 proteins did not cause
any significant change in the levels of cell cycle proteins analyzed.
HPV-16 E6 resulted in very low levels of p53 and p21 and globally
elevated cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK) activity. In contrast, HPV-16 E7
had a profound effect on several aspects of the cell cycle machinery. A
number of cyclins and CDKs were elevated, and despite the elevation of
the levels of at least two CDK inhibitors, p21 and p16, CDK activity
was globally increased. Most strikingly, cyclin E expression was
deregulated both transcriptionally and posttranscriptionally and
persisted at high levels in S and G2/M. Transit through
G1 was shortened by the premature activation of cyclin
E-associated kinase activity. Elevation of cyclin E levels required
both the CR1 and CR2 domains of E7. These data suggest that cyclin E
may be a critical target of HPV-16 E7 in the disruption of
G1/S cell cycle progression and that the ability of E7 to
regulate cyclin E involves activities in addition to the release of
E2F.
 |
INTRODUCTION |
Decisions to enter S phase and
proliferate, arrest in the G0/G1 phase of the
cell cycle, or differentiate are based on internal and external
environmental stimuli. Progression through the cell cycle is dependent
on the phosphorylation of key regulatory proteins by cyclin-dependent
kinases (CDKs), which in turn are regulated in a complex fashion by
association with cyclins, by phosphorylation and dephosphorylation, and
by CDK-inhibitory proteins, CKIs (reviewed in reference
60). Progression through the cell cycle is monitored and DNA synthesis or mitosis is delayed if the integrity of the cell is
compromised (5).
Mammalian cells commit to cell division during mid-G1,
termed the restriction point (66), following phosphorylation
of pRb, the product of the retinoblastoma tumor suppressor gene
(13, 66). At least two cyclin-CDK complexes phosphorylate
Rb, cyclin D-CDK4 or -CDK6 and cyclin E-CDK2 (22, 34, 60).
While Rb appears to be an exclusive target of cyclin D-associated
kinases, cyclin E probably targets additional factors necessary for
cell cycle progression (49, 50). Ectopic expression of
cyclins D1 and E have been shown to accelerate the G1/S
transition (49, 50, 54), and they appear to control two
different rate-limiting events (55). Rb becomes inactivated
by phosphorylation and releases the transcription factor E2F. Free E2F
transactivates numerous S-phase gene promoters prior to the movement of
cells into S phase (14, 41). Among the targets of E2F
transactivation are cyclins D, E, and A (48).
A number of human papillomaviruses (HPV) infect epithelial cells in the
genital tract and are classified based on their oncogenic potential:
the low-risk viruses (e.g., types 6 and 11) are most often associated
with benign genital warts, whereas the high-risk viruses (e.g., types
16 and 18) are frequently found in cervical carcinomas (74).
The in vivo biology of HPVs is recapitulated in their potential to
immortalize primary human cells in vitro (37). The E6 and E7
genes are invariably retained and expressed in tumors, while all the
other viral genes are dispensable, and E6 and E7 together efficiently
immortalize cells. In response to growth arrest signals such as DNA
damage or transforming growth factor
(TGF-
), cells expressing
HPV-16 but not HPV-6 oncoproteins continue to proliferate
(15). Replication of papillomaviruses requires a
cis-acting origin and a virally encoded origin binding protein with helicase activity, while other factors required for the
biosynthesis of DNA are cellular products (reviewed in references 44 and 63). Thus, HPVs have
evolved functions to ensure that infected cells enter S phase.
The E7 proteins of several HPVs bind to the retinoblastoma tumor
suppressor, p105Rb (18), and other Rb family members such as
p107 and p130 (10) through a well-defined motif, LxCxE.
HPV-16 E7 binds Rb with higher affinity both in vitro (46)
and in vivo (26) than HPV-6 E7 does. The E7-Rb interaction
results in the release of E2F. Accordingly, the expression of E7 in NIH
3T3 cells leads to a rapid induction of cyclin E (71), which
was shown to be dependent on the E2F site in the cyclin E promoter
(3). In addition, HPV-16 E7 expression results in a
reduction in the levels of Rb protein (16), although the
combined expression of E6 and E7 results in high levels of Rb
(16). E7 has been shown to induce cells to enter S phase
(65), including suprabasal epithelial cells, which are
normally quiescent (2, 6, 15, 29). HPV-16 E6 binds to p53
(67) in concert with a cellular ubiquitin-conjugating
enzyme, E6AP, and targets p53 for degradation (58). HPV-6 E6
binds to p53 much more weakly (9, 24, 67) and does not
target p53 for degradation in vitro, and the intracellular level of p53
in cells expressing 6E6 is unaffected (24).
To further analyze how papillomavirus oncoproteins disrupt cell cycle
control, we introduced HPV-6 and HPV-16 E6 and E7 genes into primary
human cells and examined various aspects of the cell cycle machinery.
HPV-16 E7 expression had a profound effect on levels of several
cyclins, CDKs, and CKIs. Interestingly, cyclin E regulation was
disrupted both transcriptionally by the increase in E2F activity and
posttranscriptionally by additional mechanisms resulting in altered
cell cycle distribution.
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Cell culture and recombinant retroviral plasmids.
Primary
human epithelial and fibroblast cells were prepared from human foreskin
samples and infected with amphotropic retroviruses as previously
described (30). The retroviral vector LXSN (45) contained the HPV-6 or HPV-16 E6 or E7 oncogenes singularly or in
combination and a gene which confers neomycin resistance
(30). Retroviral constructs expressing mutated HPV-16 E7
proteins have also been described (15). The vector
containing the cDNA encoding human cyclin E (49) was kindly
provided by Jim Roberts (Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center).
Infected cells were selected with G418 (1 mg/ml) for 7 to 10 days.
