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Journal of Virology, March 1999, p. 2084-2093, Vol. 73, No. 3
Laboratory of Molecular and Cellular Biology,
National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases,
Bethesda, Maryland 20892
Received 13 August 1998/Accepted 4 December 1998
The Rep78 and Rep68 proteins of adeno-associated virus type 2 (AAV)
are multifunctional proteins which are required for viral replication,
regulation of AAV promoters, and preferential integration of the AAV
genome into a region of human chromosome 19. These proteins bind the
hairpin structures formed by the AAV inverted terminal repeat (ITR)
origins of replication, make site- and strand-specific endonuclease
cuts within the AAV ITRs, and display nucleoside triphosphate-dependent
helicase activities. Additionally, several mutant Rep proteins display
negative dominance in helicase and/or endonuclease assays when they are
mixed with wild-type Rep78 or Rep68, suggesting that multimerization
may be required for the helicase and endonuclease functions. Using
overlap extension PCR mutagenesis, we introduced mutations within
clusters of charged residues throughout the Rep68 moiety of a maltose
binding protein-Rep68 fusion protein (MBP-Rep68 Adeno-associated virus type 2 (AAV)
is a human parvovirus with a single-stranded, linear DNA genome
containing inverted terminal repeats which function as origins of
replication (14, 40, 44, 53). AAV is nonpathogenic and
usually requires an adenovirus or herpesvirus as a helper for efficient
replication (7). The AAV rep gene encodes at
least four overlapping multifunctional nonstructural proteins
transcribed from two promoters. Rep68 and Rep78 (Rep68/78) are encoded
by spliced and unspliced transcripts, respectively, from the promoter
at map position 5; hence, the first 529 amino acids of Rep78 and Rep68
are identical (9, 35, 52, 56). Rep40 and Rep52 are encoded
by spliced and unspliced transcripts, respectively, from the promoter
at map position 19 (9, 35, 52, 56).
The terminal palindromic repeat sequences of AAV DNA fold into hairpin
structures and thereby serve as primers for the synthesis of the
complementary strand (8, 52). The resulting closed-end intermediates are resolved by a process called terminal resolution, which involves cutting by a site- and strand-specific endonuclease at
the terminal resolution site (trs) followed by unwinding and replication of the hairpin (17, 50, 51). Rep68/78 display activities which are required for AAV DNA replication, including the
ability to bind specifically to sequences within the AAV terminal hairpin DNA (17-19, 34, 38, 63) and strand-specific nicking at the trs (17, 19, 50). The larger Rep proteins
also have DNA helicase (17, 19, 26) and DNA-RNA helicase
activities (65), as well as ATPase activity (65).
Furthermore, the Rep68/78 proteins regulate AAV promoters (4, 27,
28, 30, 55) and have been shown to regulate numerous heterologous
promoters (1, 15, 29, 66, 68). They are also thought to be
involved in the preferential integration of AAV genomes into a region
on the q arm of human chromosome 19 (13, 23-25, 31, 46, 57, 63).
Rep68/78, like many transcriptional regulatory proteins of DNA viruses,
such as the 32-kDa E1A protein of adenovirus; E1, E7, L1, and L2 of
human papillomavirus; and VP2 and large T antigen of Simian virus 40, carry charge clusters in their primary sequences (for reviews, see the
work of Karlin and Brendel [20, 21]). Ionic
interactions of charge clusters within proteins are associated with
protein-protein and protein-DNA interactions (58, 64, 72)
and appear to be important in protein transport, nuclear localization,
and transcriptional regulation (6).
Mapping studies of the Rep68/78 proteins by site-specific mutation,
truncation, and deletion reveal that the Rep proteins are composed of
distinct, but interdependent, functional domains (see Fig. 1) (33,
37, 38, 59, 60, 69). Rep68/78 DNA binding functions are believed
to be bipartite, with binding specificity being associated with the
first 241 amino acids (33, 38, 62, 70) and stabilizing
interactions being associated with amino acids 242 to 476 (33, 38,
62, 70). The first 476 amino acids of Rep68/78 have been shown to
be sufficient for nucleoside triphosphate-dependent endonuclease
activity (62). The first 522 amino acids of Rep68/78 or
amino acids 225 to 621 (Rep52) are sufficient for DNA helicase activity
(26, 47). The observation that Rep68/78 proteins produce
multiple shifted bands in electrophoretic mobility shift assays (EMSAs)
with hairpin DNA (17-19, 33, 37, 70), along with the
existence of dominant-negative mutant Rep68/78 proteins (26, 36,
59, 65) and the detection of multimeric Rep78 complexes in gel
filtration, protein cross-linking, and coimmunoprecipitation
experiments (48), strongly suggests that Rep68/78 proteins
function as multimers.
