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Journal of Virology, December 2000, p. 11162-11172, Vol. 74, No. 23
0022-538X/00/$04.00+0
Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Epstein-Barr Virus That Lacks Glycoprotein gN Is
Impaired in Assembly and Infection
Cathleen M.
Lake and
Lindsey M.
Hutt-Fletcher*
School of Biological Sciences, University of
Missouri-Kansas City, Kansas City, Missouri 64110
Received 22 May 2000/Accepted 13 July 2000
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ABSTRACT |
The Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) glycoproteins N and M (gN and gM) are
encoded by the BLRF1 and BBRF3 genes. To examine the function of the
EBV gN-gM complex, recombinant virus was constructed in which the BLRF1
gene was interrupted with a neomycin resistance cassette. Recombinant
virus lacked not only gN but also detectable gM. A significant
proportion of the recombinant virus capsids remained associated with
condensed chromatin in the nucleus of virus-producing cells, and
cytoplasmic vesicles containing enveloped virus were scarce. Virus
egress was impaired, and sedimentation analysis revealed that the
majority of the virus that was released lacked a complete envelope. The
small amount of virus that could bind to cells was also impaired in
infectivity at a step following fusion. These data are consistent with
the hypothesis that the predicted 78-amino-acid cytoplasmic tail of gM,
which is highly charged and rich in prolines, interacts with the virion
tegument. It is proposed that this interaction is important both for
association of capsids with cell membrane to assemble and release
enveloped particles and for dissociation of the capsid from the
membrane of the newly infected cell on its way to the cell nucleus. The phenotype of EBV lacking the gN-gM complex is more striking than that
of most alphaherpesviruses lacking the same complex but resembles in
many respects the phenotype of pseudorabies virus lacking glycoproteins gM, gE, and gI. Since EBV does not encode homologs for gE and gI, this
suggests that functions that may have some redundancy in
alphaherpesviruses have been concentrated in fewer proteins in EBV.
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INTRODUCTION |
The envelopes of herpesviruses
include multiple glycoprotein species, some of which are unique to
individual members of the family and others of which appear to have
been conserved either in sequence, structure, or genomic organization,
reflecting a common evolutionary origin. There are two multicomponent
complexes of glycoproteins that fall into this latter category. The
best studied of the two consists of two conserved proteins,
glycoprotein H (gH) and gL that in Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) and human
cytomegalovirus (HCMV) associate with an additional protein with
less-obvious common ancestry. The apparently unique EBV protein is gp42
(34); in HCMV it has been designated gO (24).
This is one complex that appears to have been conserved in function.
Multiple studies have been done on the dependency of gH on gL for
authentic processing, and the gH-gL complex has been implicated in many
herpesviruses as playing a critical role in penetration (10, 15,
18, 20, 29, 36, 45). EBV is no exception in this regard. A
monoclonal antibody to the third member of the complex, gp42
(34), inhibits fusion of virus with the B-cell membrane
(40). It apparently does so by blocking an interaction with
HLA class II which on B cells can function as a coreceptor for virus
entry (33). Antibody to gH likewise inhibits entry of virus
into an epithelial cell on which a distinct but as-yet-unidentified
coreceptor appears to be used (41, 55).
Less information is available concerning the second conserved complex
of herpesvirus glycoproteins. It consists, as far as is currently
known, of only two species, gN and gM. All gN homologs are predicted to
be small type 1 membrane proteins of 84 to 138 amino acids with no
potential N-linked glycosylation sites. Experimentally, some, such as
the 14-kDa pseudorabies virus (PRV) gN (27) and the 15-kDa
EBV gN (30), have been shown to carry O-linked sugars. Others, such as the approximately 8-kDa herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) gN (1, 6), the 9-kDa bovine herpesvirus 1 (BHV-1) gN
(35), and the 7-kDa varicella-zoster virus gN
(50), are not glycosylated. In contrast, all gM homologs are
predicted to be multiple membrane-spanning proteins of 350 to 475 amino
acids, and all except one (17) that have been studied to
date are glycosylated (5, 13, 27, 30, 32, 39, 44, 56). The
EBV gM is expressed as several species of approximately 48, 84, and 113 kDa (30). These either represent oligomers of a single form or result from differential O-linked glycosylation; the predicted sequence of gM includes two potential N-linked glycosylation sites (3), but one is at residue 6 and thus is probably not used.
The association between gN and gM homologs was first conclusively shown
for PRV (26), although previous work with BHV-1 (35) had suggested that gN was more tightly associated with the tegument than many other membrane proteins and had identified a
disulfide-linked partner of 39 kDa, originally proposed to be a
tegument protein but subsequently shown to be gM (56). The EBV gN has been shown to associate with gM (30) and,
although there has been no formal demonstration of the HSV-1 gN homolog interacting with gM it, too, has been described as linked to the tegument by disulfide bonds (1), so its seems likely that
the motif is repeated here as well. It has now perhaps been generally assumed that all gN homologs will be found in association with gM,
although the nature of the association may differ from virus to virus,
just as there are subtle differences in the behaviors of gH and gL. For
example, there is as yet no evidence that the EBV gN-gM homologs are
disulfide linked. Authentic processing of EBV gN is dependent on
coexpression with gM (30), but although incorporation of PRV
gN into the virion is dependent on gM, O-linked sugars are apparently
added normally to PRV gN in its absence (26).
The function of the gN-gM complex is more obscure than that of gH-gL.
