Previous Article | Next Article ![]()
Journal of Virology, August 1999, p. 6220-6227, Vol. 73, No. 8
Unité de Virologie Moléculaire,
URA CNRS 1966, Institut Pasteur, Paris Cedex 15, France1; Department of Medicine, The
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North
Carolina 275992; and Department of
Microbiology and Immunology, The University of Texas Medical Branch at
Galveston, Galveston, Texas 77555-10193
Received 22 March 1999/Accepted 20 April 1999
Most details of the processing of the hepatitis A virus (HAV)
polyprotein are known. Unique among members of the family
Picornaviridae, the primary cleavage of the HAV polyprotein
is mediated by 3Cpro, the only proteinase known to be
encoded by the virus, at the 2A/2B junction. All other cleavages of the
polyprotein have been considered to be due to 3Cpro,
although the precise location and mechanism responsible for the VP1/2A
cleavage have been controversial. Here we present data that argue
strongly against the involvement of the HAV 3Cpro
proteinase in the maturation of VP1 from its VP1-2A precursor. Using a
heterologous expression system based on recombinant vaccinia viruses
directing the expression of full-length or truncated capsid protein
precursors, we show that the C terminus of the mature VP1 capsid
protein is located near residue 764 of the polyprotein. However, a
proteolytically active HAV 3Cpro that was capable of
directing both VP0/VP3 and VP3/VP1 cleavages in vaccinia virus-infected
cells failed to process the VP1-2A precursor. Using site-directed
mutagenesis of an infectious molecular clone of HAV, we modified
potential VP1/2A cleavage sites that fit known 3Cpro
recognition criteria and found that a substitution that ablates the
presumed 3Cpro dipeptide recognition sequence at
Glu764-Ser765 abolished neither infectivity nor
normal VP1 maturation. Altered electrophoretic mobility of VP1 from a
viable mutant virus with an Arg764 substitution indicated
that this residue is present in VP1 and that the VP1/2A cleavage occurs
downstream of this residue. These data indicate that maturation of the
HAV VP1 capsid protein is not dependent on 3Cpro processing
and may thus be uniquely dependent on a cellular proteinase.
The genomes of all picornaviruses
encode a single polyprotein which is co- and posttranslationally
proteolytically cleaved by virus-encoded proteinase(s). These
processing events are well characterized for most picornaviral genera,
including the enteroviruses, rhinoviruses, cardioviruses, and
aphthoviruses (reviewed in reference 23). The
mechanism and location of the primary cleavage of the polyprotein
differ between the genera. In viruses of the genera Enterovirus and Rhinovirus, the primary cleavage
occurs at the VP1/2A junction, resulting in the release of the P1
capsid protein precursor from the P2-P3 nonstructural protein
precursor. This cleavage occurs by cis action of the 2A
proteinase at its N terminus. In viruses of the genera
Cardiovirus and Aphthovirus, the primary cleavage
event occurs at the 2A/2B junction, releasing the L-P1-2A (cardioviruses) or P1-2A (aphthoviruses) capsid protein precursor from
the 2BC-P3 nonstructural protein precursor. This primary cleavage
occurs in cis and is dependent on the sequence of the 2A
protein, which is comprised of only 18 amino acid residues in the
aphthoviruses. A similar sequence is located at the C terminus of the
larger cardioviral 2A protein, and in both aphthoviruses and
cardioviruses, there is complete conservation of the three C-terminal
residues of 2A (Asn-Pro-Gly) as well as the N-terminal residue (Pro) of
protein 2B (8). In all four of these picornaviral genera,
all other cleavages within the polyprotein are carried out by the
3Cpro proteinase (or its precursor 3CDpro),
with the exception of the L/P1 cleavage directed by the L proteinase in
aphthoviruses, and the maturation cleavage of VP0 to VP4 and VP2, which
occurs in all picornaviruses by a mechanism that has yet to be
explained but which appears to be dependent on packaging of the viral RNA.
In contrast to these well-characterized events, the processing of the
polyprotein has been difficult to study in the genus Hepatovirus. This genus of the family
Picornaviridae is comprised of a single virus species,
hepatitis A virus (HAV), which typically has a protracted and
noncytolytic replication cycle in cell culture and fails to induce
shutdown of cellular host cell protein synthesis in infected cells
(reviewed in reference 18). It has recently been
shown that the primary cleavage of the HAV polyprotein occurs at the
2A/2B junction, which has been mapped by the N-terminal sequencing of
2B. Unlike all other picornaviruses, this primary cleavage of the HAV
polyprotein is carried out by the 3Cpro proteinase, which
is the only proteinase known to be encoded by the virus (13, 21,
26). The P1-2A capsid protein precursor is most likely released
from the nonstructural protein precursor (2BC-P3) as soon as
3Cpro is synthesized, as the full-length polyprotein has
not been observed in these studies. A P1-2A precursor produced in a
cell-free translation system has been shown to be readily cleaved in
vitro by purified, recombinant 3Cpro to generate VP0
(VP4-VP2), VP3, and VP1-2A (also termed PX) (20). We have
shown that similar cleavage events occur in vivo in cells infected with
recombinant vaccinia viruses expressing HAV polypeptides (see Results).
