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Journal of Virology, June 1999, p. 4713-4720, Vol. 73, No. 6
Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology,
Received 19 November 1998/Accepted 12 March 1999
The effects of hepatitis C virus (HCV) proteins on anti-Fas
(CD95/APO-1) antibody- and tumor necrosis factor alpha
(TNF- Hepatitis C virus (HCV) is a
major causative agent of chronic liver disease including chronic
hepatitis, liver cirrhosis, and hepatocellular carcinoma worldwide
(1, 7, 17, 18, 40). The majority of individuals infected by
HCV cannot resolve their infection and suffer from persistent chronic
hepatitis. This chronic infection by HCV is suspected to be strongly
associated with the development of hepatocellular carcinoma.
Apoptotic cell death with viral infection can be induced by the host
immune response through the function of cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL)
and natural killer cells, or by viral proteins themselves, and
apoptosis has been suggested to be a common pathway of virus clearance
by host organisms (25, 29). On the other hand, many virus
genomes encode proteins which suppress apoptosis so as to escape from
immune attack by the host (41). For example, CrmA, a cowpox
virus gene product, encodes a protease inhibitor of the caspase family
and prevents apoptosis caused by CTL, tumor necrosis factor alpha
(TNF- The HCV genome encodes a polypeptide precursor consisting of about
3,010 amino acid (aa) residues, and this precursor protein is cleaved
by the host and viral proteases to generate at least 10 functional
protein units: the core, envelope 1 (E1), E2, p7, nonstructural protein
2 (NS2), NS3, NS4A, NS4B, NS5A, and NS5B (12-14, 19, 24).
Ray et al. reported that the core suppresses apoptosis induced by
cisplatin in human cervical epithelial cells, by c-myc
overexpression in Chinese hamster ovary cells, and by TNF- Our results demonstrated that the core among HCV proteins protected
several types of cells from apoptotic cell death induced by anti-Fas
and TNF- Plasmid constructs.
The plasmids used in this study were
constructed to produce several proteins under the control of the
cytomegalovirus immediate-early promoter and named the pCMV series.
pCMV-3010, which expressed the whole HCV genome, was made by replacing
the EcoRI-AvrII fragment of pC980 with the
EcoRI-AvrII fragment of pCMV/729-3010
(14). pCMV-980, encoding the core, E1, E2, p7, and the
C-terminally truncated NS2, was constructed by insertion of the
EcoRI-HindIII fragment of pC980
(13) into the EcoRI-HindIII sites
of the pKS+/CMV vector (14). pCMV-Core, for expression of
the core gene encoding a polypeptide spanning from aa 1 to 191 of the
HCV precursor polyprotein, was made by inserting the PCR product with
oligonucleotide primers (5'-TGTGGATCCATGAGCACAAATCCTAAACC-3'
[named core-s] and 5'-CTCGAATTCTCAAGCGGAAGCTGGGATGGTCA-3') into the BamHI-EcoRI sites of pKS+/CMV.
pCMV-FLAG-Core, encoding the core which was N-terminally fused with
FLAG epitope tag, was constructed by inserting the amplified core
sequences into the BglII-SalI sites of pCMV-Tag1
(Stratagene). The expression plasmids of truncated core protein were
also prepared as described above by PCR with pCMV-Core as a template.
The oligonucleotides core-s and
5'-TCTGAATTCTCAAGAGCAACCGGGCAGATTCC-3' were used as
primers for pCMV- Cell culture.
HepG2, HeLa, and Saos-2 cells were cultured in
Dulbecco's modified Eagle medium (Nissui) with 10% fetal bovine serum
(FBS) and L-glutamine. Jurkat cells (a generous gift
from S. Yonehara, Kyoto University) were grown in RPMI 1640 (Nissui)
supplemented with 10% FBS. Huh-7 cells were grown in RPMI 1640 with L-glutamine, lactalbumin, and 2.5% FBS. MCF-7 cells
were grown in Eagle's minimum essential medium with nonessential
amino acids (GIBCO BRL) and 10% FBS.
Transfection of cells.