Studies of null mutants have provided a mixed picture. The effects of
eliminating either gN or gM vary somewhat between viruses, and
interpretation is complicated by the effect that the loss of one of the
two partners may have on the behavior of the other, an effect which in
most cases has not yet been explored. Much has been made of the fact
that, despite the conservation of the complex throughout the
herpesvirus subfamilies, none of the proteins has been shown to be
essential for replication of any virus. Indeed, in many cases only
minimal effects are seen on growth of virus in vitro. Loss of the VZV
gN results in a slightly smaller plaque size (50); loss of
the PRV gN has a similar phenotype and produces a virus with a two- to
fivefold-lower yield and delayed penetration kinetics (26).
The infectivity of PRV lacking gM is reduced 10- to 50-fold and also
has delayed penetration kinetics (13), although this
particular phenotype may best be ascribed to the accompanying lack of
gN in the virion (26). BHV-1 that lacks gN is unimpaired for
growth in tissue culture (35), HSV that lacks gN is
unimpaired (48), HSV that lacks gM has slightly reduced
yields in tissue culture (4, 38, 39), and the glycoprotein does play a role in cell-cell fusion (10). Loss of the
equine herpesvirus type 1 (EHV-1) gM produces a virus that is 100-fold less infectious, has a 2-fold reduction in plaque size, and has a
slower rate of penetration (43).
Two sets of observations, however, provide complimentary explanations
for the apparent paradox of conservation of nonessential proteins. The
first comes from the observation that those mutant viruses that have
been examined for behavior in vivo, i.e., PRV (12), HSV-1
(39), and EHV-1 (42) that have lost gM, are all
significantly attenuated. The second comes from a recent analysis of a
PRV mutant which lacked three glycoproteins: gM, gE, and gI
(8). This virus, in contrast to virus deleted only for
expression of gM, was significantly impaired in assembly. However,
complementation with gM, without expression of gE or gI, restored
normal maturation. Both of these sets of studies suggest that in some
viruses similar, but subtly different, functions have been assigned to
different glycoproteins. They appear to be redundant under the simplest conditions of growth, but their unique contributions may be revealed either if the redundancy is removed or if the environment is made more
complex. We report here on the phenotype of an EBV recombinant that
lacks gN. The phenotype of this virus is more striking than that of
others that lack only this small component of the gN-gM complex. It
suggests that functions that in other viruses may have been dispersed
among a number of different proteins have in this case been more
concentrated in a few.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Cells.
(i) Akata, a Burkitt lymphoma-derived cell line that
carries and can be induced to make EBV (52) (a gift of John
Sixbey, St. Jude Children's Research Hospital, Memphis, Tenn.), (ii)
EBV-negative Akata cells (a gift of Jeffrey Sample, St. Jude
Children's Research Hospital), (iii) Raji (47), an EBV
genome-positive, nonproducing human B-cell line that expresses CR2, and
(iv) P3HR1Cl5 (22), an EBV-positive human B-cell line that
does not express CR2 (a gift of George Miller, Yale University, New
Haven, Conn.) were grown in RPMI 1640 (Sigma Chemical Co., St. Louis,
Mo.) supplemented with 5% (Raji) or 10% heat-inactivated fetal bovine
serum (Gibco-BRL, Grand Island, N.Y.). AGS cells (American Type Culture
Collection) were grown in Ham's F-12 nutrient mixture (Gibco-BRL)
supplemented with 10% heat-inactivated fetal bovine serum. Human
leukocytes were obtained from heparinized adult peripheral blood by
flotation on lymphocyte separation medium and depleted of T cells by a
double cycle of rosetting with sheep erythrocytes as previously
described (34).
Virus production.
EBV was obtained from Akata cells which
were resuspended at a concentration of 2 × 106 per ml
and induced with 100 µg of anti-human immunoglobulin G per ml for 5 days. EBV to be used for cell infection was harvested from clarified
culture medium that had been passed through a 0.8-µm (pore-size) filter.
Antibodies.
Monoclonal antibody 72A1 to gp350
(23) was obtained from spent culture medium of hybridoma
cells grown in RPMI 1640 supplemented with 20% heat-inactivated fetal
bovine serum. Three anti-peptide antibodies were made to synthetic
peptides corresponding, respectively, to residues 125 to 137 of gp25
(anti-gL) (57), to residues 44 to 69 of the predicted BLRF1
open reading frame (ORF) (anti-gN), and to residues 346 to 364 of the
BBRF3 ORF (anti-gM) (30). All antibodies were purified by
chromatography on protein A (Sigma) coupled to Affigel-15 (Bio-Rad,
Richmond, Calif.).
Radiolabeling and immunoprecipitation.
EBV proteins were
labeled biosynthetically with [3H]glucosamine (20 Ci/mmol; Amersham Corp., Arlington Heights, Ill.) for 20 h at
6 h after induction with anti-human immunoglobulin G as previously described (57). Labeled cells were solubilized in
radioimmunoprecipitation buffer (50 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.2; 0.15 M NaCl;
1% sodium deoxycholate; 0.1% sodium dodecyl sulfate [SDS]; 0.1 mM
phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride; 100 U of aprotinin per ml) and
immunoprecipitated with antibody and protein A-Sepharose CL4B (Sigma).
Immunoprecipitated proteins were washed, dissociated by heating to
37°C for 30 min in sample buffer containing 2-mercaptoethanol, and
analyzed by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE) in 9 to 18%
acrylamide cross-linked with 0.28%
N,N'-diallyltartardiamide, followed by fluorography.