However, the eventual fate of the VP1-2A product remains controversial,
and the N-terminal residue of 2A has not been defined.
The VP1-2A polypeptide is unique to the hepatoviruses. It associates
with VP0 and VP3 to form pentamers, the first intermediate in the
morphogenesis of HAV particles (2, 5). The mature capsid
protein VP1 is subsequently derived from the VP1-2A precursor later in
the morphogenesis process, although preparations of infectious virus
particles often contain detectable quantities of VP1-2A (2,
5). The mechanism by which the 2A moiety is cleaved from the
VP1-2A precursor is not known. However, purified recombinant 3Cpro has been shown to cleave relevant HAV substrates that
were generated in cell-free translation reactions, suggesting that
3Cpro may be responsible for the VP1/2A cleavage (20,
25). More recently, Probst et al. (24) have presented
data suggesting that 3Cpro directs the cleavage between VP1
and 2A at a Glu-Ser dipeptide sequence that is present in most HAV
strains at residues 764 and 765 of the polyprotein
(Glu764-Ser; amino acid numbering is from the first AUG).
This would result in a VP1 protein of 273 amino acid residues, since
the N terminus of the mature capsid protein VP1 has been isolated from
virions, microsequenced, and shown to be located at residue 492 (Val)
of the polyprotein (12, 19).
Here, however, we present data that argue strongly against the
involvement of the HAV 3Cpro proteinase in the maturation
of VP1 from its VP1-2A precursor. We show that the C terminus of the
mature capsid protein VP1 is located near but downstream of, residue
764 of the polyprotein. Furthermore, we demonstrate that
3Cpro is incapable of directing the cleavage of VP1 from
the VP1-2A precursor in vivo, using recombinant vaccinia viruses that
express relevant HAV substrates, and show that a substitution that
ablates the presumed 3Cpro dipeptide recognition sequence
at positions 764-765 of the polyprotein neither abolish infectivity of
the HAV nor eliminate the normal maturation of the VP1 capsid protein.
These data strongly refute the hypothesis that the maturation of VP1 is
dependent on 3Cpro processing of the VP1-2A precursor and
suggest a novel role for an unknown cellular proteinase in processing
of a picornavirus polyprotein.
Cell cultures and viruses.
Fetal rhesus kidney (FRhK-4)
cells were used for rescue of infectious HAV following transfection
with synthetic, genome-length HAV RNA transcripts (7) and
for the in vivo expression of HAV polypeptides following infection with
recombinant vaccinia viruses. African green monkey kidney (BS-C-1)
cells were used for radioimmunofocus assays (RIFA) (16) to
characterize the replication phenotype of mutant HAVs and to determine
the titer of virus stocks. These cells were maintained in Dulbecco's
modified Eagle's medium (DMEM; Gibco BRL or Eurobio) supplemented with
5% fetal calf serum, penicillin (100 U/ml), and streptomycin (100 µg/ml) (DMEM-5%) and a mixture of nonessential amino acids (Gibco
BRL). Human 143B thymidine kinase-deficient cells were used for the
isolation of recombinant vaccinia viruses, and monkey kidney (CV1) or
human cervix carcinoma (HeLa) cells were used for propagation of these
viruses. Both of these cell lines were maintained in DMEM-5%.
0022-538X/99/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Maturation of the Hepatitis A Virus Capsid Protein
VP1 Is Not Dependent on Processing by the 3Cpro
Proteinase

![]()
ABSTRACT
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References
![]()
INTRODUCTION
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References
![]()
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References
HAV expression plasmids and generation of recombinant vaccinia viruses. For expression of HAV polypeptides in eukaryotic cells, appropriate HAV cDNA fragments were cloned into plasmid pTM1 downstream of the T7 RNA polymerase promoter (22). Recombinant vaccinia viruses were generated from these plasmids by homologous DNA recombination as described previously (21).
Plasmid pTM/P1-2A was constructed by PCR amplification of nucleotides (nt) 748 to 3255 of the HAV sequence from p5'P2P3-18f (29) with a 5' oligonucleotide primer complementary to nt 748 to 775 and a 3' primer complementary to nt 3231 to 3255 and possessing an extension designed to create a SpeI restriction site at the 3' end of the amplimer. The resulting DNA fragment was digested by SpeI, 5' phosphorylated, and inserted between the NcoI and SpeI sites of the pTM1 polylinker. To create pTM1 derivatives expressing a series of truncated HAV capsid protein precursors, nt 2221 to 2982, 2221 to 3039, 2221 to 3075, or 2221 to 3120 were PCR amplified from p5'P2P3-18f cDNA, using a series of 3' primers containing a 3' SpeI site and a 5' primer complementary to nt 2221 to 2246. The resulting PCR amplimers were digested with NcoI (nt 2827) and SpeI and inserted in lieu of the corresponding full-length fragment (nt 2827 to 3255) of pTM/P1-2A. These plasmids encode truncated capsid protein precursors, with C termini corresponding to residue 745 (p-P1745), 764 (p-P1764), 776 (p-P1776), or 791 (p-P1791) of the polyprotein, or potential VP1 proteins of 254, 273, 285, or 300 residues, respectively. Plasmid pTM/2BC-P3 was constructed from a dicistronic cDNA with an encephalomyocarditis virus internal ribosomal entry site insertion between 2A and 2B sequences of 5'P2P3-18f (pHAV-2AE2B) (2a). The Asp718-BamHI restriction fragment, which included the 132 3'-terminal nucleotides of the encephalomyocarditis internal ribosomal entry site, the initiation codon, HAV 2BC and P3 sequences, as well as HAV 3' noncoding region and poly(A) sequence, was purified from pHAV-2AE2B and inserted between the Asp718 and BamHI sites of pTM1 to create pTM/2BC-P3, which expresses the HAV 2BC-P3 polypeptide.Construction of mutated full-length HAV cDNAs by site-directed
mutagenesis.