We have previously demonstrated that a Rep68/78 truncation mutant
protein containing amino acids 1 to 476 also produces a multiple-shifted-band pattern in EMSAs with AAV hairpin DNA and that
these shifted bands have a faster migration than those formed with the
wild-type Rep68. When this mutant protein with amino acids 1 to 476 was
mixed with wild-type Rep68, there was a loss of the distinct multiple
shifted bands and instead there was a smear of protein-DNA complexes
with intermediate rates of migration (62). Truncations and
site-specific mutagenesis studies suggest that there are at least two
separate self-association domains between amino acids 164 and 484, including a 3,4 hydrophobic heptad repeat between amino acids 164 and
182 (48) and a region between amino acids 332 and 346, which
has also been shown to be important for ATPase (48, 60) and
helicase activities (60).
In this study, we have mutated charged residues to alanines in areas of
Rep68 with three or more charged residues within a continuous stretch
of five. An overlap extension PCR method (16) was used to
create these charge-to-alanine mutations in a maltose binding protein
(MBP)-Rep68 fusion protein (MBP-Rep68 Oligonucleotide-directed mutagenesis.
An overlap extension
PCR method (16) was used to introduce site-specific
substitutions within the Rep68 open reading frame. Lysine, aspartic
acid, and glutamic acid residues were mutated to alanine residues at
various positions within the Rep68 coding sequence. Briefly, two pairs
of primers were used to direct synthesis of mutated DNA fragments, with
the two leading bases in the codons for lysine (AAG and AAA), aspartic
acid (GAT and GAC), and glutamic acid (GAG and GAA) being converted to
GC, i.e., to an alanine codon, with the least amount of deviation from
the original DNA sequence (Table 1).
Arginines and histidines were not mutated to alanines, because such
mutations were predicted to be more likely to produce global
conformational disruptions (5). These fragments, which
overlapped by at least 25 bp, were gel purified and subsequently used
for overlap extension PCR with 5' and 3' flanking primers. The
resulting amplified products were gel purified and digested with
appropriate restriction endonucleases, generating fragments no larger
than 750 bp, each of which was substituted for the corresponding
fragment within the parent plasmid bearing the genes encoding
MBP-Rep68
0022-538X/99/$00.00+0
Analysis of the Effects of Charge Cluster Mutations
in Adeno-Associated Virus Rep68 Protein In Vitro


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ABSTRACT
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials and methods
Results
Discussion
References
) expressed in
Escherichia coli cells. Several mutations disrupted the
endonuclease and helicase activities; however, only one
amino-terminal-charge cluster mutant protein (D40A-D42A-D44A)
completely lost AAV hairpin DNA binding activity. Charge cluster
mutations within two other regions abolished both endonuclease and
helicase activities. One region contains a predicted alpha-helical
structure (amino acids 371 to 393), and the other contains a putative
3,4 heptad repeat (coiled-coil) structure (amino acids 441 to 483). The
defects displayed by these mutant proteins correlated with a weaker
association with wild-type Rep68 protein, as measured in
coimmunoprecipitation assays. These experiments suggest that these
regions of the Rep molecule are involved in Rep oligomerization events
critical for both helicase and endonuclease activities.
![]()
INTRODUCTION
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials and methods
Results
Discussion
References
). MBP-Rep68
exhibits all of
the functional activities reported for the wild-type Rep68 when it is
assayed in vitro (10). We have assessed the effects of these
mutations on AAV hairpin DNA binding, AAV trs endonuclease
activity, and DNA helicase activity in vitro. In addition, these
mutants were used in coimmunoprecipitation experiments with
radiolabeled, in vitro-translated Rep68 in order to assess their
ability to associate with wild-type Rep68.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials and methods
Results
Discussion
References
(10, 16). The PCRs were carried out with the
thermostable Pfu DNA polymerase, which has a high fidelity
(1.3 × 10
6 errors/bp/cycle; Stratagene, La Jolla,
Calif.). The resulting mutations in MBP-Rep68
were confirmed by
sequencing, and the resulting proteins were designated by the region of
mutation.
TABLE 1.
Mutant primers used for overlap extension PCR
Expression of MBP-Rep68
and mutant proteins.
MBP-Rep68
and mutant derivatives were expressed in Escherichia coli
and purified with amylose affinity columns as described previously
(10). An MBP-
-galactosidase fusion (MBP-LacZ) was also
synthesized and used as a negative control. The production of
MBP-Rep68
proteins of the predicted molecular weights was confirmed
by sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE) and Coomassie blue staining. Protein concentrations were determined by observing optical density at 225 nm with bovine serum
albumin (BSA) standards.