Derivation of virus in which the BLRF1 ORF is disrupted.
Dextran-purified virus harvested from the spent medium of 8 × 109 Akata cells was digested with proteinase K, and virion
DNA was purified three times by centrifugation in cesium chloride. DNA that sedimented at a density of 1.718 g/ml of cesium was digested with
EcoRI. The 8.5-kb EcoRI G fragment which begins
at bp 82920 of the B95-8 sequence and ends at approximately bp 91421 and includes the BLRF1 ORF (53) was cloned into the multiple
cloning site of pTA.108 Strider (a gift of Joan Stader, University of
Missouri-Kansas City). A 1.5-kb XmnI/HincII
fragment containing the neomycin resistance (Neor) gene
under control of the simian virus 40 promoter was digested from pcDNA3
(Invitrogen, San Diego, Calif.), blunt ended and cloned into the BLRF1
ORF (bp 88547 to 88852) which had been opened up at a unique
SapI site 51 bp from the initiation codon and blunt ended.
The 8.5-kb EcoRI G fragment, now 10 kb by virtue of the insertion of the Neor gene, was purified and used to
transfect Akata cells using DEAE-dextran (2). Twenty million
cells were incubated with 5 µg of DNA and 0.3 mg of dextran for 90 min at 37°C and then washed, resuspended in RPMI 1640 supplemented
with 10% heat-inactivated fetal bovine serum (Gibco-BRL) at a
concentration of 106 cells/ml, and cultured for 2 days.
Cells were then plated at 104 cells per well in 96-well
tissue culture plates in medium containing 500 µg of active G418
(Gibco-BRL) per ml and fed weekly with fresh drug-containing medium.
Resistant clones began to emerge after approximately 3 weeks.
Drug-resistant Akata cells that were shown by Southern blotting to
contain wild-type episomes and episomes that had undergone homologous
recombination with the Neor gene-containing fragment were
induced with anti-immunoglobulin. After 5 days, 150 µl of spent
culture medium, diluted 1/20, was used to infect 2.5 × 106 EBV-negative Akata cells. After two further days in
culture, the cells were plated in 96-well plates at 104
cells per well in medium containing 500 µg of active G418 per ml.
Resistant clones began to emerge after approximately 3 weeks.
Southern blotting.
Cells were digested overnight at 56°C
with proteinase K (1 mg/ml in 100 mM NaCl, 10 mM Tris-HCl [pH 8.0],
25 mM EDTA, and 0.5% SDS), and DNA was purified by phenol-chloroform
extraction and ethanol precipitation. Purified DNA was digested
overnight with HindIII and separated by agarose gel
electrophoresis in 0.7% agarose. Separated DNA was transferred to a
nylon membrane (Magnacharge) by capillary action, cross-linked, and
hybridized either with the 8.5-kb EcoRI G fragment or with
the XmnI/HincII fragment of pcDNA3 containing the
Neor gene. Both probes were labeled with 32P.
Slot blot assays.
The amount of EBV DNA in cells or virion
particles was measured by hybridization with the BamHI W
fragment of EBV DNA labeled with 32P as previously
described (54) and quantified by scanning with a Molecular
Dynamics Storm PhosphorImager.
Binding of [3H]thymidine-labeled virus.
Two
hundred million Akata cells containing wild-type or recombinant virus
were induced with goat anti-human immunoglobulin in 20 ml of medium.
After 4 h, 600 µCi of [3H]thymidine (20 to 30 Ci/mmol; Amersham) was added, and the volume of medium was increased to
100 ml. After 3 days of incubation, virus was harvested from the
culture supernatant by centrifugation and resuspended in 800 µl of
fresh medium. EBV receptor-positive Raji and EBV receptor-negative
P3HR1Cl5 cells were fixed in ice-cold 0.1% paraformaldehyde, and the
ability of the radiolabeled virus to bind to the cells in the presence
or absence of antibody 72A1 to gp350 was determined as previously
described (40).
Binding of unlabeled virus.
Two million EBV-negative Akata
cells were incubated with virus for 2 h on ice, after which cells
were washed three times with medium. Cells were pelleted at
325 × g for 4 min and resuspended in 40 µl of buffer
containing 90 mM Tris-borate, 2 mM EDTA, 20% Ficoll 400, and 0.01%
bromophenol blue. Cells were then transferred to the wells of a
Gardella gel (19) for analysis of the amount of virion DNA
bound to cells. Gels were run as described earlier (25),
depurinated, alkalinized, and neutralized before transfer to a Nytran
membrane (Schleicher & Schuell, Inc., Keene, N.H.). EBV DNA was
visualized by probing with a BamHI W fragment of EBV DNA
labeled with 32P as described above.
Assays of infection of B cells.
One million EBV-negative
Akata cells were incubated with virus for 2 h on ice, after which
the excess virus was removed, the volume was brought to 6 ml, and the
cells were incubated at 37°C. Five days later the cells were
harvested and analyzed for expression of EBNA1 by Western blotting. In
addition, six hundred thousand T-cell-depleted peripheral blood
leukocytes were incubated for 2 h at 37°C with 240 µl of
virus, plated in quintuplicate at 105 cells per well in
96-well tissue culture plates, and reincubated for 4 weeks, at which
time wells were examined for the presence of transforming foci.
Polyethylene glycol-mediated infection.