For plasmid transfection into the
adherent cells, we used the FuGENE 6 transfection reagent (Boehringer
Mannheim). The DNA transfection procedure for Jurkat cells was
performed with SuperFect transfection reagent (Qiagen). All these
experiments were performed essentially according to the manufacturer's protocols.
Concentration of cells transiently transfected with the
expression plasmids.
We utilized the MACSelect system (Miltenyi
Biotec) for specific concentration of transiently DNA-transfected cells
from the heterogeneous cell population. The concentration of the
plasmid-transfected cells was achieved by magnetic isolation of the
cells producing a trypsin resistance cell surface marker, a truncated
mouse H-2k molecule, which was expressed from
the cotransfected plasmid, pMacsK
0022-538X/99/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Hepatitis C Virus Core Protein Inhibits Fas- and Tumor Necrosis
Factor Alpha-Mediated Apoptosis via NF-
B Activation
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ABSTRACT
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References
)-mediated apoptosis in different human cell lines were
investigated by magnetic concentration of cells which transiently
produced the exogenous protein. HepG2 cells, which produced whole HCV
proteins, became resistant to anti-Fas-induced apoptotic cell death.
Furthermore, the core protein among HCV proteins had a key role in
protecting the various cells from apoptosis mediated by not only
anti-Fas but also TNF-
. We also found that the core functioned in
the activation of nuclear factor
B (NF-
B) in all cells examined. Deletion analysis of the core revealed that the region required for
NF-
B activation was closely correlated with that for its antiapoptotic function. In addition, we revealed in some cases that the
antiapoptotic effect of the core was restrained by coproduction of the
inhibitor of NF-
B, I
B-
protein. These results demonstrated that the core inhibits Fas- and TNF-
-mediated apoptotic cell death
via a mechanism dependent on the activation of NF-
B in particular
cell lines.
![]()
INTRODUCTION
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References
), or Fas (CD95/APO1) signaling (23, 42). Adenovirus
E1B and human papillomavirus E6 proteins suppress p53-dependent apoptosis by binding and inactivating wild-type p53 (8, 31, 36,
49). In the case of HCV infection, it was suggested that apoptosis in hepatocytes, especially that mediated by Fas, plays an
important role as the main mechanism of viral clearance (11, 15), which would result in the liver damage observed in chronic hepatitis.
in human
breast carcinoma cell lines (32, 33). Fujita et al. also
suggested that NS3 protein inhibits actinomycin D-induced apoptosis in
NIH 3T3 cells (10). In a different study, the core was
proposed to sensitize HepG2 cells to apoptosis mediated by the Fas
signaling pathway (34). The core was also suggested to
enhance TNF-
-induced apoptosis (56). Thus, these previous studies have demonstrated controversial phenomena, and the
discrepancies between these results might be partially due to the
differences in cell lines or apoptosis-inducing agents used. However,
an alternative explanation is that the cloned permanent transfectants
differ in characteristic responses from parental cell lines,
irrespective of exogenously introduced protein production, because all
these results were obtained with cloned permanent transfectant cells producing the viral protein. To avoid this possibility, recent reports
showing the function of the exogenous proteins in apoptosis have tended
to include the results of transient-transfection experiments in which
transfection-positive cells were detected by production of
-galactosidase or green fluorescent protein originating from a
cotransfected expression plasmid (48, 53). Therefore, we used a magnetic concentration system for transiently DNA-transfected cells to analyze the functions of viral proteins in a population of
cells expressing HCV proteins. Using this system, we examined whether
HCV proteins affect apoptotic responses in various cells, especially
those mediated by Fas and TNF-
, and directly analyzed the
biochemical characteristics of the concentrated cells.
and that the activation of NF-
B is an important pathway
of the antiapoptotic effects of the core in certain cells.
![]()
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References
Core173, and core-s and
5'-ACTGAATTCTCAC AGGGCCCTGGCAACGCCTC-3' were used for
pCMV-
Core151. The resultant expression plasmids, pCMV-
Core173 and
pCMV-
Core151, encode C-terminally truncated core proteins in which
the C-terminal 18 and 40 aa, respectively, were deleted.
pCMV-E1E2, for expression of the C-terminal portion of core, E1, E2,
p7, and C-terminally truncated NS2, was produced by inserting the
EcoRI-HindIII fragment of pN124
(13) into EcoRI-HindIII-digested pKS+/CMV.