EMSAs.
EMSAs were performed as described previously
(18, 60, 63). Briefly, radiolabeled AAV hairpin DNA (5,000 cpm) was incubated with 2 µg of MBP-Rep68
or mutant proteins in a
reaction mixture (30 µl) containing 50 mM NaCl, 25 mM HEPES-KOH (pH
7.5), 10 mM MgCl2, 1 mM dithiothreitol (DTT), 2% (vol/vol)
glycerol, 0.5 µg of BSA, 0.01% (vol/vol) Nonidet P-40, and 1 µg of
poly(dI-dC) at 24°C for 30 min. The protein-DNA complexes were
resolved on a nondenaturing 4% polyacrylamide gel at 24°C, which was
then dried and autoradiographed.
trs endonuclease assays.
The site- and
strand-specific endonuclease assay was performed as described
previously (17). AAV hairpin DNA labeled at its 5' end with
32P (25,000 cpm) was incubated in the presence of 2 µg of
MBP-Rep68
or a mutant protein in a 30-µl reaction volume
containing 25 mM HEPES-KOH (pH 7.5), 10 mM MgCl2, 1 mM
DTT, 2% glycerol, 0.2 µg of BSA, and 0.4 mM ATP. The reaction
mixtures were incubated for 1 h at 37°C, and the reactions were
terminated by addition of 15 µl of gel loading buffer (0.5% SDS, 50 mM EDTA, 40% [vol/vol] glycerol, 0.1% [wt/vol] bromophenol blue,
0.1% [wt/vol] xylene cyanol) with subsequent boiling to release the
nicked fragment. The reaction products were resolved on a nondenaturing
6% polyacrylamide gel, which was then dried and autoradiographed.
DNA helicase and ATPase assays.
The DNA helicase substrate,
which consisted of a radiolabeled 26-mer annealed to single-stranded
M13 DNA, was prepared as described previously (17). The
helicase assays were performed under the conditions developed by Im and
Muzyczka (17) with modifications described by
Kyöstiö and Owens (26). Briefly, 32P-labeled helicase substrate (25,000 cpm) was incubated
with 2 µg of MBP-Rep68
or a mutant protein in a 30-µl reaction
volume containing 25 mM HEPES-KOH (pH 7.5), 10 mM MgCl2, 1 mM DTT, 2% glycerol, 0.2 µg of BSA, and 0.4 mM ATP. The reaction
mixtures were incubated for 35 min at 24°C, the reactions were
terminated by the addition of 15 µl of gel loading buffer (0.5% SDS,
50 mM EDTA, 40% [vol/vol] glycerol, 0.1% [wt/vol] bromophenol
blue, 0.1% [wt/vol] xylene cyanol), and the reaction products were
resolved on a nondenaturing 6% polyacrylamide gel in 1× TAE buffer
(40 mM Tris-acetate, 1 mM EDTA). The gel was dried and exposed to X-ray
film for autoradiography. ATPase assays were carried out according to
the procedure described by Warrener et al. (61), with
modifications as described by Wonderling et al. (65).
In vitro translation. In vitro-translated Rep68 was synthesized with plasmid pMAT21 (38) and the TNT coupled T7-rabbit reticulocyte lysate, in vitro transcription-translation system in 50-µl reaction mixtures containing 20 µCi of 35S-labeled methionine as directed by the manufacturer (Promega, Madison, Wis.). The correct size of the product was verified by SDS-PAGE followed by autoradiography.
Coimmunoprecipitation assays.