Epithelial cells were maintained in keratinocyte serum-free medium
(GIBCO). Fibroblasts were grown in Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium
supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum (FBS; HyClone) and
antibiotics.
Western blots and kinase assays.
Cell monolayers were washed
with phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) and scraped from culture plates.
Total-cell lysates were prepared by lysing packed cells in lysis buffer
(50 mM Tris-HCl [pH 7.5], 250 mM NaCl, 5 mM EDTA, 0.1% sodium
dodecyl sulfate [SDS], 1% Nonidet P-40, 1% deoxycholic acid, 20%
glycerol) containing 50 mM NaF, 0.5 mM sodium orthovanadate, 80 mM
-glycerophosphate, 10 µg of aprotinin per ml, 10 µg of pepstatin
per ml, 25 µg of leupeptin per ml, 0.5 mg of Pefablock per ml, and 1 mM dithiothreitol. The lysates were sonicated in a cup horn sonicator
(Branson Sonifier 450), and the supernatants were diluted in sample
buffer (0.25 M Tris-HCl [pH 7.5], 8% [wt/vol] SDS, 40%
[vol/vol] glycerol, 20% [vol/vol]
-mercaptoethanol, 0.05%
[wt/vol] bromophenol blue). The proteins were resolved on
Tris-glycine SDS-polyacrylamide gels and transferred to polyvinylidene
difluoride (PVDF) membranes (Dupont). Cyclin A (1:2,500) and CDC2
(1:3,000) polyclonal rabbit antibodies were kindly provided by Jim
Roberts. Affinity-purified goat anti-rabbit immunoglobulin Gs IgGs
(peroxidase conjugated) were used as secondary antibodies (1:20,000;
Boehringer Mannheim). Monoclonal antibodies to cyclins B1 (1:1000), D1
(1:200), E (1:5,000), and A (1:600) (Pharmingen) and to CDK2 (1:250)
and CDK4 (1:250) (Transduction Laboratories) were used. Anti-mouse
horseradish peroxidase conjugate was used as a source of secondary
antibodies (Jackson Immunoresearch Laboratories). Membranes were
developed by chemiluminescence (Renaissance; NEN).
Histone H1 kinase assays were performed as previously described
(38, 39) with polyclonal antibodies against cyclins A and E,
CDK2, and CDC2 provided by Jim Roberts. Briefly, extracts (100 µg)
were subjected to immunoprecipitation with cyclin E antibodies (1 µl)
on ice for 20 min. Immunocomplexes were collected on protein A-Sepharose (Pharmacia Biotech) and washed three times with H1 wash
buffer and once with H1 kinase buffer. The H1 kinase reaction mixtures
were incubated at 37°C for 30 min in kinase buffer in the presence of
histone H1 (40 µg; Sigma) and [
-32P]ATP (10 µCi
per reaction) (Dupont/NEN). The reaction products were resolved on
SDS-12% polyacrylamide gels and analyzed by autoradiography.
RNase protection assays.
Total-cell RNA was extracted by
lysing cells directly on culture plates with 1.5 ml of guanidinium
solution (4M guanidinium isothiocyanate, 20 mM sodium acetate [pH
5.2], 0.1 mM dithiothreitol, 0.5% N-lauroylsarcosine
[Sarkosyl]). The lysates were scraped from the culture dishes and
sheared, and the entire cell lysate was layered onto a cushion of 5.7 M
cesium chloride (CsCl). The samples were fractionated at 150,000 × g for 16 to 24 h at 18°C. RNA was resuspended in TES
buffer (10 mM Tris [pH 7.5], 5 mM EDTA [pH 7.5], 1% SDS] and
precipitated twice on a mixture of dry ice and ethanol. Riboprobe
templates were prepared by cloning cyclin E (390 bp), A (342 bp), and
D1 (320 bp) coding fragments into the PBS(+) plasmid expression vector.
The RNA loading control riboprobe was synthesized from pGem-4z
containing a 220-bp PstI fragment of 36B4 (a gift of Robert
Dickson and Sharyl Nass, Lombardi Cancer Center, Georgetown University)
(42, 47). The plasmids were linearized with EcoRI
or NcoI. RNA antisense strands were synthesized with RNA
polymerase T3 or T7 (Boehringer Mannheim) and
[
-32P]UTP (800 Ci/mmol; Dupont/NEN). The riboprobes
were treated with DNase I and purified through Sephadex G-50 columns
(Pharmacia Biotech).
RNase protection assays were conducted by following the protocol of the
Ribonuclease Protection Assay kit (RPA II; Ambion).
Protected RNA
fragments were separated on 5% acrylamide-8 M urea
gels. The gels
were quantitated with a PhosphorImager (Molecular
Dynamics).
Cell synchronization and sorting and cell cycle analysis.
Primary human foreskin fibroblasts (HFF) were synchronized either by a
combination of density arrest and serum starvation (D/S) or by just
serum starvation (S). Either the cells were grown to density for 2 days
and incubated in 0.5% FBS for 3 days (D/S) or subconfluent cell
populations were incubated in 0.2% FBS for 3 days (S). The cell cycle
phases were measured by flow cytometry (FACScan; Becton Dickinson) and
analyzed with Cell Quest software (Becton Dickinson) and MultiCycle
(PHOENIX Flow Systems, San Diego, Calif.).
Human foreskin keratinocytes (HFK) were trypsinized from culture plates
and resuspended in 5 ml of PBS-ABC (1× phosphate-buffered
saline, 1 mM
CaCl
2, 1 mM MgCl
2). Nuclear staining was
performed
by staining the cells with 5 µg of Hoechst 33342 per
10
6 cells per ml. To eliminate nonviable cells from the
sorted population,
the cells were counterstained with propidium iodide
(PI) at a
final concentration of 5 µg/ml and gated out. HFKs were
sorted
into G
1, S, and G
2/M fractions on the
FACS Vantage (Becton Dickinson).