B-inducing kinase, pcDNA3-NIK, was kindly provided by David
Wallach (Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovot, Israel). The cDNA
fragment of human I
B-
was synthesized by reverse
transcription-PCR with mRNA from Jurkat cells as a template. After
reverse transcription with the oligonucleotide primer
(5'-CAAGTCCATGTTCTTTCAGC-3'), PCR was performed with
oligonucleotides 5'-ATAGGATCCAGCTCGTCCGCGCCATGTTC-3' and
5'-TTAGGATCCGTTCTTTCAGCCCCTTTGCA-3' as primers. After
digestion with BamHI, the PCR product was then cloned into
the BamHI site of pKS+/CMV. The sequence of the resultant
plasmid, pCMV-I
B, was verified by sequencing. The reporter plasmid,
pNF-
B(Mut)-Luc, was constructed by inserting the synthetic
oligonucleotide for the mutated element of NF-
B binding sequences
(51) into the pGL3 promoter vector (Promega).
.
Evaluation of cell death.
Apoptotic cell death was evaluated
by determining the cell viability and caspase activation and by the
detection of DNA fragmentation. The cell viability was measured by
scoring 200 cells in each experiment, and the score of viable cell
ratio represented the average of three independent experiments. The
cells transfected with several plasmids and concentrated magnetically
were treated with anti-Fas antibody (CH-11; MBL, Nagoya, Japan) or
recombinant human TNF-
(Sigma). Anti-Fas and TNF-
were used at
final concentrations of 100 and 10 ng/ml, respectively. The minimum
concentration of cycloheximide (CHX) required for anti-Fas-induced
apoptosis in HepG2 cells was determined as a final concentration of 500 ng/ml, which was 1/20 less than that generally used in the same assay (50). The number of dead cells was counted as those stained with trypan blue dye within four microscopic fields after 14 or 48 h from the start of anti-Fas or TNF-
treatment, respectively. The
apoptotic cell death was also measured by cell detection enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (Boehringer Mannheim) according to the
manufacturer's protocol. This assay is based on the specific
determination of mononucleosomes and oligonucleosomes in the
cytoplasmic fraction of apoptosis-induced cells.
-treated cells were
examined with caspase colorimetric protease assay kits for caspase-8
(MBL). The assay was based on spectrophotometric detection of the
chromophore p-nitroanilide after cleavage from the labeled substrates IETD (Ile-Glu-Thr-Asp) and p-nitroanilide for
caspase-8. The assays were performed according to the manufacturer's
protocol 3 or 6 h after addition of anti-Fas or TNF-
,
respectively. The protein concentration of the lysates was measured by
using the bicinchoninic acid protein assay reagent (Pierce, Rockford,
Ill.).
Reporter plasmid assay.
The reporter pNF-
B-Luc vector
contained the NF-
B binding elements upstream of the minimum promoter
region driving the luciferase reporter gene (Stratagene). The
luciferase activities in the cells after treatment or not with anti-Fas
or TNF-
for 2 h were measured by a luminometer with a
luciferase assay kit (Promega) as recommended by the manufacturer.
Immunoblotting analysis.
The preparation of cell lysates,
sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, and
immunoblotting analysis were performed with a polyvinylidene difluoride
membrane as described previously (14). The antibodies used
in this experiment were those against HCV core protein (54)
(515S; a generous gift from M. Kohara, Tokyo Metropolitan Institute of
Medical Science), anti-NS5A protein (14), anti-Bcl-2 (MBL),
anti-caspase-8 (MBL), and anti-I
B-
(Santa Cruz). Immunocomplexes
on the filters were detected by enhanced chemiluminescence assay
(Renaissance; NEN, Boston, Mass.). The densitometric analysis of
detected protein by immunoblotting was performed by using a Fluor-S
multi-imager (Bio-Rad).