Coimmunoprecipitation assays
were based on the method of Smith et al. (48). Recombinant
protein G-agarose resin was washed and resuspended in binding buffer
(0.01 M sodium phosphate [pH 7.0], 0.15 M NaCl, 0.5% Nonidet P-40)
to form a 50% (vol/vol) slurry. 35S-labeled in
vitro-translated Rep68 (7.5 µl) was diluted 25-fold with ice-cold
binding buffer, and 0.5 M ATP was added to a final concentration of 5 mM. The diluted protein solution was precleared by adding 20 µl of
protein G-agarose slurry and mixing by repeated inversion of the test
tube at 4°C for 30 min. After a brief centrifugation, the cleared
protein solution was transferred to a new tube and 0.9 µg of purified
MBP-Rep68
, MBP-LacZ, or mutant MBP-Rep68
protein was added. The
resulting solution was mixed by constant inversion of the test tube at
4°C for at least 1 h. Next, 2 µl of rabbit polyclonal anti-MBP
serum (New England Biolabs, Beverly, Mass.) was added and the solution
was mixed by inversion for 2 h at 4°C. Following this
incubation, 40 µl of protein G-agarose slurry was added and the
mixture was incubated a final time with inversion for 1 h at
4°C. Following this final incubation, the protein G-agarose beads
were sedimented by centrifugation and washed four times with 5 volumes
of 4°C binding buffer to remove unbound proteins. After the final
wash the protein G-agarose beads and associated proteins were pelleted
by brief centrifugation. The complexed proteins were then eluted by
boiling the pellets for 5 min in 2 bed volumes of 1× sample buffer (25 mM Tris-HCl [pH 6.8], 1% SDS, 10% glycerol, 1%
-mercaptoethanol, 0.0025% bromophenol blue). Eluted proteins were
resolved by SDS-10% PAGE, fixed in 20% acetic acid-10%
methanol-5% glycerol, soaked in Enlightning autoradiography enhancer
(New England Nuclear, Boston, Mass.) and visualized by fluorography.
The bands of radiolabeled Rep68 were also excised and counted in a
liquid scintillation counter.
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RESULTS |
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We set out to identify regions within Rep68 which are important for protein-DNA and protein-protein interaction. To achieve this goal we replaced the lysine, aspartic acid, and glutamic acid residues within areas of high local charge density (three charged amino acid residues within a stretch of five) with alanines, based on the assumption that these areas of high localized charge density are more likely to exist on the surface of the protein and are therefore likely to participate in intermolecular association (Fig. 1).
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Purification of wild-type and mutant MBP-Rep68
proteins.
Wild-type and mutant recombinant MBP-Rep68
proteins were expressed
in E. coli cells. Mutant proteins were purified from the crude sonicates by selective retention on amylose resin as described previously (10, 65). The eluted fractions were analyzed and the predicted molecular mass of 105 kDa was confirmed for the predominant protein species by SDS-PAGE and Coomassie blue staining (Fig. 2). The levels of purification
varied slightly from preparation to preparation; however, all mutant
proteins were obtained as stable proteins which were immunoreactive to
Rep68-specific antisera on Western blots (data not shown) and were in
concentrations suitable for assessment by in vitro assays. The results
of our in vitro analyses are summarized in Table
2.
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Binding of wild-type and charge-to-alanine mutant MBP-Rep68
proteins to AAV hairpin DNA.
To determine if any of the charge
neutralization mutations affected binding to AAV hairpin DNA, the
mutant proteins were analyzed by an EMSA in which MBP-Rep68
(wild-type) and MBP-Rep68
-K340H proteins were used as positive
controls for binding to the hairpin substrate. It has been well
established that Rep proteins with the K340H mutation lack
trs endonuclease, helicase, and ATPase activities but have
the ability to bind AAV hairpin DNA at levels comparable to that bound
by wild-type Rep68 (26, 37, 38, 59, 68). As seen in Fig.
3, the EMSA results are quite complex. There are qualitative, as well as quantitative, differences in the
levels of hairpin DNA binding of the mutants relative to those of the
K340H mutant and wild-type MBP-Rep68
proteins. Both the wild-type
and K340H proteins produce two classes of protein-DNA complexes. The
first class migrates part of the way through the gel, and the second
class remains at the top of the gel, in the wells. Previous EMSAs with
wild-type MBP-Rep68
have shown that both classes of complexes can be
competed away specifically with unlabeled DNA containing a Rep
recognition sequence (67). Due to the heterogeneous nature
of the shifted bands, we had to judge the relative binding activities
by comparing the amount of unbound DNA with each mutant protein to
those in the dilution series of the wild-type protein. Of the new
mutant proteins tested here, only the E201A-K204A-E205A and
D402A-K404A-K406A proteins were similar to the wild-type in the amount
of hairpin DNA bound per microgram of protein. The E66A-K72A,
E114A-K115A, K146A-D149A-E150A, E184A-K186A, D455A-D457A, and
E479A-E481A-E483A proteins had binding activities equivalent to between
one-half and one-quarter of the activity of the wild-type protein. Two
micrograms of the E83A-K84A-E86A, K463A-E465A-K467A-D468A, or
K474A-D475A mutant protein bound less hairpin DNA than 0.5 µg of the
wild-type protein but still retained a somewhat normal pattern of
shifted bands. Two micrograms of the E378A-E379A-K381A or D443A-K447A
mutant protein bound less hairpin DNA than 0.5 µg of the wild-type
protein and lacked clearly discernible bands that migrated part of the
way through the gel. With the E378A-E379A-K381A and D443A-K447A
proteins all of the shifted DNA was retained in the wells. Only the
D40A-D42A-D44A mutant protein was completely incapable of binding
hairpin DNA.