The cell cycle fractions (6 × 10
4 cells) were sorted into sterile Eppendorf tubes. Flow
cytometric
data were collected and analyzed with Cell Quest and
MultiCycle.
The cell pellets were lysed in lysis buffer, sonicated, and
centrifuged
to remove cellular debris. Sample buffer was added before
the
entire cellular lysates were loaded onto SDS-polyacrylamide gel
electrophoresis (PAGE) gels.
 |
RESULTS |
HPV-16 E7 alters the levels and activities of cyclins, CDKs, and
CKIs.
LXSN-based amphotropic retroviruses expressing the E6 and E7
genes of HPV-6 and HPV-16 were used to infect HFK and HFF cultures derived from neonatal foreskin. HFKs were chosen because they represent
the natural targets of HPV infection; HFFs were chosen because cell
cycle proteins have been frequently studied in this cell type because
it is easier to grow in culture and easier to synchronize. The cultures
were selected for neomycin resistance, and expression of the viral
proteins was documented by radioimmunoprecipitation with specific
antisera (23). As demonstrated previously (16, 29,
30), each of the papillomavirus proteins was expressed abundantly; E7 was expressed at a reduced level from E6/E7 retrovirus compared to the E7 retrovirus, as shown previously (16, 21, 29), because of transcriptional repression of the retroviral long
terminal repeat LTR by E6 (21).
To begin to examine the effects of the HPV oncogenes on the cell cycle,
expression of a panel of G
1, S and G
2/M
regulatory
control proteins was examined. Figure
1 shows individually probed
Western blots
for several cyclins and CDKs in asynchronously growing
HFKs (Fig.
1A)
and HFFs (Fig.
1B) and in HFFs arrested in
G
0/G
1 by growth to density and serum starvation
(HFF-D/S) (Fig.
1C).
No changes in any of the cell cycle proteins were
detected as
a result of the low-risk oncogenes. The only noticeable
change
in cells expressing HPV-16 E6 was a reduction in the level of
cyclin D1. In cells expressing HPV-16 E7, several cyclins and
CDKs were
more abundant; the most striking and consistent change
was the
increased level of cyclin E. In asynchronously growing
populations of
HFKs or HFFs, cyclin E levels were elevated approximately
threefold. A
more dramatic elevation in the level of cyclin E
protein, ranging from
5- to 20-fold, was observed in quiescent
cells (Fig.
1C) (see below).
Elevated levels of cyclin A were
not consistently detected in
asynchronously growing cells expressing
E7 but were detected in
synchronous populations released from
quiescence (see below).

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FIG. 1.
Cyclin and CDK protein levels in asynchronous and
G0/G1-arrested cells. Total-cell lysates were
prepared from asynchronous HFKs and HFFs (A and B) or
G0/G1-arrested fibroblasts (C) expressing the
designated viral gene. Proteins (20 µg/lane) were fractionated on
individual SDS-PAGE gels (12% polyacrylamide) and transferred to PVDF
membranes. The membranes were probed with antibodies, as described in
Materials and Methods, and were visualized by enhanced
chemiluminescence. (D) The cells were fixed, processed for PI
immunofluorescence, and monitored for their position in the cycle by
FACScan analysis.
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|
Among asynchronously growing HFFs, the distribution of cells in
G
1, S, and G
2/M was not significantly affected
by the HPV
oncogenes whereas constitutive overexpression of cyclin E
from
a retroviral promoter reduced the number of cells in
G
1 as previously
reported (
49). HFKs responded
more dramatically to increased
cyclin E levels, with fewer cells in the
G
1 phase in the E7-expressing
population and an even
greater reduction in the cyclin E-overexpressing
population. Growth
arrest by either depletion of serum (S) or
density arrest followed by
serum depletion (D/S) generally resulted
in an almost complete
accumulation of LXSN cells in G
0/G
1, with
only
1 to 2% of the cells being found in the S phase (Fig.
1D);
however,
the E7-expressing cells were never as tightly arrested,
with an S-phase
population of 5 and 10% in the D/S- and S-arrested
cells,
respectively.
At least two families of CDK inhibitors, the CIP/KIP family and the
INK4 family, mediate the G
1/S transition by controlling
the
kinase activity of the cyclin D- and cyclin E-associated CDKs
(
60). We had previously observed that p53 protein levels
were
elevated three- to fivefold in HPV-16 E7-expressing cells and
that
p53 protein was nearly undetectable in E6-expressing cells,
although
the RNA levels were unchanged (
16,
17). p21cip1 is
transcriptionally activated by p53 (
19,
20); thus, the
elevated
levels of p53 in E7-expressing cells may result in increased
p21
production. Figure
2A shows that the
levels of p21cip1 parallel
the levels of p53 in the HPV
oncogene-expressing cells; the levels
of p21 protein reflected the
level of p21 mRNA (data not shown).
p16ink4 specifically regulates
cyclin D-associated kinases, which
in turn mediate phosphorylation of
Rb and release of E2F (reviewed
in references
34,
36, and
60). High levels of p16 protein
were observed in 16E7-expressing cells (Fig.
2B), consistent with
the
hypothesis that the requirement for cyclin D-associated kinase
activity
is obviated by the ability of E7 to release E2F from
Rb. p27kip1
associates with G
1 cyclin complexes and mediates
G
1 arrest in response to antimitogenic signals such as
TGF-

or contact
inhibition (
40,
53). Neither p27 protein
(Fig.