Immunofluorescence. The indirect immunofluorescence experiment was performed as described previously (30). Briefly, HepG2 cells were fixed in 2% paraformaldehyde for 1 h at room temperature. After being washed twice with PBS, the fixed cells were permeabilized with 0.05% Triton X-100 for 15 min and washed with PBS. Then, the cells were incubated with a 1:1,000 dilution of anti-HCV core monoclonal antibody. After being washed with PBS, the cells were incubated with rhodamine-conjugated secondary antibody and 4',6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI). After washing, the samples were mounted on glass slides and observed by fluorescence microscopy.
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RESULTS |
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Selective concentration of plasmid DNA-transfected
cells.
To assess the efficiency of the transfection and
selective concentration method, two reporter plasmids were used:
pEGFP-N1 (Clontech), which was designed to express a green
fluorescent protein in transfected cells; and pCMV-lacZ, for expression
of Escherichia coli
-galactosidase in mammalian cells,
the production of which can be easily monitored by staining with X-Gal
(5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolyl-
-D-galactopyranoside) in
situ. Compared with other conventional methods, a relatively high
efficiency of plasmid transfection into HepG2 and MCF-7 cells (~10
and ~20%, respectively) was obtained with minimum cytotoxicity with
FuGENE 6 in this study. Almost the same amount of plasmid was likely to
be distributed to each cell, as demonstrated by the intensity of the
signals from the reporter gene product (data not shown). In addition,
the expression levels of transiently transfected plasmids in a single
cell obtained by our procedure were likely to be lower than those
obtained by using a conventional calcium phosphate technique (data not
shown). The SuperFect reagent also produced efficient transfection in
Jurkat cells, although the transfection efficiency remained at 2 to
3%. After concentration by the magnetic separator, the ratio of
transfected cells was markedly increased in each case. We confirmed by
the observation of green fluorescent signals from transfected pEGFP-N1
that more than 80% of collected cells were usually transfection positive.
HepG2 cells that produced the whole HCV proteins showed resistance against Fas-mediated apoptosis. To examine whether HCV proteins alter the fate of cells in which apoptotic cell death is induced by anti-Fas, the expression plasmid pCMV-3010, encoding all HCV proteins, was transfected into HepG2 cells and the enriched fraction of transfected cells was used as a model of hepatocytes infected by HCV. The production and processing of each HCV protein in these cells were confirmed by immunoblotting analysis (Fig. 1A and data not shown). As a negative control, pKS+/CMV without any insert was used, and pCMV-Bcl-2 encoding Bcl-2 protein, a well-known inhibitor of apoptosis (43, 46, 52), was used as a positive control. Fourteen hours after treatment with anti-Fas, the numbers of viable and dead cells in the enriched population were counted after trypan blue staining, and the viability of the population was determined. As shown in Fig. 1B, cell viability of control HepG2 cells transfected with pKS+/CMV was 23.7% (±4.0% [standard error]). However, the viability of cells transfected with pCMV-3010 was 35.9% (±3.7%) under similar conditions. The HepG2 cells expressing Bcl-2 protein were significantly more resistant to anti-Fas-induced cell death (54.3% ± 3.1%) than were the HCV protein-producing cells. No change in cell viability was observed following treatment with CHX only or no treatment (data not shown). From these results, we concluded that HepG2 cells which produced all the proteins of HCV become resistant to apoptotic cell death induced by anti-Fas despite the proapoptotic effect of CHX.
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HCV core protein protected the cells from Fas- and TNF-
-mediated
apoptotic cell death.
To investigate which HCV protein might have
this antiapoptotic effect, cells transfected with plasmids for
expression of several HCV protein units were treated with anti-Fas
after magnetic enrichment of the cells. First, we examined the effects
of HCV structural and nonstructural protein production in HepG2 cells
on the Fas-mediated apoptosis. As shown in Fig. 1B, cells
transfected with pCMV-980, which is for production of core, E1, E2, p7,
and C-terminally truncated NS2, showed resistance to anti-Fas-induced
cytotoxicity (the mean viability was 32.0% ± 5.2%) compared with
control cells. However, the viability of the cells transfected with
pCMV-N729/3010, which produced the C-terminal portion of E2, p7, and
all NS proteins of HCV, was the same as that of negative controls
(24.4% ± 1.4%). Then, HepG2 cells transfected with pCMV-Core or
pCMV-E1E2, for production of the core or E1, E2, p7, and
C-terminally truncated NS2, respectively, were also analyzed to examine
the ability of each protein to resist the effects of anti-Fas (Fig.