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The effect of charge-to-alanine mutations on MBP-Rep68
trs endonuclease (nicking) activity.
The MBP-Rep68
charge-to-alanine mutant proteins were assessed for their ability to
cleave AAV hairpin DNA labeled with 32P at its 5' end
in the trs endonuclease assay. The E184A-K186A and
E201A-K204A-E205A mutant proteins displayed trs
endonuclease activities equivalent to between one-half and one-quarter
of the activity of wild-type MBP-Rep68
(Fig.
4A). The E66A-K72A and E114A-K115A
proteins had low, but detectable, levels of endonuclease activity. All
other mutant proteins lacked detectable nicking activity (Fig. 4A).
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in a 1:1 ratio, and the degree of endonuclease inhibition was determined. The dominant-negative K340H mutant protein, which inhibits the endonuclease activity of wild-type MBP-Rep68
(10), was used as a control (Fig. 4B and C). As seen in Fig.
4B and C, only the D402A-K404A-K406A protein was capable of fully
inhibiting wild-type MBP-Rep68
endonuclease activity. The other
mutant proteins which were negative for endonuclease activity were
unable to significantly inhibit wild-type MBP-Rep68
endonuclease
activity when they were mixed in the in vitro reaction mixture.
The effects of charge-to-alanine mutations on MBP-Rep68
DNA helicase activity.
The MBP-Rep68
mutant proteins were
assayed for their ability to unwind a labeled 26-base oligonucleotide
from an M13 DNA circle (Fig. 5A). Two
micrograms of any of the amino-terminal mutant proteins (the
D40A-D42A-D44A, E66A-K72A, E83A-K84A-E86A, E114A-K115A,
K146A-D149A-E150A, E184A-K186A, and E201A-K204A-E205A proteins) retained the ability to unwind the labeled DNA helicase substrate at least as well as 0.5 µg of the wild type (Fig.
5A). The D40A-D42A-D44A, E66A-K72A, E114A-K115A, and
E184A-K186A mutant proteins did, however, have clearly
lower activities than wild-type MBP-Rep68
. No significant
helicase activity was observed for the
carboxyl-terminal-mutation proteins (the E378A-E379A-K381A, D402A-K404A-K406A, D443A-K447A, D455A-D457A,
K463A-E465A-K467A-D468A, K474A-D475A, and E479A-E481A-E483A
proteins) (Fig. 5A). It should be noted that all of the
helicase-negative mutants were also trs endonuclease
negative.
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helicase activity (Fig. 5B).
The effects of charge-to-alanine mutations on MBP-Rep68
ATPase activity.
Figure 6 shows the
results of our ATPase assays. Due to variation in the background levels
of E. coli ATPases contaminating our MBP fusion proteins, it
was very difficult to distinguish between mutant proteins with less
than one-fourth of the ATPase activities of wild-type MBP-Rep68
and
mutant proteins with no ATPase activity. We are, however, fairly
certain that under the conditions used all mutant proteins which showed
greater than 10% hydrolysis of ATP (the
D40A-D42A-D44A, E66A-K72A, E83A-K84A-E86A, E114A-K115A, K146A-D149A-E150A, E184A-K186A, E201A-K204A-E205A, D402A-K404A-K406A, D455A-D457A, and
K474A-D475A proteins) are truly ATPase positive to some degree. Note
that all of these ATPase-positive proteins are also helicase positive,
except for the D402A-K404A-K406A, D455A-D457A, and K474A-D475A mutant
proteins, whose samples showed ATPase levels higher than those of the
helicase-positive E114A-K115A and E184A-K186A proteins. All mutant
proteins whose ATPase levels were below this 10% cutoff (K340H,
E378A-E379A-K381A, D443A-K447A, K463A-E465A-K467A-D468A, and
E479A-E481A-E483A proteins) are helicase negative.
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The interactions of charge-to-alanine mutant MBP-Rep68
proteins with radiolabeled wild-type Rep68 protein in vitro.
We
tested the abilities of our charge-to-alanine mutant proteins to
associate with radiolabeled wild-type Rep68 protein in coimmunoprecipitation assays. These assays were performed in the presence of ATP, which is believed to stimulate oligomerization of Rep
proteins (28, 48). As expected, MBP-LacZ had no detectable association with the radiolabeled Rep68 protein. Wild-type MBP-Rep68
and the MBP-Rep68
-K340H protein were included as positive controls. All of the mutant proteins displayed an ability to interact with 35S-labeled Rep68 to some degree (Fig.