2C) nor RNA
levels (data not shown) varied significantly in E6-
or E7-expressing
cells, indicating that transcription of p27 is not
regulated by
p53 or E2F and that HPV oncogenes did not affect the
levels of
p27. These observations indicate that cells expressing E7
continue
to cycle in the presence of high levels of at least two CKIs,
p21 and p16.

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FIG. 2.
CKI expression and CDK activity in proliferating cells.
(A to C) Whole-cell lysates were prepared from retrovirally transduced
asynchronous HFKs. Lysates (20 µg) were resolved on SDS-PAGE gels
(12% polyacrylamide) and probed with monoclonal antibodies to p53 and
p21 (A), p16 (B), and p27 (C). (D) Extracts were prepared from
asynchronous HFKs expressing the indicated HPV oncogenes,
immunoprecipitated with antibodies to cyclin A, cyclin E, CDK2, or CDC2
with protein A-Sepharose, washed, and tested for H1 histone kinase
activity.
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Lysates were prepared from asynchronously growing HFKs,
immunoprecipitated with antibodies to various cyclins or CDKs, and
assayed for the ability to phosphorylate histone H1 (Fig.
2D).
Cells
expressing the low-risk viral oncogenes had kinase activity
comparable
to levels in uninfected or vector-infected cells. In
contrast, the
cyclin A-, cyclin E-, CDK2-, and CDC2-associated
kinase activity was
elevated in the HPV-16 E6- or E7-expressing
cells. In all cases, kinase
activity was highest in the E6-expressing
cells, either alone or with
E7, suggesting that the reduction
of p21 had a profound effect on CDK
activity in cycling cells.
E7-expressing cells also showed a
significant enhancement of CDK
activity compared to vector-infected
HFKs, despite the presence
of elevated levels of p21. Elevated levels
of cyclin E probably
contributed to the increased cyclin E-associated
kinase activity;
however, other mechanisms may be involved as well.
Transcriptional and posttranscriptional regulation of cyclin
E.
The promoter for the cyclin E gene contains E2F-responsive
sites (14, 27), and transcription of cyclin E is elevated in cells with inactive Rb protein (32, 71); therefore, we
examined levels of cyclin E RNA in HPV-16 E7-expressing cells. Although Northern blotting had detected elevated levels of cyclin E RNA in
established rodent cell lines (32, 71), that approach was not sensitive enough in HFK cells, although cyclin D RNA was detectable in the HFKs and cyclin E RNA was detectable in NIH 3T3 cells by Northern blot analysis (data not shown). Therefore, RNase protection assays were carried out with RNA from asynchronously growing cells expressing the vector or the HPV-16 oncogenes (Fig.
3). Each hybridization contained total
RNA; a single cyclin probe for cyclin E, D1, or A; and an internal
loading control probe, 36B4. Fivefold more RNA was required to detect
the cyclin E RNA than the cyclin D RNA, and 2.5-fold more was required
to detect the cyclin E RNA than the cyclin A RNA. In the asynchronously
growing HFKs expressing E7, less than a twofold elevation in cyclin E
RNA levels was seen. These results suggested that transcriptional
activation by E2F at least partially contributed to the increased level
of cyclin E in E7-expressing cells, but posttranscriptional mechanisms
may also contribute.

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FIG. 3.
mRNA expression of cyclins E, D1, and A in primary human
keratinocytes. Total-cell RNA was extracted from asynchronous
populations of HFKs expressing the high-risk HPV oncogenes. RNA (25, 10, and 5 µg) was used for hybridization with
[ -32P]UTP riboprobes for cyclins E, A and D1,
respectively. Protected fragments and the internal loading control 36B4
were run on the same gel and exposed for the same length of time.
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Because cyclin E levels were more dramatically elevated in
growth-arrested cells, we sought to investigate the cell
cycle-regulated
expression of cyclin E. Two complementary approaches
were used.
First, HFFs were growth arrested, either by growth to
confluence
followed by removal of serum (Fig.
4) or by serum depletion of
sparse
cultures (Fig.
5), and then they were
stimulated and examined
periodically for 36 h. Arrest of primary
human fibroblasts, particularly
those expressing E7, was difficult,
requiring prolonged periods
of growth at confluence (2 days) and
without serum (3 days). Consequently,
a substantial fraction of the
population did not reenter the cycle.
Because reentry into the cell
cycle from a G
0/G
1 arrest and/or
mitogenic
stimulation can complicate interpretation of the cell
cycle profile, as
a second approach asynchronously growing HFKs
were separated into
G
1, S, and G
2/M fractions by FACS sorting
and
cell cycle proteins were analyzed (Fig.
6).

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FIG. 4.
Cell cycle progression following density and serum
starvation arrest. HPV-16 E6, E7, cyclin E, and LXSN vector were
retrovirally transduced into HFFs, and the cells were
G0/G1 arrested by a combined growth to density
and serum deprivation. The cells were restimulated to enter the cycle
by being plated subconfluently in 10% FBS-supplemented media and
harvested at 0, 6, 12, 18, 24, 30, and 36 h after release. (A)
Cells were processed for PI immunofluorescence and monitored for cell
cycle position by FACScan. (B to F) Cyclin E protein levels (B) and
associated kinase activity (C) was determined, and protein lysates were
probed for p53 (D), p21 (E), and p27 (F).
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FIG. 5.
Cell cycle arrest following serum starvation. HPV-16 E7-
and vector-expressing HFFs were starved of serum for 48 h,
restimulated with 10% FBS, and monitored at intervals for 30 h
after release. (A to D) The cells were harvested and prepared for FACS
analysis (A), protein lysates were immunoblotted for cyclin E (B) and
cyclin A (C), and RNA samples were analyzed by RNase protection for
cyclins E and A; 36B4 was used as a control (D). (E) RNA levels were
quantitated by PhosphorImager analysis.
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FIG. 6.