1B). Increased viability was observed in the cells with core
production (39.0% ± 3.7%), whereas transfection with
pCMV-E1E2 did not confer any protection against anti-Fas-induced cell
death (23.4% ± 1.4%). The suppressive effect of the core on
Fas-mediated apoptosis was also confirmed by measuring the
cytoplasmic histone-associated DNA fragments (Fig. 1C). Taken together,
the decreased sensitivity against Fas-mediated apoptosis
observed in whole-HCV protein-producing HepG2 cells was assumed to be
due to the effect of the core protein.
-mediated apoptotic cell death in MCF-7 cells. The
viability of MCF-7 cells transfected with pCMV-Core or pKS+/CMV was
assessed after 48 h of treatment with TNF-
(Fig. 1D). As
observed for HepG2 and Jurkat cells, MCF-7 cells producing the core
also showed a high cell survival ratio in comparison with that of
negative control cells (68.0% ± 4.1% versus 49.5% ± 2.3%,
respectively) against TNF-
-induced apoptosis. We also
observed that expression of other plasmids expressing the HCV open
reading frame, pCMV-3010, pCMV-980, pCMV/729-3010, and pCMV-E1E2,
resulted in cellular responses in MCF-7 and Jurkat cells quite similar
to those found for HepG2 cells (data not shown). The apparent
induction of cell death was not observed in HepG2 and MCF-7 cells
after the treatment with TNF-
and anti-Fas, respectively.
From the above results, we concluded that the core was responsible
for suppressing the apoptotic response mediated by either Fas
or TNF-
in different cell lines.
Caspase-8 activation was suppressed in HCV core protein-producing
cells.
It has been suggested that the binding of Fas ligand to Fas
results in the activation of a cascade of caspases including
caspase-8 (FLICE) and caspase-3 (CPP32) (26, 27, 38).
Therefore, to determine whether the core affects the protease
cascade, we examined the activation of caspase-8 in HepG2 cells
induced by anti-Fas under conditions of core production. As shown in
Fig. 2B, the activity of caspase-8, which
has been suggested to be located at the most upstream site in the
caspase cascade activated by anti-Fas (6, 9) and TNF-
(48), was suppressed in the core-producing HepG2 cells after
anti-Fas treatment (68.0% of that in negative controls). Furthermore,
anti-Fas-induced processing of caspase-8 was diminished in the
core-producing HepG2 cells compared with that in the control cells
(Fig. 2A). As observed for HepG2 cells, the activation of caspase-8
induced by TNF-
was also down-regulated in MCF-7 cells producing the
core (55% of the activity found in negative control cells,
respectively). We confirmed that no activation of caspase-8 occurred
after the magnetic concentration of the cells in the absence of
anti-Fas or TNF-
. These results indicated that the core plays a role
in the suppression of caspase activation induced by anti-Fas and TNF-
in those cell lines and that the suppression was likely to be
achieved upstream of caspase-8 in the caspase cascade.
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HCV core protein activates a cellular transcriptional factor,
NF-
B.