7). Mutations in the amino-terminal region of the Rep68 moiety of MBP-Rep68
generally had
less-detrimental effects on the association with
35S-labeled Rep68 than mutations in the carboxyl-terminal
region, with the exception of the mutations of the
DNA-binding-deficient D40A-D42A-D44A protein (Fig. 7).
The K146A-D149A-E150A and the E184A-K186A mutant proteins also
had significantly less association with Rep68 than wild-type
MBP-Rep68
. The carboxyl-terminal mutant proteins, i.e., the
E378A-E379A-K381A, D443A-K447A, D455A-D457A, K463A-E465A-K467A-D468A, K474A-D475A, and E479A-E481A-E483A proteins, all displayed a weakened association with the wild-type protein. One
notable exception among the proteins with carboxyl-terminal mutations
was the dominant-negative D402A-K404A-K406A mutant protein (Table 2),
which apparently associated with labeled Rep68 better than the
wild-type MBP-Rep68
protein.
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DISCUSSION |
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There were two goals to this study. The first was to identify the
residues required for specific DNA binding. The second goal was to
identify residues involved in Rep-Rep interactions. We adopted the
strategy of alanine scanning mutagenesis to introduce mutations within
areas of high localized charge density (likely to be at the surface of
the protein) throughout the Rep moiety of the MBP-Rep68
fusion
protein. These mutant proteins were tested for AAV hairpin DNA binding
and helicase and trs endonuclease activities, as well as
their ability to associate with wild-type Rep68 in vitro. The results
of these experiments are summarized in Table 2.
Several observations imply that an amino-terminal domain in Rep68/78 is responsible for specific AAV hairpin binding. Rep52 and Rep40, both of which are nonstructural proteins of AAV that lack the amino-terminal 224 amino acids found in Rep68/78 but contain amino acids 225 through 529, have been shown to be incapable of specifically binding AAV hairpin DNA (19). Deletion of the carboxyl-terminal regions of Rep78 to glutamine 241, with the addition of a positively charged missense tail, resulted in a protein capable of specifically binding AAV hairpin DNA, albeit weakly (38). In addition, several deletion, insertion, truncation, and site-specific mutations within the amino-terminal region which abolish DNA binding have been reported (3, 33, 59, 62, 70). In the study presented here the D40A-D42A-D44A mutant protein further defines the importance of the amino-terminal domain for specific DNA binding. Yang and Trempe (70) previously demonstrated that the deletion of amino acids 25 to 56 abolishes hairpin binding. Our D40A-D42A-D44A mutant protein also had no detectable AAV hairpin binding (Fig. 3). Since this mutant protein retained the ability to hydrolyze ATP (Fig. 6) and had detectable helicase activity (Fig. 5), its inability to bind hairpin DNA is not simply the result of a global disruption of protein conformation.
The fact that the D40A-D42A-D44A mutant protein had no detectable AAV
hairpin binding ability and yet was capable of unwinding the helicase
substrate approximately one-fourth as well as wild-type MBP-Rep68
suggests that the domain for AAV hairpin-specific binding must be
separable from the proposed nonspecific, single-stranded DNA binding
domain, which is thought to be necessary for helicase activity
(19, 32). Rep protein sequences with homology to other
helicase and ATPase proteins are located between Rep68/78 amino acids
329 and 422 (22). An MBP-Rep52 fusion protein, which lacks
the amino-terminal 224 amino acids of Rep68/78, is also helicase
positive (47).
In this study, only the D40A-D42A-D44A mutation completely disrupted hairpin DNA binding. The fact that mutation of many of the other charged (and presumably surface) amino acids resulted in a significant, although less dramatic, decrease in hairpin binding suggests that there may be multiple contacts between Rep68/78 and AAV hairpin DNA. Consistent with this model, modification of bases covering a 16- to 18-base region on either strand of the A-stem of AAV hairpin DNA interfered with Rep68/78 binding (38, 39). There is also a secondary Rep68/78 binding site in the B-C portion of the hairpin (39). It is also possible that some of these mutations disrupt protein-protein interaction domains which are required for hairpin DNA binding. Our data suggest that the oligomerization interface is also multipartite (Fig. 1 and 7).
Hydrophobic residues may also contribute to hairpin DNA binding. Walker et al. (59) have shown that mutation of tyrosine 224 to phenylalanine greatly reduces the ability of the protein to bind AAV hairpin DNA.