Cyclin and CKI levels in different cell cycle
compartments. Asynchronous HFKs expressing E7 or vector were harvested
at 106 cells/ml, stained with the DNA binding dye Hoechst
33342 (500 µg/ml), and counterstained with PI (100 µg/ml).
G1, S, and G2/M cell populations were isolated
at 6 × 104 cells per phase. Protein lysates were
probed with either anti-cyclin E, A, CDK2, p21, or p27 (A), and the
amount of cyclin E was quantitated by PhosphorImager analysis (B).
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After replating and addition of serum, the LXSN-expressing D/S HFFs
began to enter S phase after 18 h; by 30 h the S-phase
population was maximal and some cells had begun to enter G
2
(Fig.
4A). The progression was accelerated in E7-expressing D/S cells;
they began to enter S by 12 h, were maximally in S by 24 h
with
cells entering G
2, and were asynchronous by 30 h.
When the cells
were arrested by serum deprivation only, the same
relative profiles
were observed except that entry into S phase occurred
4 h earlier
and G
0/G
1 arrest of the E7
cells was less complete (Fig.
5A).
In the LXSN-expressing cells, the levels of cyclin E were low in the
D/S-arrested cells and peaked by 12 to 18 h just prior
to entry
into S phase (Fig.
4B). In the serum-starved cells, an
increase in the
level of cyclin E protein was detected at 16 h,
with a decrease to
G
1 levels by 20 h (Fig.
5B). The E7-expressing
cells
arrested with high levels of cyclin E, which were elevated
from 6 to
12 h after release; the level of cyclin E protein decreased
by 16 to 18 h but was elevated in comparison to that of LXSN.
Cells that
constitutively overexpressed cyclin E had high levels
of cyclin E
protein that did not oscillate with the cell cycle.
It is interesting
that multiple bands of cyclin E were observed
in all of the arrested
cells (Fig.
4B and
5B) whereas the asynchronously
growing cells had
fewer bands (Fig.
1 and
6). Alternative forms
of cyclin E were
previously noted in cyclin E-overexpressing cells
(
28,
50)
and are shown here to be related not only to high
levels of cyclin E
protein but also to growth arrest conditions.
The slowest-migrating
species of cyclin E predominated in asynchronously
growing cells,
whereas a faster-migrating species was more abundant
in
G
0/G
1-arrested cells.
Transcription of cyclin RNA was examined after release from serum
starvation (Fig.
5D). In the LXSN-expressing cells, cyclin
E mRNA
levels rose following the addition of serum, were highest
as the cells
entered S, and dropped in late S phase. The cyclin
E mRNA level was
threefold higher in the serum-deprived E7-expressing
cells, although
this may simply represent the greater proportion
of cells in the S
phase. A similar, though less pronounced, oscillation
of the cyclin E
mRNA level was observed as the E7-expressing cells
entered and then
passed through the S phase. Cyclin E RNA and
protein levels oscillated
less than twofold throughout the cell
cycle; however, the difference in
cell cycle expression was obscured
by the large percentage of arrested
cells expressing cyclin E
which never reentered the cycle.
A clearer pattern emerged from the cyclin E-associated kinase activity
(Fig.
4C). The rise in cyclin E-associated kinase activity
occurred a
few hours before cells detectably entered the S phase
despite high
levels of cyclin E protein in the E7- and cyclin
E-expressing cells
during G
1. Taken together, these data showed
that quiescent
E7-expressing HFFs had at least 10-fold more cyclin
E protein than
normal growth-arrested HFFs, which resulted only
partially from
increased transcription of cyclin E. Cyclin E transcription
and protein
levels increased prior to entry into S phase, coincident
with an
increase in cyclin E-associated kinase activity.
Serum-starved LXSN HFFs arrested with undetectable levels of cyclin A,
which remained low throughout G
1, rose continuously
throughout S, and had the highest level at 24 h, when cells were
in G
2 (Fig.
5C). Cyclin A RNA levels paralleled the levels
of
protein (Fig.
5D). The serum-starved E7-expressing cells had more
abundant cyclin A protein, probably reflecting cells in S phase
due to
incomplete arrest. Levels of cyclin A protein and RNA began
to rise
about 4 h earlier in the E7-expressing cells, consistent
with the
accelerated entry into S phase. At a time when most cells
were in S and
G
2, the difference in the cyclin A levels was less
than
twofold between the LXSN- and E7-expressing cells.
Arrested LXSN cells had low levels of p53 that increased in early
G
1 or upon mitogenic stimulation and then returned to low
levels (Fig.
4D). The level of p53 protein was higher in the
E7-expressing
cells, but the pattern of expression was similar
throughout the
cell cycle. E6-expressing cells had almost undetectable
levels
of p53, although a slight mitogenic stimulation was noticeable.
The pattern of p21 expression did not entirely parallel the levels
of
p53, indicating both p53-dependent and p53-independent regulation
of
p21 expression (Fig.
4E). LXSN-expressing cells were arrested
with a
low level of p21, which increased with the addition of
serum or entry
into G
1, as seen for p53; the levels remained low
in late
G
1 and S and then increased in G
2/M without a
parallel
increase in the p53 protein level. p21 levels were greatly
elevated
in the E7-expressing cells. A shorter exposure of the blot
also
showed a decline in p21 levels during late G
1 and S,
with higher
levels by G
2/M (data not shown). Interestingly,
E6-expressing
cells arrested with high levels of p21 in the absence of
detectable
p53; no burst in early G
1 or upon mitogenic
stimulation was seen,
nor was there a detectable increase in
G
2/M. p27 protein levels
were equivalent in all of the
arrested cells, increased slightly
as the cells were restimulated to
enter G
1, and declined as the
cells entered S (Fig.