In HepG2 cells, the antiapoptotic function of the
core was seen in the presence of a very low dose of CHX (500 ng/ml). However, a higher dose of CHX, 10 µg/ml, which is
generally used in several apoptotic assays, eliminated that
ability of the core despite no significant change in core production
detected by immunoblotting analysis (data not shown). From these
observations, we supposed that the core might protect the cells from
apoptotic cell death in response to anti-Fas stimulation
through a newly synthesized protein(s). Recently, protein
synthesis-dependent protective mechanisms against apoptotic
cell death have been reported to be associated with the activation of
NF-
B (2, 4, 5, 45, 47, 48). To determine whether core
production affects NF-
B activity in the cells, a reporter plasmid
assay, in which NF-
B-dependent reporter gene expression was
monitored in the presence or absence of HCV proteins, was performed
with HepG2 cells cotransfected with pNF-
B-Luc and pCMV-3010,
pCMV-Core, and pKS+/CMV for a negative control or pcDNA3-NIK for a
positive control. As shown in Fig. 3, at
48 h after transfection, we found two- and threefold augmentation of relative luciferase activities in whole-HCV protein- and
core-producing cells, respectively, compared to that in the negative
control cells. In our experiment, 12-fold augmentation of the
luciferase activities in the positive control cells producing
NF-
B-inducing kinase was found. Furthermore, the treatment of
core-producing HepG2 cells with either TNF-
or anti-Fas for 2 h
resulted in 22- and 17-fold increases in luciferase activity,
respectively, while the same treatments augmented the reporter activity
by about 2- to 5-fold in the negative control cells. This activation of reporter gene expression was likely to be NF-
B specific for two reasons; one was that the transcription from either reporter plasmid which contained the mutated element of NF-
B binding sequence or
cyclic AMP-responsive element was not affected (data not shown), and
another was that exogenous production of I
B-
, a specific inhibitor of NF-
B, eliminated NF-
B activation by the core as mentioned below. When the core was produced in MCF-7 cells, both the
basal and TNF-
-induced levels of NF-
B-dependent transcriptional activities were increased 5- and 15-fold, respectively, compared with
that in the negative control cells (Fig.
4C and data not shown). About three- to
sevenfold enhancement of NF-
B activities was also observed for
Jurkat, Huh-7, Saos-2, and HeLa cells producing the core (data not
shown).
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B in all cell lines
examined in this study and that this activation is synergistically
enhanced in HepG2 cells by stimulation with anti-Fas and in MCF-7 cells
by TNF-
, under the apoptosis-inducing conditions.
C-terminally truncated core had no effect on either NF-
B
activation or suppression of apoptotic cell death.
The
primary structure of the final core product after secondary processing
in cells is still unknown. There have been some controversial reports
suggesting that its C-terminal end is located at around 151 or 173 aa
based on the results of deletion analysis (21, 35). It was
also shown that the subcellular localization of the core was shifted
from the cytoplasm to the nucleus by these deletions (20,
39). Therefore, to assess what type of core is functional in the
suppression of apoptosis, HepG2 cells transfected with the
expression plasmids for the two truncated core proteins, pCMV-
Core173 and pCMV-
Core151, were analyzed as described above. As shown in Fig. 4A, the molecular sizes of the cores from pCMV-Core, pCMV-
Core173, and pCMV-
Core151 were estimated to be similar to
those previously reported (54). We also observed
differences in subcellular localization of each core product by
indirect immunofluorescence analysis. As shown in Fig. 4B, the core
which was designed to be truncated as a polypeptide of 151 aa was
detected mainly in the nucleus, in contrast to the observation that the
core which was translated as a full-length protein of 191 aa was
located around the perinuclear region in the cytoplasm. In contrast,
the core which was produced primarily as a product of 173 aa was
distributed in the nucleus and perinucleic cytoplasm.
B
activation were observed for HepG2 cells transfected with
pCMV-Core, whereas the cells producing the C-terminally truncated
core of 151 aa showed no resistance against Fas-mediated
apoptosis and no activation of NF-
B. In the HepG2 cells
transfected with pCMV-
Core173, intermediate effects on both
apoptotic cell death and NF-
B activation were observed.
Similar results were obtained for MCF-7 cells transfected with each
construct after stimulation with TNF-
(Fig. 4C, lower panels). These
results indicated that the ability of each construct to activate
NF-
B paralleled its antiapoptotic potential. Furthermore, we
observed that the FLAG-core construct, in which FLAG tag was fused with
the N-terminal end of the core, showed no antiapoptotic effect
and no activation of NF-
B in spite of the fact that the production
level and subcellular localization of this protein were similar to
those of the original when it was produced in HepG2 cells (data
not shown). This may suggest that a certain tertiary structure of
the core which was destroyed by the N-terminal fusion is important for
its biological activities.
The antiapoptotic effects of the core were restrained
by inhibition of NF-
B activation.