Potential 3Cpro cleavage sites which may
represent the VP1/2A junction were altered in the infectious molecular
clone, p5'P2P3-18f (29), using three different strategies
for site-directed mutagenesis. For mutants 764Q, 764R, 776Q, 776R, and
791R (Table 1), the isolated SacI-EcoRI fragment (nt 3002 to 4990) of
p5'P2P3-18f was inserted into the polylinker of phage M13mp18 DNA and
subjected to site-directed mutagenesis according to the method of
Taylor et al. (28). For mutants 745N and 745R (Table 1), the
Bst1107I-SacI segment (nt 2037 to 3002) of
p5'P2P3-18f was PCR amplified by using a 3' oligonucleotide primer with
nucleotide substitutions in the relevant codon. For mutants 791D and
791Q (Table 1), p5'P2P3-18f was used as a template for PCR-mediated
mutagenesis by an adaptation of the method described by Stemmer and
Morris (27). All mutated cDNA segments were sequenced to
exclude spurious mutations prior to their reintroduction into the
background of p5'P2P3-18f.
|
Transcription and transfection of full-length HAV RNAs. Transcription of full-length HAV RNA and liposome-mediated RNA transfection of FRhK-4 cells were carried out essentially as described previously (21). Briefly, 1 µg of HaeII-digested plasmid DNA was transcribed by SP6 RNA polymerase (50 U; Promega) in a 50-µl reaction mix containing 0.5 mM each ribonucleoside triphosphate for 60 min at 37°C. The quality and approximate quantity of the transcription products were assessed by electrophoresis in 1% agarose gels. For transfections, approximately 5 µg of RNA transcript was mixed with 50 µl of DOTAP (Boehringer Mannheim) in a 150-µl total volume, incubated for 15 min at room temperature, and added to 3 ml of DMEM. This mixture was added dropwise to subconfluent monolayers of prewashed FRhK-4 cells (5 × 105 cells in 25-cm2 culture flasks). After overnight incubation at 37°C, the cells were washed and maintained in 5 ml of DMEM with 2% fetal calf serum for 14 days at 37°C. Cells were harvested mechanically, subjected to three freeze-thaw cycles, and extracted with an equal volume of chloroform.
HAV RIFA. Lysates of transfected cells were assayed for infectious HAV by radioimmunofocus assay (RIFA) carried out in BS-C-1 cells as described previously (16). Infected cells were maintained at 37°C for 7 days before processing.
HAV polypeptide expression assays. Segments of the HAV polyprotein were expressed in FRhK-4 cells (2 × 105 cells in 35-mm-diameter petri dishes) by coinfection of the cells with vTF7-3 and vaccinia virus-HAV recombinants expressing full-length or truncated capsid protein precursor (vv-P1-2A) and/or a 3Cpro precursor (vv-2BC-P3), each at a multiplicity of infection (MOI) of 5 PFU per cell.
Stocks of viable HAV mutants were used to infect FRhK-4 cells (2 × 105 cells in 35-mm-diameter petri dishes) at an MOI of 1 to 2 radioimmunofocus-forming units (RFU) per cell (16).Immunoblot detection of HAV proteins. Cytoplasmic extracts were prepared at 20 h postinfection (p.i.) (for vaccinia virus infections) or at 24, 48, 72, or 96 h p.i. (for HAV infections) by lysis of cells in 200 µl of 50 mM Tris-Cl (pH 7.5)-150 mM NaCl-1 mM EDTA-1% Nonidet P-40-0.1% sodium deoxycholate containing 25 µg of aprotinin per ml. A 10- to 20-µl aliquot was subjected to sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE), followed by semidry transfer onto a polyvinylidene difluoride membrane (Amersham). Nonspecific binding sites were blocked in phosphate-buffered saline containing 0.1% Tween 20 (PBST) and 5% nonfat milk for 1 h at room temperature. The membrane was incubated overnight at 4°C with a mixture of HAV anti-VP1 and anti-VP2 guinea pig antibodies, diluted 1:4,000 and 1:8,000, respectively, in PBST containing 1% bovine serum albumin (PBST-BSA). After four washes with PBST, the membrane was incubated with anti-guinea pig antibodies conjugated to horseradish peroxidase (Sigma) diluted in PBST-BSA for 1 h at room temperature. After four washes with PBST, the HAV polypeptides were visualized by chemiluminescence (ECL Plus; Amersham).