4F). By
30 h, when the E7-expressing cells
were in late G
2/M,
the levels of p27 increased.
Figure
6 shows the distribution of cell cycle proteins among an
equivalent number of flow-sorted G
1, S, and
G
2/M cells expressing
vector or E7. As anticipated,
vector-expressing cells had the
highest level of cyclin E in the
G
1 phase of the cell cycle, which
decreased in S and
continued to decline in G
2/M. Cyclin E levels
were also
highest in the G
1 population of E7-expressing cells,
but
the amount of protein was elevated less than twofold compared
to that
in vector-expressing cells. Although the levels of cyclin
E declined in
S and G
2/M, the abundance of protein was 5.5- and
20-fold
greater, respectively, than the S and G
2/M fractions of
LXSN-expressing cells. These data suggest that the cell cycle
regulation of cyclin E was disrupted in E7-expressing cells. In
comparison, cyclin A levels were lowest in G
1, increased in
S,
and were highest in G
2/M, as expected. Both the pattern
of expression
and the protein levels were similar in LXSN- and
E7-expressing
cells, indicating that the disregulation of cyclin
turnover was
not perturbed globally in E7-expressing cells but was
specific
for cyclin E. CDK2 protein levels were more or less constant
throughout
the cell cycle, and the levels were similar in both
populations
(data not shown). The pattern of expression of p21 and p27
had
a similar distribution throughout the cell cycle. Protein levels
were highest in G
1, decreased in S, and were elevated in
G
2/M.
The G
2/M-associated increase was less
prominent for p27 than for
p21. The distribution of these proteins was
the same in the E7-expressing
cells, although the amount of p21 was
elevated two- to threefold
in all three cell cycle compartments in the
E7-expressing cells
compared with the LXSN-expressing cells, indicating
that the cell
cycle regulation of p21 and p27 was not disrupted in the
E7-expressing
cells.
Elevation of the cyclin E level requires the CR1 and CR2 domains of
E7.
To begin to understand the mechanism by which E7 expression
resulted in deregulation of cyclin E levels and cell cycle
distribution, we examined the regions of E7 responsible for increasing
the levels of cyclin E protein. The amino terminus of E7 contains two
regions of homology to other DNA viral oncoproteins. The CR2 domain
contains the well-recognized LxCxE motif (residues 22 to 26), which
mediates binding to Rb and other related "pocket" proteins.
Residues in the CR1 domain have been shown to be required for cellular
transformation (1, 7) and for bypass of growth arrest
signals (15); however, the mechanisms responsible for these
activities are unclear. Unlike E1A, the CR1 region of E7 apparently is
not involved in the release of E2F from Rb (33). Although
complementation studies with E1A and E7 mutants provided some evidence
for similar functions encoded by the N termini, no E7-p300 complexes
were detected, nor did the mutants complement in reciprocal crosses
(11). Two mutations in CR1,
6-10 and H2P, and three
mutations in CR2,
21-24, C24G, and E26G, were tested for their
ability to increase the levels of cyclin E. Retroviral transduction of
the mutated E7 genes resulted in comparable levels of all the E7
proteins (15). Figure 7
demonstrates that only wild-type E7 resulted in elevated levels of
cyclin E, which indicated a requirement for both the CR1 and CR2
domains of E7. Interestingly, elevation of p53 protein levels also
required both CR1 and CR2. These results further underscore the notion that mechanisms in addition to E2F-mediated transcriptional activation are involved in the elevation of cyclin E levels in E7-expressing cells.

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|
FIG. 7.
The CR1 and CR2 domains of E7 are required for increased
cyclin E levels. Total-cell lysates were prepared from asynchronous HFK
expressing the designated mutated E7 gene product. Proteins (20 µg/lane) were fractionated on SDS-PAGE gels (12% polyacrylamide),
transferred to PVDF membranes, probed with the designated antibodies,
and visualized by enhanced chemiluminescence.
|
|
 |
DISCUSSION |
HPV-6 infection typically causes benign proliferative lesions with
detectable viral particles, and in at least some cases, basal cell
hyperplasia is present. Thus, HPV-6 is clearly able to replicate in
epithelial cells and probably induces cellular replication. However, in
this study we did not detect any alteration in cell cycle proteins as a
consequence of HPV-6 E6 or E7 gene expression, consistent with earlier
observations in which HPV-6 E7 failed to stimulate the proliferation of
epithelial cells grown in organotypic culture (15, 30) or to
bypass growth arrest signals (15, 16). An early study
examining the mitogenic activity of various E7 proteins in Rat 3Y1
cells indicated that HPV-6 E7 stimulated DNA replication approximately
threefold less well than did HPV-16 E7 (65), and they and
others (46) found that in vitro binding of HPV-6 E7 to Rb
was 10- to 20-fold weaker than the HPV-16 E7-Rb interaction. The in
vivo association of HPV-6 E7 with Rb was also much weaker than that of
HPV-16 E7 (26). Thus, it is likely that weak stimulation of
replication by HPV-6 in vivo has a profound impact on cellular
replication over a prolonged period; however, in our assays we were not
able to detect less than a twofold difference.
HPV-16 E6 did not substantially affect the levels of cyclins or CDKs.