The above results
suggested that at least one of the antiapoptotic effects of the
core is achieved through the activation of NF-
B. Therefore, to
assess this possibility, the sensitivity of MCF-7 cells
cotransfected with pCMV-Core and pCMV-I
B against TNF-
-induced apoptotic cell death was evaluated after
magnetic concentration as described above. As expected, the resistance against apoptosis observed for MCF-7 cells producing the core was completely abolished by coproduction of the inhibitor of NF-
B, I
B-
, in the cells (Fig. 5, middle
panels). We also confirmed by reporter plasmid assay that the NF-
B
activity in the cells producing the core was substantially inhibited by
cotransfection of pCMV-I
B either with or without treatment with
TNF-
(Fig. 5, left panels, and data not shown). When
apoptotic cell death was induced by anti-Fas, this suppressive
effect of I
B-
on the antiapoptotic function of
the core was also observed for HepG2 cells (Fig. 5, upper panels). In
contrast to these two cell lines, when I
B-
was coproduced in
Jurkat cells with the core, the cell viability after treatment with
anti-Fas was only partially reduced compared with that of the
core-producing cells despite the complete suppression of NF-
B
activities (Fig. 5, lower panels). Thus, the suppressive mechanism of
apoptotic signaling by the core was believed to differ in the
case of Jurkat cells from that for HepG2 and MCF-7 cells.
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B in HepG2 and MCF-7 cells. Moreover, our results suggested that the activation of NF-
B
contributes to protection from Fas-mediated apoptosis in certain cells.
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DISCUSSION |
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As part of the defense mechanism of host organisms, cells infected
by viruses are induced to initiate apoptotic cell death by
signals delivered from CTL (25). On the other hand, a
number of viruses have been reported to cause infected cells to escape from this apoptosis to maintain persistent infection (29,
41). In this study, we investigated the effects of whole HCV
proteins produced in HepG2 cells on Fas-mediated apoptotic cell
death and found that these cells became resistant to apoptosis.
These collected cells are likely to be a good model of HCV-infected
cells because all HCV proteins were authentically produced from a
precursor polyprotein encoded in a single open reading frame. This
antiapoptotic effect of HCV proteins turned out to be a
contribution of the core and was seen for different cell lines treated
with anti-Fas or TNF-
. Furthermore, we demonstrated that the
antiapoptotic effect of the core was exerted through
enhanced activation of NF-
B, especially in HepG2 and MCF-7 cells.
Discrepancies regarding the effects of the core on the cellular
apoptotic responses have been reported previously: the core functions antiapoptotically according to some papers (32,
33) and proapoptotically according to others (34,
56). The reason for the discrepancy among these reports is
still unclear. It may be that the core has bipotential roles in the
apoptotic signaling. This discrepancy may be, however,
explained by the possibility that it was caused by use of clonally
selected permanent transfectant cells in the previous studies. As
cultured cell lines are likely to be mixed populations of certain
cells, a clonally selected cell population cannot be certified to have
characteristic features of the parental mixed population. To decrease
the chance of selecting particular cells from mixed populations, we
enriched the transfected cell population magnetically. Under these
conditions, the cell populations which were originally sensitive to the
apoptosis mediated by Fas or TNF-
gained the ability to
resist such stimuli from the HCV core protein production. During
preparation of the manuscript, Shrivastava et al. reported that the
core suppressed TNF-mediated NF-
B activation in MCF-7 cells
(37). The discrepancies between our findings and
theirs might be derived from the difference in cells used in the
experiments as mentioned above. The other difference between
transient-transfection and permanent transfectant systems seems to be
the expression levels of exogenous genes: that is, a relatively higher
level of expression would be expected in the former case. Furthermore,
the production of exogenous proteins, not only by transient but also by
permanent transfection, may cause a kind of nonspecific stress in the
cells. Therefore, to try to reduce the production level we chose the
transfection method that enabled us to produce a relatively small
amount of exogenous protein in a single cell but in many cells.