| |
RESULTS |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Processing of the HAV P1-2A polypeptide by 3Cpro proteinase expressed by recombinant vaccinia viruses. To study proteolytic cleavage of the HAV polyprotein by the 3Cpro proteinase of HAV, we expressed segments of the polyprotein in FRhK-4 cells in a hybrid T7-vaccinia expression system (11, 22). HAV cDNA sequences were cloned into plasmid pTM1 under control of the T7 promoter and recombinant vaccinia viruses were generated in vivo by homologous recombination with wild-type vaccinia virus DNA as described in Materials and Methods. One recombinant vaccinia virus (vv-P1-2A) expressed amino acids (aa) 1 to 836 of the HAV polyprotein, encompassing the entire capsid protein precursor P1-2A (Fig. 1). Another recombinant vaccinia virus (vv-2BC-P3) expressed aa 837 to 2226 of the HAV polyprotein, encompassing the 2BC-P3 polypeptide, as a precursor to proteinase 3Cpro. Coinfection of cells with one or more of these recombinant vaccinia viruses and with an additional recombinant vaccinia virus, vTF7-3, which expresses T7 RNA polymerase, resulted in expression of the HAV polypeptides.
|
|
Mature VP1 capsid protein from HAV-infected cells comigrates with a recombinant VP1 molecule of 273 amino acid residues (VP1764). In an effort to determine the approximate location of the C terminus of the mature VP1 capsid protein, we constructed a series of recombinant vaccinia viruses expressing truncated P1-2A capsid protein precursors: aa 1 to 745 (vv-P1745), 1 to 764 (vv-P1764), 1 to 776 (vv-P1776), and 1 to 791 (vv-P1791). The C-terminal residues of these truncated precursors correspond to each of the four potential 3Cpro cleavage sites that may represent the VP1/2A junction: Gln745-Ser, Glu764-Ser, Glu776-Ser, and Glu791-Ser (Fig. 1). These sites were identified on the basis of the substrate recognition criteria of picornaviral 3Cpro proteinases, which include a requirement for a Gln or possibly a Glu residue at the P1 position immediately preceding the scissile peptide bond (3). We examined the processing of these truncated P1-2A substrates by 3Cpro expressed in cells that were coinfected with vv-2BC-P3 and vTF7-3 (Fig. 3A). Products containing VP1 residues were identified by immunoblotting with anti-VP1 antibodies. As expected, the proteolytic cleavage of these substrates by 3Cpro produced C-terminally truncated VP1-2A polypeptides representing aa 492 to 745, 492 to 764, 492 to 776, and 492 to 791 (Fig. 3A).
|
Infectivity of mutated HAV RNA transcripts.
To ascertain
whether any of the four potential VP1/2A cleavage sites listed above
constitute actual substrates for the 3Cpro proteinase
within the context of the full-length HAV polyprotein, substitutions
were introduced at the P1 residue of these sites within a
genome-length, infectious HAV cDNA clone, p5'P2P3-18f. The
P1 residue represents the most important determinant of
3Cpro specificity. Two types of mutations were engineered
at each of these putative junctions (Table 1). One set of mutations was designed to preserve or even enhance 3Cpro recognition and
cleavage (Gln745
Asn and
Glu764,776,791
Gln), while a second set of substitutions
were nonconservative and designed to abolish 3Cpro
recognition of the dipeptide sequence (Gln745 and
Glu764,776,791
Arg). In addition, we introduced a
conservative substitution that maintained the charge of the Glu residue
at position 791 (Glu791
Asp). For each mutation, we
attempted to rescue infectious HAV from two independent clones by in
vitro transcription of the cDNA with SP6 RNA polymerase, followed by
liposome-mediated transfection of the RNA transcripts into permissive
FRhK-4 cells (see Materials and Methods). Cell lysates were prepared 2 weeks after transfection, and the presence of virus was determined by
RIFA in BS-C-1 cells.
|
Arg substitution in 764R, which would be expected to abolish
3Cpro recognition of the Glu764-Ser dipeptide,
had no appreciable effect on replication of the virus.
The viable HAV mutants that were rescued from transfected FRhK-4 cells
were subjected to an additional passage in these cells. This led to an
amplification of the titer of the 791Q mutant, which nonetheless
remained 10- to 100-fold lower than that of parental virus (Table 1).
For each of the mutants, however, the size of the RIFA foci remained
unchanged after this additional passage (data not shown). In all cases,
the RNA sequences of the viruses recovered, either directly from the
transfected cells or following an additional passage in FRhK-4 cells,
retained the nucleotide substitutions that had been introduced at the
suspect 3Cpro cleavage sites by site-directed mutagenesis.