As shown previously (24, 67), HPV-16 E6 dramatically reduced
the level of p53 (Fig. 2A). In asynchronously growing keratinocytes or
fibroblasts, E6 expression resulted in greatly reduced levels of p21,
suggesting that in these proliferating cells, p21 expression is
dependent predominantly on p53 transactivation. Expression of other
CKIs including p27 and p16 was unchanged. Additionally, there was a
global increase in CDK activity in HPV-16 E6- and E6/E7-expressing
cells (Fig. 2D). CDK complexes in proliferating cells have been
reported to contain p21, and the p21-associated CDK complexes can be
active (68, 73). Our data would suggest that the elimination
of p21 increased CDK activity, suggesting either that p21-containing
complexes are less active than complexes that do not contain p21 or
that some p21-containing CDK complexes in proliferating cells are
inactive. Xiong et al. (69) examined the composition, but
not the activity, of CDK complexes in proliferating HFFs expressing
HPV-16 E6 and found that although p21 mRNA was undetectable, p21
protein was apparently present in cyclin D-CDK4 and cyclin A-CDK2
complexes but not in cyclin B-CDC2 complexes (cyclin E-CDK2 complexes
were not examined); none of the CDK complexes contained
proliferating-cell nuclear antigen. It is also notable that
G0-arrested E6-expressing cells had high levels of p21 in the absence of p53 (Fig. 4E and D), indicating that the induction of
p21 in response to depletion of serum and/or confluence was not p53
dependent. The expression of p21 in E6-expressing cells, although
always greatly reduced, was somewhat variable (for example, the HFKs in
Fig. 2A), which could reflect some degree of growth arrest resulting in
p53-independent expression of p21.
HPV-16 E7 had a profound effect on several aspects of the cell cycle
machinery. (i) A number of cyclins and CDKs had elevated levels. (ii)
Cyclin E expression was upregulated both transcriptionally and
posttranscriptionally and persisted at high levels in S and G2/M; transit through G1 was shortened. (iii)
We had observed previously that Rb levels were reduced and p53 levels
were increased (16, 17); both changes were due to protein
half-life rather than changes in transcription (reference
15 and data not shown). (iv) Despite the elevation
of the levels of at least two CKIs, p21 and p16, CDK activity was
elevated.
Other groups (57, 71) have also reported that cyclin E
levels were elevated in E7-expressing cells, but conclusions about the
mechanism by which the steady-state levels of cyclin E protein were
increased were contradictory. In NIH 3T3 cells expressing adenovirus
E1A (62) or HPV-16 E7 (71), E2F binding sites in the promoter of cyclin E were necessary for induction, and mutants of
E7 that failed to bind Rb were not able to stimulate cyclin E
expression (71). Rb
/
murine fibroblasts were
also shown to have increased levels of cyclin E (32),
confirming the prediction that disruption of the Rb-E2F pathway will
lead to increased transcription of E2F-responsive genes. Our finding
that both CR1 and CR2 were required for increased cyclin E may point to
differences in the regulation of cyclin E between primary human cells
and established murine cell lines. Another discrepancy is that the
cyclin A and CDC2 promoters have also been shown to contain
E2F-responsive elements (14, 59), yet overexpression of
cyclin A or CDC2 was not reproducibly detected in asynchronous
populations expressing E7. Although E7 cells released from quiescence
had elevated cyclin A RNA and protein levels (Fig. 5), the apparent
overexpression could be explained by the increased number of E7 cells
in S phase. Interestingly, although the promoter of cyclin D also
contains an E2F-responsive site, neither this report nor previous
studies with E7-, E1A-, or Rb-deficient murine fibroblasts (32,
62, 71) found any evidence of overexpression of cyclin D1.
Furthermore, E7 did not elevate the level of cyclin E in the U2OS cell
line, which contains functional Rb protein, arguing against
transcriptional activation of the cyclin E gene (57).
Our results indicate that cyclin E regulation was disrupted in multiple
ways. The increase in cyclin E transcription due to E2F activation was
not sufficient to account for the increased levels of protein. In
asynchronous E7-expressing cells, the cyclin E RNA level increased less
than twofold in comparison with vector whereas the cyclin E protein
level increased three- to fivefold (Fig. 1 and 3). In synchronous
populations, the RNA level increased approximately 3-fold in
G1 whereas the protein level increased 5- to
20-fold (Fig. 5). In contrast, the increase in the level of cyclin A
protein was proportional to the increase in the RNA level. Thus, in
normal human epithelial and fibroblast cells, the cyclin E level is
elevated both transcriptionally and posttranscriptionally. The cyclin E
protein level has been shown to peak at the G1/S boundary
and to decline as the S phase progresses (39) by degradation via the ubiquitin-proteasome system (8). Consistent with
that, we observed that cyclin E levels were highest in cells in the G1 phase; however, while the levels dropped sharply in S
and G2/M in vector-expressing cells, cyclin E protein
levels declined by less than twofold in other cell cycle compartments
in the E7-expressing cells (Fig. 6). This indicated that the mechanisms
restricting cyclin E to a specific period in the cycle were perturbed
by HPV-16 E7. These effects were specific to cyclin E since the
patterns of cyclin A, p21, and p27 expression were unaltered.
The levels of cyclin E protein peaked several hours earlier following
release from arrest in E7-expressing cells than in vector-expressing cells (Fig. 4B and 5B). Ohtsubo et al. (49) noted that cells engineered to overexpress cyclin E by retroviral transduction entered S
phase several hours early following restimulation and that even though
the cyclin E protein level was constitutively elevated throughout the
cell cycle, kinase activity did not increase until late G1.
HPV-16 E7 cells had cyclin E protein levels that were intermediate
between those in vector and cyclin E overexpressers; accordingly, the
timing of cyclin E kinase activity and entry into S phase was
intermediate (Fig. 4). These data provide further support for the
notion that cyclin E kinase activity is rate-limiting for entry into S
phase, even in cells where the Rb pathway has been inactivated.
Alternatively, it is possible that E7-expressing cells arrest in
response to serum withdrawal or density at a point in G1
that is closer to the restriction point, or the G1/S
boundary, than the arrest point for vector-containing cells.