Samples of 5 × 106 T-cell-depleted peripheral blood leukocytes were
incubated for 1 h on ice with wild-type or recombinant virus or
growth medium. Cells were washed once and gently resuspended in 1 ml of
35% polyethylene glycol 1500 (Boehringer Mannheim) or serum-free
medium for 5 min. Then, 10 ml of medium was added, and the cells were
centrifuged at 400 × g, resuspended in fresh growth
medium, and incubated for 14 days before harvesting and Western blot analysis.
Western blotting.
Proteins were electrophoresed in
polyacrylamide and then electrically transferred onto nitrocellulose
membranes (0.45-µm pore size; Schleicher & Schuell) at 125 mA for
6 h. The transferred sheets were reacted overnight with blocking
buffer (10 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.2; 0.15 M NaCl; 5% skim milk; 0.05%
sodium azide) containing a 1/500 dilution of EBNA1-positive human
serum. They were then washed five times with wash buffer (10 mM
Tris-HCl, pH 7.2; 0.15% NaCl; 0.3% Tween 20) for 10 min each time.
The washed sheets were reacted with alkaline phosphatase-conjugated
goat anti-human antibodies (HyClone) for 2.5 h, and the bound
anti-human antibodies were detected by reacting with substrate
5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolylphosphate (BCIP) and Nitro Blue Tetrazolium (Sigma).
Sedimentation analysis of virus.
A 24 to 42% continuous
gradient of Nycodenz (Sigma) in 1 mM potassium phosphate containing
0.01% bacitracin was made by layering 1 ml of 42, 40, 38, 36, 34, 32, 30, 28, 26, and 24% Nycodenz in a centrifuge tube and allowing the
steps to diffuse overnight at 4°C. Then, 500 µl of virus was
layered on top of the gradient and centrifuged in a Beckman SW41 Ti
rotor at 70,000 × g for 2 h at 4°C. Fractions
(500 µl) were collected from the top. The refractive index was
measured with 25 µl; 25 µl was then digested with 5 U of DNase I
and analyzed by slot blot for the presence of encapsidated virus DNA.
The remaining volume was dialyzed against phosphate-buffered saline,
and 300 µl of each dialysate was bound to 2 × 106
paraformaldehyde-fixed EBV-negative Akata cells. Binding was measured
by Gardella gel analysis as described above.
Electron microscopy.
Ten million Akata cells carrying
wild-type or recombinant virus were induced with anti-immunoglobulin
for 48 h, pelleted at 350 × g, and washed with
cacodylate buffer (0.15 M sodium cacodylate, 2 mM calcium chloride) at
4°C. Cells were fixed overnight at 4°C in cacodylate buffer
containing 4% glutaraldehyde, washed three times in buffer alone,
transferred to a microcentrifuge tube, pelleted at 250 × g, and resuspended in 50 µl of cacodylate buffer containing 10%
gelatin that had been prewarmed to 37°C. Cells were pelleted at
250 × g for 2 min and put on ice to harden the gelatin. Each gelatin plug was cut with a razor blade into 1-mm cubes
which were rinsed twice in phosphate buffer (100 mM potassium phosphate, 10 mM magnesium chloride; pH 6.0), postfixed for 1 h
with 1% osmium tetroxide, rinsed twice in buffer, rinsed twice in
water, dehydrated, and embedded in Araldite for sectioning.
Complementation of mutant.
The BLRF1 ORF was cloned into the
EcoRV site in the multiple cloning region of the pIRESpuro
vector (Clontech Laboratories, Inc., Palo Alto, Calif.). The resulting
plasmid, pIRES-gN-Puro was linearized with SspI and
transfected into the gastric carcinoma cell line AGS. After 48 h
the cells were trypsinized and then plated in 96-well plates in medium
containing 0.2 µg of puromycin (Clontech) per ml. Drug-resistant
colonies were examined for expression of gN by indirect
immunofluorescence. Those in which at least 10% of the cells were
positive were infected with a mixture of recombinant and wild-type
viruses that had been concentrated 50-fold. After 48 h, the cells
were trypsinized and plated in 96-well plates in medium containing both
0.2 µg of puromycin per ml and 500 µg of active G418 per ml.
Colonies resistant to both drugs were screened by Southern blot for
presence of pure recombinant virus lacking gN, for expression of gN
from pIRES-gN-Puro, and for the efficiency of induction of the virus
lytic cycle after treatment with 30 ng of
12-o-~tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate per ml and 2.5 mM sodium butyrate.
 |
RESULTS |
Generation of recombinant EBV with a selectable marker in the BLRF1
ORF.
A 10-kb fragment of virus DNA that encompassed the BLRF1 ORF
and contained the Neor gene 51 bp from its 5' end was
transfected into Akata cells carrying EBV episomes and cells in which
recombination had occurred were obtained by selection in the presence
of G418. To determine whether illegitimate or homologous recombination
had occurred in each, DNA was extracted, digested with
HindIII, and probed with the 8.5-kb EcoRI G
fragment that corresponded to the fragment used for transfection except
that it lacked the insertion of the Neor gene. This probe
was predicted to visualize two fragments of 5,155 and 4,585 bp in cells
harboring wild-type EBV episomes and an additional fragment of 6103 bp
in cells harboring both wild-type and recombinant episomes (Fig.
1A). Three independently isolated clones
obtained from separate transfections were obtained with patterns
indicative of homologous recombination in one or more episomes. To
derive cells that contained only recombinant episomes in the absence of
wild-type episomes, cells from each were induced with
anti-immunoglobulin antibody, and virus harvested from the spent
culture medium was used to infect EBV-negative Akata cells. Drug-resistant clones that grew out after infection with virus from
each parental clone were tested for the ability to be induced to make
virus and for the presence of recombinant but not wild-type episomes.