Two proteins, the E83A-K84A-E86A and K146A-D149A-E150A proteins, were negative for trs endonuclease activity and yet had significant hairpin DNA binding and helicase activities. Both retained association (albeit weaker than that of the wild type) in coimmunoprecipitation assays. Because these mutant proteins retained all functional activities other than nicking, their charged regions (E83-K84-E86 and K146-D149-E150) may be involved in the active site for endonuclease activity. In fact, mutation of tyrosine 152 to a phenylalanine also results in an endonuclease-negative, DNA-binding-positive, helicase-positive protein (59).
The D402A-K404A-K406A and K340H mutant proteins were the only ones tested which displayed the dominant-negative phenotype for both nicking and helicase. These mutants, as expected, displayed a strong association with radiolabeled wild-type Rep68 in coimmunoprecipitation assays. These mutated residues are highly conserved within parvovirus nonstructural proteins (60) and reside within the B' and A motifs, respectively, of the putative helicase domain (22). Additionally, the K340H mutation is in the P-loop of a well-characterized nucleoside triphosphate association domain (41, 43) and this mutation is known to abolish ATPase activity (65). Mutation of the B' domain at amino acid 404 by McCarty et al. (33) (K404I, K404T) and Walker et al. (60) (K404A) resulted in mutant proteins which bound hairpin DNA in vitro and retained ATPase activity (60) but lacked both nicking (33, 60) and helicase (60) activities. Our D402A-K404A-K406A mutant protein likewise lacked nicking and helicase activities and hydrolyzed ATP (Fig. 6; Table 2). The fact that this mutant protein retained the ability to hydrolyze ATP distinguishes it from the K340H mutant protein. Interestingly, the D402A-K404A-K406A protein is the only ATPase-positive, dominant-negative, helicase-negative Rep mutant protein reported in the literature to date. Although the Rep68/78 helicase activity is thought to require ATPase activity (32, 65), the results with this mutant protein suggest that helicase activity can be abolished in wild-type-mutant protein hetero-oligomers by a mechanism that is not dependent upon abolishing ATPase activity.
Charge cluster mutations in the region from amino acids 378 to 483 resulted in mutant proteins which retained at least some ability to bind to AAV hairpin DNA. However, all of the proteins with mutations in this region of the molecule lacked both endonuclease and helicase activity, in spite of the fact that the D402A-K404A-K406A, D455A-D457A, and K474A-D475A mutant proteins retained ATPase activity which was clearly above background levels (Fig. 6). However, two mutant proteins, the E378A-E379A-K381A and D443A-K447A proteins, have very low levels of hairpin DNA binding in addition to lacking endonuclease, helicase, and ATPase activities (Table 2 and Fig. 6) and may therefore represent misfolded proteins. The relatively high charge density in the region from amino acids 378 to 483, as noted by the proximity of the mutations in the region (Fig. 1), does, however, suggest that these mutations may disrupt a local structural entity required for both the endonuclease and helicase activities of the Rep proteins.
Several other mutation studies also illustrated the importance of this region for Rep68/78 function (33, 60, 62, 69, 70). Many insertions, deletions, or amino acid substitutions in the region from amino acids 378 to 483 abolished helicase and/or nicking activities of Rep68/78 in vitro (33, 59, 60, 62) or the ability of Rep68/78 to complement replication of rep mutant AAV in vivo (33, 69). Some of these mutations even disrupted hairpin DNA binding (33, 62, 70), indicating that this region may be involved in the stabilization of sequence-specific binding of Rep proteins to double-stranded DNA.
Because the nicking and helicase functions are believed to be mediated
through oligomers of Rep proteins, we believe that the lack of nicking
and helicase activities for most of the charge cluster mutant proteins
with mutations in the region from amino acids 378 to 483 is
attributable to a loss of the ability of these charge cluster mutant
proteins to form functional oligomers. Consistent with this hypothesis,
Weitzman et al. (62) showed by EMSA analysis that although a
Rep truncation containing the first 476 amino acids of Rep68/78
appeared to form oligomers efficiently with wild-type Rep68 on AAV
hairpin DNA, a mutant protein containing the first 466 amino acids
formed mixed complexes less efficiently and those complexes were
qualitatively different from those formed by the mutant protein
containing amino acids 1 to 476. Smith et al. (48) using the
same coimmunoprecipitation assay that we used, showed that MBP-Rep78
efficiently bound 35S-labeled mutant proteins containing
Rep68/78 amino acids 1 to 484 but not one containing amino acids 1 to
371. We have also identified a series of discontinuous 3,4 hydrophobic
heptad repeats (11, 12) in Rep68/78 which span amino acids
441 to 481 (Fig. 8). This repeated motif
is also conserved in the nonstructural (replication) proteins of
muscovy duck parvovirus (MDPV) (71), human
erythrovirus B19 (B19) (45), goose parvovirus (GPV)
(71), and minute virus of mice (MVM) (2) (Fig.