Cleavage at the VP1/2A junction during replication of virus with amino acid substitutions at Glu764 or Glu791. Since the VP1/2A precursor is present in small quantities in some purified preparations of infectious HAV particles (2, 5), the VP1/2A cleavage might not be necessary for replication of the virus. If this were the case, then the viable mutant viruses with substitutions at Glu764 or Glu791 could still have a defect in their ability to fully process the VP1-2A precursor to mature VP1. To exclude this possibility, we infected FRhK-4 cells with these mutants and at various times p.i. prepared cytoplasmic extracts for immunoblot analysis (Fig. 5). VP1- and VP2-reactive proteins were detected with a mixture of anti-VP1 and anti-VP2 antibodies. VP0 and/or VP2 were detected in lysates of cells infected with each of these mutants with kinetics similar to those of the parental virus (Fig. 5).
|
Gln change introduced at residue 791 of
the 791Q mutant compared to those of parental virus. However, the
electrophoretic mobilities of the fully processed VP1 proteins were
identical for both mutants and parental virus (Fig. 5A). This result
indicates that the C terminus of VP1 lies upstream of residue 791.
The fully processed VP1 protein was also produced in FRhK-4 cells
infected with the 764Q and 764R mutants at an MOI of 2 RFU/cell (Fig.
5B). There were no apparent delays in the processing of the VP1
intermediates in comparison to the wild-type virus. Importantly, however, the electrophoretic mobilities of the P1-2A, VP1-2A, and VP1
proteins were each significantly altered by the Glu
Gln substitution
at residue 764 of the mutant 764Q and even more by the Glu
Arg change
in 764R (Fig. 5B). This finding indicates that the mature VP1 protein
contains residue 764 and that the VP1/2A cleavage must therefore be
downstream of the potential 3Cpro cleavage site at
Glu764/Ser.
| |
DISCUSSION |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Viruses of the genus Hepatovirus are unique among the Picornaviridae with respect to the primary cleavage of the viral polyprotein, which is carried out by the viral 3Cpro proteinase at the 2A/2B junction (13, 21). The capsid protein precursor, polypeptide P1-2A, is subsequently cleaved by 3Cpro to generate VP0, VP3, and VP1-2A (Fig. 2 and references 20, 24, and 26). In contrast to these well-documented events, considerable uncertainty has surrounded the identification of the junction between VP1 and 2A and the mechanism of this cleavage. One difficulty has been that we and others (24) have been unable to detect the 2A protein in HAV-infected cells. This has made it impossible to purify this protein and determine its N-terminal residue by microsequencing. Our inability to detect 2A could be because it is highly unstable and rapidly degraded, and/or because it is not released from VP1-2A as an intact protein. The role of the 2A polypeptide sequence in virus replication has also been elusive. The 2A proteins of hepatoviruses show no sequence homologies with the 2A proteinase of the enteroviruses and rhinoviruses nor with the cardiovirus 2A protein. The HAV 2A polypeptide is present as a C-terminal extension of VP1 (VP1-2A = PX) in viral pentamers but is generally absent or present in only small quantities in mature virions (2, 5). The mechanism of the VP1/2A cleavage remains unclear, as indicated by the lack of unambiguous reports concerning 3Cpro-mediated cleavage of VP1 from various substrates (13, 20, 24-26).
Several approaches were undertaken in this study in an effort to elucidate the process leading to maturation of the VP1 capsid protein. We determined the approximate C terminus of the mature VP1 protein that is present in infectious virions, by comparing its electrophoretic mobility in SDS-PAGE with those of a series of truncated HAV VP1-2A proteins expressed by recombinant vaccinia viruses (Fig. 3A). The C termini of these recombinant proteins corresponded to potential 3Cpro cleavage sites that may represent the VP1/2A junction: Gln745-Ser, Glu764-Ser, Glu776-Ser, or Glu791-Ser. Of these four potential 3Cpro cleavage sites, two are unlikely to be sites of a 3Cpro-directed VP1 maturation cleavage, given other information. First, the C terminus of VP1 is unlikely to be located at Glu791 since the mature VP1 protein isolated from HAV virions has been shown to have a mass less than that of a recombinant polypeptide representing aa 492 to 791 of the polyprotein (9). Similarly, the most N-terminal of these potential sites, Gln745-Ser, is also unlikely to be the site of VP1/2A cleavage, since a neutralizing monoclonal antibody, H7-C27, binds in enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays to nested synthetic octapeptides representing aa 747 to 759 (our unpublished results). This leaves Glu776-Ser, which is conserved among all HAV strains for which the nucleotide sequence has been determined, and Glu764-Ser, which is not fully conserved but is Val764-Ser in one cell culture-adapted HAV variant (6). It was of interest, therefore, that we found the mature VP1 protein isolated from virions to have an electrophoretic mobility indistinguishable from that of a recombinant VP1 protein with a C terminus at Glu764 (Fig. 3B). This result demonstrated that the VP1 C terminus is located close to, if not at, residue 764 of the polyprotein.