Moreover, as shown in Fig. 1A, HepG2 cells transfected with pCMV-3010,
in which only less than 1/20 of the core production was seen compared
with that for pCMV-Core transfection, also showed the effects on both
suppression of apoptosis and NF-
B activation. In addition,
we found that the production of FLAG-core fusion protein did not show
the above-reported biological effects at all despite the similarity in
expression patterns to that of the wild-type core protein, including
production level. Taken together, the biological effects of the core
reported here should be attributable to the core-specific function
irrespective of its expression levels.
We showed here that one of the antiapoptotic effects of the
core was exerted through the activation of NF-
B in certain cells. The fine structure of the core required for its ability to activate NF-
B is not clear at this time. However, deletion analysis indicated that at least the C-terminal region of the core is important for that
function. Although a simple explanation for this is that the C-terminal
portion of the core forms the NF-
B activation domain, the real
reason seems to be more complicated. Deletions of the C-terminal
hydrophobic region of the core caused changes of subcellular
localization of those products (Fig. 4). As this region was suggested
to act as a signal peptide for E1 protein of HCV during processing of
the precursor polyprotein (13), this region is likely to
function as a primary topogenic signal of the core for the cytoplasmic
surface of the endoplasmic reticulum. From the nuclear localization of
the C-terminal deletion mutants,
Core173 and
Core151, it is
assumed that the decrease in and the loss of NF-
B activation
abilities of these mutants, respectively, are due to the isolation of
these products from cytoplasm by translocation into the nucleus. It is
well known that the regulation of NF-
B activation is based on its
localization in the cell: NF-
B is present as an inactive form in the
cytoplasm as a complex with I
B, but when the degradation of I
B is
induced via activation of several protein kinases, for example, IKK-
and -
, NF-
B translocates into the nucleus as an active form
(3, 22). Therefore, it seems reasonable that the core
modulates the pathway for NF-
B activation in the cytoplasm, as do
several other viral proteins (16, 28, 44, 55).
It is still unknown how NF-
B activation by the core leads to
suppression of Fas- and TNF-
-mediated apoptosis. However, it was recently reported that NF-
B induces a group of gene products such as TNF receptor-associated factors 1 and 2 and
inhibitor-of-apoptosis proteins 1 and 2, which suppress
TNF-
-mediated apoptosis, and blocks the activation of
caspase-8 (48). We have not observed the induction of those
factors in the core-producing cells treated with anti-Fas or TNF-
.
However, it may be possible that the core activating NF-
B acts on
not only the TNF-
- but also the Fas-mediated apoptotic
pathway by a similar mechanism, since we found that the activation of
caspase-8 in anti-Fas- and TNF-
-treated HepG2 and MCF-7 cells,
respectively, was diminished by production of the core. In contrast to
HepG2 and MCF-7 cells, the mechanism of the suppressive effect on
Fas-mediated apoptosis introduced by the core in Jurkat cells
is unknown so far, because this effect was revealed to be independent
of NF-
B activation.
We concluded from our results that HCV core protein inhibits the onset
of apoptotic cell death, and at least one of the important pathways for this includes NF-
B activation by the core. This antiapoptotic effect introduced by the core might be
advantageous for HCV by allowing the host hepatocytes to survive
apoptosis, resulting in sustained infection. Further studies
are necessary to determine the molecular mechanism by which the core
enhances NF-
B activity and to find the other antiapoptotic
pathway mediated by the core independently of NF-
B, because this
might allow development of effective strategies for the prevention of
chronic sustained viral infection.
| |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
We are grateful to Y. Tsujimoto and D. Wallach for providing plasmids, S. Yonehara for Jurkat cells, M. Kohara for anticore antibody, and K. Watashi for assistance with the transfected-cell concentration procedure.
This work was supported by grants-in-aid for cancer research and for the second-term comprehensive 10-year strategy for cancer control from the Ministry of Health and Welfare and by grants-in-aid for scientific research from the Ministry of Education, Science and Culture of Japan.
| |
FOOTNOTES |
|---|
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Laboratory of Human Tumor Viruses, Department of Viral Oncology, The Institute for Virus Research, Kyoto University, Sakyo-ku, Kyoto 606-8507, Japan. Phone: 81-75-751-4000. Fax: 81-75-751-3998. E-mail: mhijikat{at}virus.kyoto-u.ac.jp.
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