One inducible clone from each of two independently isolated parents was
selected for further study. Each contained only recombinant episomes,
as judged by Southern blotting and probing with the EcoRI
fragment. Probing with the XmnI/HincII fragment
of pcDNA3 containing the Neor gene confirmed that the
resistance gene was inserted at only one site in the extracted DNA (for
an example, see Fig. 1B). The phenotype of one recombinant is described
in detail below.

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FIG. 1.
(A) Diagram of the positions of the EcoRI and
HindIII sites, numbered according to the B95-8 sequence,
surrounding the EcoRI G fragment of Akata DNA targeted for
homologous recombination. The boxes above indicate the position of the
EcoRI G fragment used as a probe and the insertion of the
Neor gene at bp 88598. Shown below are the sizes of the
fragments expected from DNA from cells harboring wild-type episomes, a
mixture of wild-type and recombinant episomes, or pure recombinant
episomes after digestion with HindIII and probing with
the EcoRI G fragment. (B) Southern blot analysis of DNA
extracted from Akata cells harboring wild-type episomes (Wt), a
parental clone of Akata cells harboring a mixture of wild-type and
recombinant episomes (Wt+Rc), or a clone derived from the parental
clone that contains only recombinant episomes (Rc). DNA was digested
with HindIII, and the two identical halves of the
membrane were cut apart and probed either with the EcoRI G
fragment of EBV or the XmnI/HincII
Neor fragment as indicated. The sizes are indicated in
kilobases by arrows.
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Lack of expression of gN and mature gM in cells harboring
recombinant virus.
To confirm that expression of gN had been lost
as a result of insertion of the Neor gene into the BLRF1
ORF, cells were induced with anti-immunoglobulin antibody, labeled with
[3H]glucosamine, and immunoprecipitated with anti-gN,
anti-gM, and anti-gL, which immunoprecipitates the three components of
the EBV gH-gL complex: gp85, gp42, and gp25. Anti-gN immunoprecipitated the gN-gM complex from cells harboring wild-type episomes and, as
previously shown (30), anti-gM immunoprecipitated gM without detectable gN (Fig. 2). As expected, the
gH-gL complex, but not gN, was immunoprecipitated from cells harboring
only recombinant episomes. More surprising was the finding that no
detectable gM was present in these cells either, despite the fact that
the sequence of the gM ORF in the recombinant virus (data not shown)
was confirmed to be identical to the wild-type Akata virus sequence.
The identical phenotype was seen for the second independently isolated
recombinant, confirming that it was unlikely to represent a second site
mutation. The failure to detect gM might reflect a very rapid turnover
of gM in the absence of its partner or a failure of the protein to be
glycosylated. It does, however, argue that the virus that lacks gN also
lacks mature gM.

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FIG. 2.
Electrophoretic analysis in 9 to 18% polyacrylamide of
proteins immunoprecipitated from Akata cells harboring wild-type or
recombinant episomes. The cells were induced with anti-immunoglobulin
antibody and labeled with [3H]glucosamine. Proteins were
immunoprecipitated by anti-gL ( gL), which immunoprecipitates the EBV
gH-gL complex of gH (85 kDa), gL (25 kDa), and gp42, by anti-gN
( gN), which immunoprecipitates the 15-kDa gN and the three 113-, 84-, and 48-kDa species of gM, by anti-gM ( M), and by preimmune
antibody (PB). The sizes are indicated on the right in kilodaltons.
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Recombinant virus exits cells less efficiently than does wild-type
virus.
To examine whether recombinant virus could exit cells
normally, a slot blot assay was used to assess the total amount of
virus-specific DNA associated with induced cells and the
DNase-resistant, encapsidated DNA that could be pelleted from spent
culture medium after it had been filtered through a 0.8-µm-pore-size
filter to remove the cells. A comparison of the ratios of the two for
recombinant and wild-type viruses showed that, although they varied
from induction to induction, cells harboring recombinant virus
consistently released less encapsidated virion DNA than did those
harboring wild-type virus (Table 1). This
contrasts with three other recombinant viruses in which no such
consistent reduction was seen (7, 41, 54).
Recombinant virus associates with electron-dense material in the
nucleus.
The impairment in egress of recombinant virus stimulated
an analysis of virus-producing cells by electron microscopy. Cells making wild-type virus contained the expected condensed and marginated chromatin and capsids in various stages of maturation in the nucleus (Fig. 3). Virus particles could also be
seen in vesicles in the cytoplasm, and enveloped virus was visible
outside the cell. In contrast, in cells making virus that lacks gN
there was a marked accumulation of capsids within the condensed
chromatin itself (Fig. 4). Although
clearly not all particles were within chromatin, a majority were.
Subjectively few viruses were seen in vesicles in the cytoplasm, and
the number of cells with extracellular virus was at too low a frequency
to detect.

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FIG. 3.
Electron micrographs of induced Akata cells producing
wild-type virus showing virus in the nucleus (A), in the cytoplasm (B
and C), and extracellular virus (D). The arrows indicate enveloped
virus and enveloped virus in vesicles in the cytoplasm.
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FIG. 4.
Electron micrographs of induced Akata cells producing
recombinant virus lacking gN showing virus associated with chromatin in
the nucleus (A to C) or in the cytoplasm (D). The arrows in panels A to
C indicate virus in the condensed chromatin in the nucleus. The arrows
in panel D indicate nonenveloped virus in the cytoplasm.