Crystallographic studies of the HAV 3Cpro proteinase suggest that a Glu-Ser dipeptide, such as that present at residues 764-765 of the HAV polyprotein, could constitute a substrate for this proteinase, even though 3Cpro has been shown to exhibit a marked preference for Gln at the P1 position immediately upstream of the scissile bond (1, 3, 14). In support of this argument, the predicted HAV 3A/3B cleavage site, which has not yet been confirmed by protein sequencing, is also thought to involve a Glu residue at the P1 position (in this case, a Glu-Gly dipeptide). However, although we have recently shown that a Glu-Ser dipeptide is partially cleaved in trans by 3Cpro when introduced in lieu of the normal Gln-Ala dipeptide at the 2A/2B site, we have found that a LeuP4-ProP3-ThrP2-GluP1-SerP'1 pentapeptide sequence (which corresponds to the sequence context of the putative 3Cpro cleavage of VP1/2A Glu764-Ser765) is not cleaved at all when introduced at the 2A/2B junction (our unpublished results). This is probably due to the additive deleterious effects of two unfavorable residues, the Pro at the P3 position as well as the Glu at the P1 position (2b). Furthermore, a Val residue, such as found at position 764 of the attenuated HM175 p35 strain (6), is not a suitable P1 residue for 3Cpro trans cleavage (our unpublished results). All of these data suggest that 3Cpro-mediated cleavage of the HAV polyprotein at the Glu764-Ser765 dipeptide is not a very likely scenario, despite the fact that Glu764 is close to or at the C terminus of VP1 (Fig. 3B). That 3Cpro is likely not to cleave this dipeptide is further indicated by the failure of the HAV proteinase to process VP1-2A into a mature VP1 protein when P1-2A and 2BC-P3 polypeptides were expressed in vivo by recombinant vaccinia viruses, whereas 3Cpro is fully active to process P1-2A at other junctions (Fig. 2).
These observations led us to test whether the Glu764-Ser
dipeptide was an actual substrate for 3Cpro in the context
of the full-length polyprotein by introducing various amino acid
substitutions at Glu764 that were designed to either
maintain or abolish potential recognition by the 3Cpro
proteinase. The transfection of FRhK-4 cells with an HAV RNA transcript
encoding a Glu764
Arg substitution at this putative
P1 residue resulted in the rescue of a mutant virus (764R)
with replication properties similar to those of the parental virus
(Table 1 and Fig. 4). This substitution should completely abolish
3Cpro substrate recognition, as we have shown previously in
studies of the 2A/2B primary cleavage site (21). We ruled
out the possibility that the 764R HAV mutant was viable in the absence
of VP1/2A cleavage, by demonstrating that the maturation of VP1
proceeded with normal kinetics in cells infected with this 764R mutant
(Fig. 5). Taken together, these results argue strongly against the
hypothesis that maturation of the VP1 protein occurs by
3Cpro-mediated cleavage at the Glu764-Ser dipeptide.
This conclusion contradicts a recent report describing the processing of HAV polypeptides in a transient expression system involving Cos-7 cells (24). VP1 was reported to be cleaved in trans by 3Cpro from a P1-2A substrate containing a Glu764 residue, but much less efficiently when a Val764 residue was present (as in the cell culture-adapted HM175 p35 variant). The authors concluded that 3Cpro effects a VP1/2A cleavage at the 764-765 dipeptide on the basis of (i) the variation in the efficiency with which these substrates were processed and (ii) the similar electrophoretic mobilities of the VP1 product of these cleavages and a polypeptide corresponding to residues 492 to 764 of the polyprotein. The latter result obtained with polypeptides from the HAS-15 HAV strain is in agreement with our observations concerning the mass of the VP1 protein of the HM175 strain (Fig. 3). It is surprising that the inefficient 3Cpro processing of the P1-2A substrate containing Val764 that was observed by Probst et al. (24) in their transient expression system was not reflected in inefficient maturation of the VP1 protein in cells infected with the attenuated HM175 variant. Indeed, in contrast to the situation with transient expression of P1-2A, VP1 was efficiently cleaved from VP1-2A during the replication of this virus which contains a Val764 residue (24). This can be construed as further evidence that 3Cpro does not mediate the maturation of VP1 from its VP1-2A precursor during replication of the virus.
Considering that the C terminus of the mature VP1 protein is located
just downstream of residue 764 (Fig. 3 and 5) and that the only
apparent 3Cpro recognition sequence in the vicinity of this
residue (Glu764-Ser765) is not cleaved by
3Cpro during replication of the virus, we suggest that
3Cpro is not directly responsible for the maturation of
VP1. It is possible that a downstream 3Cpro cleavage of the
VP1-2A precursor, at an alternative 3Cpro recognition site,
may result in an intermediate protein that is subsequently subjected to
C-terminal trimming by a cellular proteinase once pentamers or
provirions are formed. Such a situation is found in the case of the
mengovirus (cardiovirus) VP1 capsid protein, which is
posttranslationally trimmed by three carboxy-terminal amino acids
following an initial VP1/2A cleavage mediated by 3Cpro
(4). In the case of HAV, the presence of minor
anti-VP1-reactive polypeptides with molecular masses intermediate
between those of VP1-2A and VP1 in HAV-infected cells (15)
would support such a mechanism. However, the results of our experiments
involving mutagenesis of the potential 3Cpro cleavage sites
that are located downstream of residue 764 (i.e., Glu776-Ser and Glu791-Ser) do not provide
support for this hypothesis (Table 1). Indeed, the lethal nature of the
Glu776
Gln substitution, which would be expected to
enhance 3Cpro recognition and cleavage, argues against
3Cpro cleavage at the Glu776-Ser dipeptide. The
Glu791-Ser dipeptide also seems unlikely to constitute a
substrate for 3Cpro. Even though a Glu791
Arg
substitution proved lethal to replication, we found that conservation
of the charge of the putative P1 residue
(Glu791
Asp substitution) was more important than
maintaining a 3Cpro recognition sequence
(Glu791
Gln substitution) to preserve virus replication.