8), as well as the human herpesvirus 6 (HHV6) Rep homolog
(54). The 3,4 hydrophobic heptad repeat motif has been well
characterized for other eukaryotic proteins containing coiled-coil
domains such as the basic leucine zipper class of mammalian
transcription factors, which includes C/EBP, Fos, and Jun (58,
64). These coiled-coil domains are involved in protein
recognition as well as oligomerization (58). The hydrophobic
residues at positions a and d in Fig. 8B in the Rep68/78 motif may
represent a repeating helical dimerization interface. Charged residues
at positions e and g (Fig. 8) are thought to stabilize oligomerization
by forming interhelical salt bridges (11). We predict that
our charge-to-alanine mutations (many of which are at position e or g)
in the suspected coiled-coil domain in MBP-Rep68
disrupt the
formation of interhelical salt bridges between subunits in mutant
complexes, thereby inhibiting the stability and/or proper formation of
oligomers required for efficient nicking and helicase activities. This
prediction is supported by the weakened association between MBP-Rep
proteins containing charge mutations within this predicted motif
(D443A-K447A, D455A-D457A, K463A-E465A-K467A-D468A, K474A-D475A, and
E479A-E481A-E483A) and wild-type Rep68 in our coimmunoprecipitation
assays. Upon closer comparison of this series of putative heptad
repeats (denoted I through IV in Fig. 8) with those of other parvovirus
replication proteins, we found proline residues which were not present
in Rep68/78 proteins. These proline residues appear to be concentrated in heptad repeat II of the Rep homologs (B19, HHV6, GPV, and MVM) and
heptad repeat IV of the avian Rep homologs (MDPV and GPV); proline 532 of heptad repeat III in MVM represents the only exception. Considering
the helical destabilizing effect of proline residues, it is likely that
the secondary structures of heptads II and IV, and in one case of
heptad III, may not be preserved in the Rep homologs of these other
viruses. The disruption of certain areas of this repeating motif in
these Rep homologs may imply a functional redundancy for parts of this
repeating motif in the Rep68 molecule.
|
Although it is clear that this putative coiled-coil domain that we have tentatively characterized is important for nicking and helicase activity in vitro, our results, as well as those of others, demonstrate that it is not the only domain required for optimal Rep protein self-association. Smith et al. demonstrated that deletion of amino acids 151 to 188 and/or 334 to 347, which contain another putative coiled-coil region and part of the A motif of the conserved ATPase and helicase domain of Rep68/78, respectively, also greatly reduced Rep protein self-association in vitro (48). However, they did not report on the status of their mutants in either nicking, helicase, or replication assays. Walker et al. demonstrated that conservative point mutations in this same A region of the ATPase-helicase domain (G334A, G339A, and T341A) of Rep68 resulted in mutant proteins which lacked nicking and helicase activities (60). It is not surprising that there is a Rep-Rep interaction subdomain within the ATPase-helicase domain since nearly all helicases studied to date function as multimers (32) and this is the primary region of homology between members of this family of helicases (22). Our results with the protein containing the E378A-E379A-K381A mutation, which overlaps ATPase-helicase motif B and is found outside of our putative coiled-coil region in another area of the predicted alpha-helical structure, are consistent with this hypothesis. This mutant protein lacks both helicase and endonuclease activity and associates weakly with wild-type Rep68 in coimmunoprecipitation assays. In conclusion, it appears that several sites of protein-protein association are present in Rep68/78 and that they all may influence Rep activities.
| |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
We thank Nancy Nossal and John Hanover for critical reading of the manuscript. We also thank Jan Schwartz and Robert Kotin for useful communications.
| |
FOOTNOTES |
|---|
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Laboratory of Molecular and Cellular Biology, NIDDK, National Institutes of Health, Bldg. 8, Rm. 309, 8 Center Dr. MSC 0840, Bethesda, MD 20892-0840. Phone: (301) 496-3359. Fax: (301) 402-0053. E-mail: ro6n{at}nih.gov.
Present address: Dept. of Internal Medicine, Div. of
Gastroenterology, The University of Michigan Medical Center, Ann Arbor, MI 48109-0362.
Present address: Heska Corp., Fort Collins, CO 80525.
§ Present address: Abbott Laboratories, North Chicago, IL 60064.
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