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Recombinant virus binds to B cells with the same specificity as the
wild-type virus, but less encapsidated DNA attaches to
receptor-positive cells.
To determine whether the recombinant
virus that did egress from the cells was able to bind to
receptor-positive cells with the same specificity as wild-type virus,
virus was labeled intrinsically with [3H]thymidine, and
its ability to bind to receptor-negative P3HR1Cl5 cells or
receptor-positive Raji cells in the presence or absence of antibody to
gp350 was evaluated. The amount of acid-precipitable radioactivity
bound to the cells could be reduced by antibody to an amount similar to
that associated with receptor-negative cells, indicating that its
specificity of binding had not been altered. The binding of
[3H]thymidine-labeled recombinant or wild-type virus to
receptor-positive and -negative cells was as follows. The
acid-precipitable radioactivity (in counts per minute) bound to Raji
cells (i.e., receptor-positive cells) was 1,488 cpm in the absence of
antibody and 460 cpm in the presence of antibody 72A1. Radioactivity
bound to P3HR1Cl5 cells (i.e., receptor-negative cells) was 362 cpm.
This is consistent with the behavior of wild-type virus and other
recombinant viruses in which gp350 is not disrupted (7, 40,
54). However, the amount of encapsidated virion DNA that bound to
receptor-positive cells was significantly reduced for recombinant virus
as judged by Gardella gel analysis. The amount of recombinant and
wild-type virion DNA in virus stocks was equilibrated, and equal
amounts of each were incubated with EBV-negative Akata cells on ice.
Excess virus was removed by washing, and the cells were lysed and
digested in the wells of a Gardella gel. Linear virion DNA was run into the gel, Southern blotted, and probed. This protocol allowed analysis of far more cells than could be looked at on a cell blot. The signal
could be quantitated by scanning, and scans of exposures within the
linear range showed that for different virus preparations the amount of
recombinant viral DNA that bound to cells was 10- to 30-fold lower than
with wild type. A representative experiment is shown in Fig.
5 in which the identical phenotype is
shown by the second independently isolated recombinant virus.

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FIG. 5.
Southern blot of Gardella gel analysis of the amount of
virion DNA that bound to EBV-negative Akata cells. The amounts of
virion DNA in wild-type (Wt) or one of two independently isolated
recombinant viruses (Rc1 and Rc2) that were added were equilibrated.
Scanning of exposures of Southern blots within the linear range
indicated that at least 10-fold more of the wild type than the
recombinant virion DNA bound to cells.
|
|
That the specificity of virus binding was unaltered suggested either
that the recombinant virus preparations contained a large
number of
empty capsids that competed for binding or that a majority
of the virus
was damaged in some way. To test the first possibility,
stocks of
recombinant and wild-type viruses that contained the
same amounts of
virion DNA were added singly or as mixtures to
EBV-negative Akata
cells, and the amounts of DNA that bound were
again measured by
Gardella gel analysis. Scanning of blots at
exposures within the linear
range indicated that the amount of
virion DNA bound in the mixtures was
the same as would have been
expected from simple addition of each virus
(Fig.
6). Thus, although
less recombinant
virus bound to cells there was no evidence that
this was because the
recombinant stocks contained empty virions
that could compete for
binding.

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|
FIG. 6.
Southern blot of Gardella gel analyses of the amounts of
wild-type (Wt) and recombinant viruses (Rc) that bound to EBV-negative
Akata cells alone or in combination. The starting concentration of each
virus stock was equilibrated for virus DNA content. Scanning of the
Southern blot at exposures within the linear range indicated that the
amount of virion DNA bound in the mixtures of the different viruses was
in each case what would have been expected from a simple addition of
each virus. The two panels represent duplicate analyses.
|
|
To test the second possibility, i.e., that virus was damaged in some
way, equal amounts of recombinant and wild-type viruses,
as judged by
virion DNA content, were sedimented through a 24
to 42% Nycodenz
gradient. Fractions were collected, and aliquots
of each were analyzed
by slot blot to measure viral DNA content
and by Gardella gel analysis
to measure their ability to bind
to EBV-negative Akata cells. The
majority of wild-type virus measured
both in terms of DNA content and
in terms of ability to bind to
cells was found in the first 10 fractions at the top of the gradient
(Fig.
7A) at a density consistent with that
previously reported
(
16). In contrast, the majority of
recombinant virus, measured
by the same criteria, was present in
fractions 18 through 21 (Fig.
7B), a finding consistent with previous
observations of de-enveloped
or partially damaged enveloped virions
sedimenting at this higher
density (
51). Also, a much
smaller proportion of the recombinant
virus was able to bind to cells,
although expansion of the scale
of Fig.
7B (Fig.
7C) demonstrates the
presence of a small amount
of virus sedimenting in fractions 5 and 10 that was able to bind
to cells. Both observations were consistent with
the release of
only a very small amount of completely enveloped
recombinant virus.
The viability of cells producing recombinant virus
was consistently
about 50% less than those making wild-type virus at
72 h after
induction, even though similar numbers of cells were
induced.
This suggested that improperly enveloped particles might be
being
released from the recombinant cells as a result of cell death
and
lysis.

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FIG. 7.