Thus, it seems that there is no sequence downstream of residue 764 in
the vicinity of the VP1-2A cleavage that is recognized by
3Cpro. This finding suggests that the cleavage of VP1 from
its VP1-2A precursor is not dependent on 3Cpro, which is
the only proteinase known to be expressed by HAV.
This observation raises the possibility that a cellular proteinase contributes to the mechanism of VP1/2A cleavage during the replication of HAV. If so, such a major role for a cellular proteinase in the processing of the polyprotein would be unique to HAV among all picornaviruses. This interpretation leaves unanswered the question as to why no maturation of the VP1 protein from its VP1-2A precursor was observed in FRhK-4 cells expressing P1-2A and 2BC-P3 (3Cpro) from recombinant vaccinia viruses (Fig. 2). The entire HAV protein complement is present in this system, and FRhK-4 cells are permissive for virus replication and thus must express any putative cellular proteinase involved in maturation of the HAV capsid protein. Perhaps such a proteinase is induced by HAV infection and not present in sufficient quantities in uninfected FRhK-4 cells to render its detection possible. A difference in the abundance of this unknown cellular proteinase in the different cell types used in our study and in that of Probst et al. (24) may explain the discrepancy relating to whether processing of a P1-2A substrate to a mature VP1 product can occur. Alternatively, this unknown proteinase may be sequestered within an isolated compartment of the FRhK-4 cells which is not accessible to vaccinia-expressed HAV polypeptides. However, it cannot be ruled out that VP1-2A becomes a competent substrate for this proteinase only after assembly of the virus particle.
| |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
We are grateful to Nicolas Escriou and Czeslaw Wychowski for their interest in this work and helpful discussions and to Marc Girard for continuous support. We thank Bernard Moss for providing plasmid pTM1 and the recombinant virus vTF7-3, and we thank Stephen Feinstone for the gift of anti-HAV 3C antibodies.
This work was supported in part by the Pasteur Institute and CNRS and in part by grant AI32599 from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases.
| |
FOOTNOTES |
|---|
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Unité de Virologie Moléculaire, URA CNRS 1966, Institut Pasteur, 25 rue du Dr. Roux, 75724 Paris Cedex 15, France. Phone: (33-1) 40 61 33 60. Fax: (33-1) 40 61 30 45. E-mail: annettem{at}pasteur.fr.
Present address: Department of Pediatrics, Duke University, Durham,
NC 27710.
| |
REFERENCES |
|---|
|
|
|---|
| 1. | Allaire, M., M. M. Chernaia, B. A. Malcolm, and M. N. James. 1994. Picornaviral 3C cysteine proteinases have a fold similar to chymotrypsin-like serine proteinases. Nature 369:72-76[Medline]. |
| 2. |
Anderson, D. A., and B. C. Ross.
1990.
Morphogenesis of hepatitis A virus: isolation and characterization of subviral particles.
J. Virol.
64:5284-5289 |
| 2a. | Beard, M., L. Cohen, A. Martin, and S. M. Lemon. Unpublished data. |
| 2b. | Bergmann, E. M. Personal communication. |
| 3. | Bergmann, E. M., and M. N. G. James. 1999. Proteolytic enzymes of the viruses of the family Picornaviridae, p. 139-163. In B. Dunn (ed.), Proteinases of infectious agents. Academic Press, San Diego, Calif. |
| 4. | Boege, U., and D. G. Scraba. 1989. Mengo virus maturation is accompanied by C-terminal modification of capsid protein VP1. Virology 168:409-412[Medline]. |
| 5. |
Borovec, S. V., and D. A. Anderson.
1993.
Synthesis and assembly of hepatitis A virus-specific proteins in BS-C-1 cells.
J. Virol.
67:3095-3102 |
| 6. |
Cohen, J. I.,
B. Rosenblum,
J. R. Ticehurst,
R. J. Daemer,
S. M. Feinstone, and R. H. Purcell.
1987.
Complete nucleotide sequence of an attenuated hepatitis A virus: comparison with wild-type virus.
Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA
84:2497-2501 |
| 7. |
Cohen, J. I.,
J. R. Ticehurst,
S. M. Feinstone,
B. Rosenblum, and R. H. Purcell.
1987.
Hepatitis A virus cDNA and its RNA transcripts are infectious in cell culture.
J. Virol.
61:3035-3039 |
| 8. | Donnelly, M. L., D. Gani, M. Flint, S. Monaghan, and M. D. Ryan. 1997. The cleavage activities of aphthovirus and cardiovirus 2A proteins. J. Gen. Virol. 78:13-21[Abstract]. |
| 9. | Dotzauer, A., A. Vallbracht, and G. M. Keil. 1995. The proposed gene for VP1 of HAV encodes for a larger protein than that observed in HAV-infected cells and virions. Virology 213:671-675[Medline]. |
| 10. | Drillien, R., D. Spehner, and A. Kirn. 1982. Complementation and genetic linkage between vaccinia virus temperature-sensitive mutants. Virology 119:372-381[Medline]. |
| 11. |
Fuerst, T. R.,
E. G. Niles,
F. W. Studier, and B. Moss.
1986.