Entry into S phase is dependent on the release of E2F from Rb; however,
disruption of the E2F-Rb interaction by E7 did not block the majority
of E7-expressing cells from becoming quiescent, indicating that some
growth arrest pathways are still intact in the E7-expressing cells. To
achieve >95% G1 arrest of E7-expressing cells, prolonged
growth arrest regimens were required, with the result that a major
fraction of both vector- and E7-expressing cells failed to reenter the
cycle (Fig. 4A and 5A). We do not know whether there are differences
between cells that remain arrested and those that reenter the cycle,
but they are not related to E7, since a substantial proportion of the
vector population remained arrested too. Under less severe growth
arrest conditions, E7-expressing cells were not as tightly arrested as
vector-expressing cells. Similarly, we do not know why only some
E7-expressing cells escape from growth arrest induced by serum
withdrawal or density. The levels of E7 protein may vary, but only
slightly, since all cells after selection in G418 harbor at least one
copy of E7, and the copy number in retrovirally transduced cells is
low, one to a few. When E7-expressing cells are treated with a
DNA-damaging agent or TGF-
, they enter S phase as well as do
untreated cells (15, 16), arguing that every cell expresses
a sufficient amount of E7 to bypass those growth arrest signals.
We had previously noted that the expression of E7 reduced the levels of
Rb protein and that DNA damage of E7 expressing cells further reduced
the level of protein (16). Jones and Munger (35)
found that reduction of Rb levels was impaired when E7 proteins mutated
in either CR1 or CR2 were used and that the reduction of Rb protein
levels correlated with the ability to bypass DNA damage-induced growth
arrest. The mechanism responsible for increased Rb turnover is unclear,
or it may be cell type specific. Ubiquitin-mediated proteolysis was
implicated in breast epithelia expressing HPV-16 E7 (4) but
was not found to mediate degradation in HPV-16 E7-expressing RKO cell
lines (35). Importantly, when HPV-16 E6 was coexpressed with
HPV-16 E7, Rb levels did not decline (16), and the reduction in Rb levels may be an indirect consequence of E7, depending on elevated levels of p53 or other parameters. It is intriguing that the
CR1- and CR2-mutated E7 proteins also failed to elevate the levels of
p53 (unpublished data).
Studies with rodent cell lines or transgenic mice have indicated that
the release of E2F by the viral oncogenes SV40T, E1A, or HPV-16 E7 in
cells expressing wild-type p53 led to apoptosis, particularly when the
cells were simultaneously confronted with growth arrest signals
(12, 51, 64). Similarly, E7- but not E6-immortalized human
uroepithelial cells underwent apoptosis in response to irradiation
(56). However, the E7-expressing HFFs did not detectably
undergo apoptosis in response to withdrawal of serum, suggesting that
human fibroblasts may be particularly refractory to apoptosis
(31).
HPV-16 E7 expression elevated the levels of p53 protein three- to
fivefold in a wide variety of cell types by a posttranscriptional mechanism (16, 17, 24, 35) with a concomitant increase in
p21 protein levels (Fig. 2A and 4), due to increased transcription (data not shown). No increase in p27 protein (Fig. 2 and 6) or mRNA
(data not shown) levels was observed. Despite elevated levels of p21,
the cell cycle expression of p21 and p27 was not altered. Soos et al.
(61) found that the amount of p27 in the MANCA cell line was
constant during the cell cycle, whereas our data indicated that in
primary human cells the levels of both p21 and p27 were lowest during S
phase, consistent with a role for these CKIs in controlling entry into
the S and M phases of the cell cycle. p16 was also elevated in
E7-expressing cells, as observed in the absence of functional Rb
(52, 70). In cells in which cyclin D-CDK4 phosphorylation of
Rb is required for S phase entry, Rb represses p16 mRNA transcription
in a feedback loop to maintain CDK activity (43).
It is intriguing that despite high levels of p21 inhibitor, CDK
activity was globally elevated in E7-expressing HFKs (Fig. 2D).
Although the activity was not quite as high as in E6-expressing cells
that had greatly reduced levels of p21, the CDK activity was
substantially higher than in vector-expressing cells or in cells
expressing the low-risk HPV oncoproteins. When the established colorectal tumor cell line RKO was engineered to express HPV-16 E7, no
increase in cyclin E-associated kinase activity was observed (35). It is possible that the establishment of a cell line
or the development of a tumor perturbs cyclin E regulation and hence that expression of E7 would have no additional effects. The mechanism by which E7 bypasses p21 inhibition is complex and incompletely understood. E7 proteins that failed to bind Rb were unable to bypass
p21-mediated growth arrest, suggesting a mechanism in which the
E2F-mediated increase in the cyclin E level could result in a shift in
the number of cyclin E-CDK2 complexes needed to titrate p21
(15). However, E7 proteins that were able to bind Rb but were mutated in other domains also failed to bypass p21-mediated growth
arrest. Recently the C-terminal half of E7 has been shown to bind to
both p27 (72) and p21 (25) and to restore CDK
activity to p27- and p21-inhibited complexes, providing evidence for
new pathways by which E7 can bypass growth arrest signals.
Understanding the mechanisms used by HPV-16 E7 to perturb cell cycle
regulation may have broad importance for our understanding of the
disruption of these processes in many human neoplasias.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
We thank Jim Roberts and members of his laboratory for many
reagents and for helpful suggestions, Tim Knight and Andrew Berger for
assistance with fluorescence-activated cell sorter and image analysis,
and Scott Foster and Jens Oliver Funk for discussions and critical
reading of the manuscript.
This work was supported by grant CA64795 from the National Cancer
Institute.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Program in
Cancer Biology, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, 1124 Columbia
St., Room C1-015, Seattle, WA 98104. Phone: (206) 667-4500. Fax: (206) 667-5815. E-mail: dgallowa{at}fhcrc.org.
Present address: Canji, Inc., San Diego, CA 92121.
 |
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Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
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