Sedimentation profiles in 24 to 42% Nycodenz of
wild-type virus (A) and recombinant virus (B). The scale of the first
15 fractions of panel B are enlarged in panel C. Samples of each
fraction were measured by slot blot analysis for the relative amounts
of virion DNA and by Gardella gel analysis for the relative amounts of
virion DNA that could bind to EBV-negative Akata cells. Equal amounts
of virion DNA were loaded for each virus. Variables: , refractive
index; , virion DNA; , virus binding.
|
|
Recombinant virus is reduced in infectivity for B cells, but this
loss cannot be solely attributed to reduced binding.
The ability
of two independently isolated recombinant viruses to transform resting
B cells was reduced equally by 1,000-fold (Table
2), although the binding of virus had
been reduced by a factor of <100-fold (Fig. 5). This suggested that
recombinant virus was also defective in a step postbinding. To confirm
this, the amounts of wild-type and recombinant viruses added to
EBV-negative Akata cells were adjusted so that the infectivity of equal
amounts of bound virus could be compared. Even when equal or slightly more recombinant virion DNA than wild type was bound to cells, infectivity of the recombinant remained significantly reduced (Fig.
8). To determine whether this represented
a block in virus cell fusion, wild-type virus, a recombinant virus that
lacks gp42 and is known to be deficient in fusion, and the gN-minus
virus were bound to normal B cells. Cells and bound virus were then treated with the exogenous fusogen polyethylene glycol. The infectivity of virus lacking gp42 was restored at a low level, and polyethylene glycol treatment even increased the infectivity of wild-type virus in
the experiment shown. Polyethylene glycol can also rescue a virus that
is lacking gH (41). In repeated attempts, however, it was
never possible to increase the infectivity of the small amount of virus
lacking gN that bound to cells (Fig. 9).
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|
TABLE 2.
Comparison of the ability of wild-type and two
independently isolated recombinant viruses to transform
T-cell-depleted peripheral blood leukocytes
|
|

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FIG. 8.
Comparison of the infectivity of wild-type (Wt) and
recombinant (Rc) viruses after attachment of equal amounts of virion
DNA. (Upper panel) Southern blot of Gardella gel analysis, in
duplicate, of amounts of virion DNA bound to EBV-negative Akata cells
after addition of different dilutions of wild-type and recombinant
viruses. (Lower panel) Infectivity of the same dilutions of virus
measured by Western blot analysis for the EBV latent protein EBNA1.
|
|

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FIG. 9.
Western blot analysis for EBNA1 expression in
T-cell-depleted human mononuclear cells infected in the absence or
presence of polyethylene glycol (PEG) with wild-type Akata virus (Wt),
recombinant virus lacking gN (Rc/gN), or recombinant virus lacking gp42
(Rc/gp42).
|
|
Complementation of recombinant virus by expression of gN in
trans.
Repeated attempts to establish an Akata cell line that
constitutively expressed gN from an integrated plasmid were
unsuccessful. To confirm that the phenotype of the virus that lacked gN
could be attributed to interruption of the BLRF1 ORF, recombinant virus was rescued either into the gastric carcinoma cell line AGS or into an
AGS-derived cell line in which approximately 10% of cells expressed gN
from the integrated plasmid pIRES-gN-Puro. Cells that were resistant to
treatment with both puromycin and G418 were screened for the ability to
be induced to make virus. Virus was obtained from a clone in which
approximately 15% of cells could be induced to enter the lytic cycle.
Virus from the parental AGS line or from the clone that expressed gN
were adjusted for DNA content and examined for the ability to bind to
and infect EBV-negative Akata cells. Both binding and infectivity of
the partially complemented virus were increased (Fig.
10).

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FIG. 10.
Binding and infectivity of equal amounts of recombinant
viruses that had been produced from AGS cells (Rc) or from AGS
expressing gN from an integrated plasmid (Complemented Rc). (Upper
panel) Southern blot of Gardella gel analysis of amounts of dilutions
of virion DNA bound to EBV-negative Akata cells. (Lower panel)
Infectivity of dilutions of virus measured by Western blot analysis for
the EBV latent protein EBNA1.
|
|
 |
DISCUSSION |
Although glycoproteins gN and gM are highly conserved among the
herpesviruses, they have generally been considered to be nonessential proteins whose loss has a relatively small effect on replication in
vitro. The results presented here demonstrate a very different phenotype for EBV, in which loss of gN sequences also leads to loss of
the mature form of gM. EBV lacking the gN-gM complex is defective in
several steps in the normal replication cycle (Fig. 11). Wild-type virus is thought to bud
through the inner nuclear membrane and either follow the default
exocytic pathway to the cell surface or perhaps undergo a second step
of de-envelopment and re-envelopment (21). Enveloped
particles that are released attach to a new cell and fuse with the cell
membrane, and the capsid moves to the nucleus. Replication of the
recombinant virus differed from this model in several respects. First,
a significant proportion of the recombinant virus remained associated
with condensed chromatin in the nucleus of the virus-producing cell.
Although some enveloped virus could be detected in the cytoplasm, the
vesicles containing enveloped particles that could be readily seen in
cells producing wild-type virus were not found. Second, enveloped virus was not released in sufficient quantity to be visualized at the cell
surface. This was despite the fact that only twofold differences were
seen in the amount of encapsidated virion DNA released from cells. It
was, however, consistent with the sedimentation analysis that indicated
that much of the virus that was released lacked a complete envelope and
also with the failure of much of the released virus to bind to cells.