Eukaryotic transient-expression system based on recombinant vaccinia virus that synthetizes bacteriophage T7 RNA polymerase.
Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA
83:8122-8126 |
| 12. | Gauss-Muller, V., F. Lottspeich, and F. Deinhardt. 1986. Characterization of hepatitis A virus structural proteins. Virology 155:732-736[Medline]. |
| 13. |
Gosert, R.,
P. Cassinotti,
G. Siegl, and M. Weitz.
1996.
Identification of hepatitis A virus non-structural protein 2B and its release by the major virus protease 3C.
J. Gen. Virol.
77:247-255 |
| 14. | Jewell, D. A., W. Swietnicki, B. M. Dunn, and B. A. Malcom. 1992. Hepatitis A virus 3C proteinase substrate specificity. Biochemistry 31:7862-7869[Medline]. |
| 15. | Jia, X. Y., D. F. Summers, and E. Ehrenfeld. 1993. Primary cleavage of the HAV capsid protein precursor in the middle of the proposed 2A coding region. Virology 193:515-519[Medline]. |
| 16. |
Lemon, S. M.,
L. N. Binn, and R. H. Marchwicki.
1983.
Radioimmunofocus assay for quantitation of hepatitis A virus in cell cultures.
J. Clin. Microbiol.
17:834-839 |
| 17. |
Lemon, S. M.,
P. C. Murphy,
P. A. Shields,
L. H. Ping,
S. M. Feinstone,
T. Cromeans, and R. W. Jansen.
1991.
Antigenic and genetic variation in cytopathic hepatitis A virus variants arising during persistent infection: evidence for genetic recombination.
J. Virol.
65:2056-2065 |
| 18. | Lemon, S. M., and B. H. Robertson. 1993. Current perspectives in the virology and molecular biology of hepatitis A virus. Semin. Virol. 4:285-295. |
| 19. |
Linemeyer, D. L.,
J. G. Menke,
A. Martin-Gallardo,
J. V. Hughes,
A. Young, and S. W. Mitra.
1985.
Molecular cloning and partial sequencing of hepatitis A viral cDNA.
J. Virol.
54:247-255 |
| 20. | Malcolm, B. A., S. M. Chin, D. A. Jewell, J. R. Stratton-Thomas, K. B. Thudium, R. Ralston, and S. Rosenberg. 1992. Expression and characterization of recombinant hepatitis A virus 3C proteinase. Biochemistry 31:3358-3363[Medline]. |
| 21. | Martin, A., N. Escriou, S.-F. Chao, M. Girard, S. M. Lemon, and C. Wychowski. 1995. Identification and site-directed mutagenesis of the primary (2A/2B) cleavage site of the hepatitis A virus polyprotein: functional impact on the infectivity of HAV RNA transcripts. Virology 213:213-222[Medline]. |
| 22. | Moss, B., O. Elroy-Stein, T. Mizukami, W. A. Alexander, and T. R. Fuerst. 1990. New mammalian expression vectors. Nature 348:91-92[Medline]. |
| 23. | Palmenberg, A. C. 1990. Proteolytic processing of picornaviral polyprotein. Annu. Rev. Microbiol. 44:603-623[Medline]. |
| 24. | Probst, C., M. Jecht, and V. Gauss-Muller. 1997. Proteinase 3C-mediated processing of VP1-2A of two hepatitis A virus strains: in vivo evidence for cleavage at amino acid position 273/274 of VP1. J. Virol. 71:3288-3292[Abstract]. |
| 25. | Schultheiss, T., Y. Y. Kusov, and V. Gauss-Muller. 1994. Proteinase 3C of hepatitis A virus (HAV) cleaves the HAV polyprotein P2-P3 at all sites including VP1/2A and 2A/2B. Virology 198:275-281[Medline]. |
| 26. | Schultheiss, T., W. Sommergruber, Y. Kusov, and V. Gauss-Muller. 1995. Cleavage specificity of purified recombinant hepatitis A virus 3C proteinase on natural substrates. J. Virol. 69:1727-1733[Abstract]. |
| 27. | Stemmer, W. P. C., and S. K. Morris. 1992. Enzymatic inverse PCR: a restriction site independent, single-fragment method for high-efficiency, site-directed mutagenesis. BioTechniques 13:215-220. |
| 28. |
Taylor, J. W.,
J. Ott, and F. Eckstein.
1985.
The rapid generation of oligonucleotide-directed mutations at high frequency using phosphorothioate modified DNA.
Nucleic Acids Res.
13:8765-8785 |
| 29. | Zhang, H., S.-F. Chao, L.-M. Ping, K. Grace, B. Clarke, and S. M. Lemon. 1995. An infectious cDNA clone of a cytopathic hepatitis A virus: genomic regions associated with rapid replication and cytopathic effect. Virology 212:686-697[Medline]. |
This article has been cited by other articles:
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Copyright © 2009 by the American Society for Microbiology. For an alternate route to Journals.ASM.org, visit: http://intl-journals.asm.org | More Info»