The rapid decrease in the viability of cells producing recombinant
virus suggested that these incompletely enveloped particles might be
released by premature cell lysis. Finally, the small amount of
enveloped virus that could bind to cells was defective in a step
following fusion or penetration that, at least speculatively, might
result from impaired movement of virus from the cell surface to the
nucleus to establish a new infection.

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FIG. 11.
Comparison of replication of wild-type virus and virus
lacking the gN-gM complex. (A) Wild-type virus. Wild-type virus buds
through the inner nuclear membrane and either follows the default
exocytic pathway to the cell surface or undergoes a second step of
de-envelopment and re-envelopment. Enveloped particles bind to a new
cell and fuse with the cell membrane, and the capsid moves away from
the membrane to the nucleus. (B) Virus lacking the gN-gM complex. Many
gN-null capsids associate with condensed chromatin. A few appear as
enveloped particles in vesicles, and a significant amount of the virus
is released without an intact envelope. Virus that remains able to bind
to new cells is impaired in infectivity at a step following fusion,
perhaps involving movement of capsids away from the cell membrane to
the nucleus.
|
|
The most obvious potential common denominator in this apparently
diverse series of defects is the interaction of a partially or
completely tegumented capsid with its envelope. The association of
capsids with condensed chromatin is consistent with a failure to
associate correctly with the inner nuclear membrane. This in turn would
lead to diminished yields of vesicles containing enveloped virus in the
cytoplasm. If a de-envelopment and re-envelopment step occurs after
exit from the nucleus, the effect might be compounded to produce a
significantly reduced yield of infectious extracellular virus. Movement
of the capsid away from the membrane of a newly infected cell with
which virus has fused requires a dissociation of capsid and envelope.
This, intuitively, must involve an alteration in behavior of some of
the same proteins as are involved in association and assembly.
gN is a very small protein with a predicted cytoplasmic tail of only 9 amino acids (3). In contrast, gM, which is predicted to be a
protein that spans the membrane multiple times, has a potential
cytoplasmic tail of 78 amino acids which is highly charged and rich in
prolines. The potential for an interaction between tegument proteins
would thus appear to be greater for EBV gM than for gN. In this respect
the recent findings concerning the role of PRV gM in virion maturation
may be pertinent, if not exactly parallel. Although deletion of PRV gM
alone had only a relatively small impact on replication
(13), the loss of gM, gE, and gI resulted in virus that was
impaired in morphogenesis at a stage before envelopment (8).
The contribution of gM was suggested to be in directing tegumented
capsids to the budding site for secondary envelopment; the loss of the
cytoplasmic tail of gE, which contributes to the phenotype, was thought
to play a subordinate role in the presence of gM (9). Loss
of the PRV gN produced a virus that was impaired in penetration but had
no effect on morphogenesis (26). EBV contains no gE or gI
homologs and replicates primarily in lymphocytes that do not grow
contiguously. The functions that are to some extent shared between gE
and gM in PRV may then be entirely carried out by gM in EBV.
The most important caveat to this interpretation is, of course, that
the recombinant under study here is not genetically a gM-null virus. In
fact, the failure to detect gM was a surprise in that previous
expression of gM from a T7 promoter in the absence of gN had produced a
protein that was indistinguishable from the wild-type form made in
virus-producing cells (30). Since gM is produced at levels
that, at least with our present reagents, we can only detect with a
glucosamine label, this could mean either that the protein is not fully
processed or that it is turned over at a very rapid rate. However,
since the levels of expression of gM under control of a T7 promoter are
likely to be much higher than from its endogenous viral promoter, we
currently favor the latter hypothesis which suggests that the loss of
gN, at least in the context of additional virus proteins with which gM
might interact, leads to its destabilization. Derivation of a
recombinant virus in which the BBRF3 ORF that encodes gM has been
disrupted is clearly a priority, as is a search for potential
interactive proteins.
Loss of the gN-gM complex, although it reduces virus infectivity
considerably, is not lethal. This implies that there is cooperativity or redundancy between the complex and other EBV membrane proteins. gB
may be one such protein, since a recombinant virus lacking gB has been
shown to assemble neither nucleocapsids nor enveloped particles
(31). EBV also expresses a glycoprotein encoded by the BFRF1
gene, which is a homolog of HSV UL34 (14). HSV
mutants that fail to express the UL34 protein make DNA
containing capsids but little enveloped virus (49). At least
three other EBV glycoproteins, (i) gp78, the product of the BILF2 ORF
(37), (ii) gp60, the product of the BILF1 ORF (W. J. Kenyon and L. M. Hutt-Fletcher, unpublished data), and (iii) the
unknown product of the BMRF2 ORF (46) are all potential
players since none has yet been ascribed a function. Derivation of EBV
mutants by homologous recombination and selection is extremely
labor-intensive and time-consuming. The availability of newer
technologies (11), which may make the process much less
cumbersome, will hopefully facilitate identification of all the
molecules involved in the critical processes of assembly and
disassembly of the virion.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
This research was supported by Public Health Service grant
AI20662 from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases.
We thank Brian Hatch of the Electron Microscopy Core of the School of
Biological Sciences, University of Missouri-Kansas City, for expert
technical assistance.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: School of
Biological Sciences, University of Missouri-Kansas City, 5007 Rockhill
Rd., Kansas City, MO 64110. Phone: (816) 235-2575. Fax: (816) 235-5595. E-mail: huttfletcher{at}umkc.edu.
 |
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Journal of Virology, December 2000, p. 11162-11172, Vol. 74, No. 23
0022-538X/00/$04.00+0
Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
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