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Journal of Virology, May 2000, p. 4004-4016, Vol. 74, No. 9
0022-538X/00/$04.00+0
Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Role of the Cytoplasmic Tail of Pseudorabies Virus
Glycoprotein E in Virion Formation
Alexandra R.
Brack,1
Barbara G.
Klupp,1
Harald
Granzow,2
Rebecca
Tirabassi,3
Lynn W.
Enquist,3 and
Thomas
C.
Mettenleiter1,*
Institutes of Molecular
Biology1 and
Infectology,2
Friedrich-Loeffler-Institutes, Federal Research Centre for Virus
Diseases of Animals, D-17498 Insel Riems, Germany, and
Department of Molecular Biology, Princeton University,
Princeton, New Jersey 085443
Received 7 December 1999/Accepted 7 February 2000
 |
ABSTRACT |
Glycoproteins M (gM), E (gE), and I (gI) of pseudorabies virus
(PrV) are required for efficient formation of mature virions. The
simultaneous absence of gM and the gE/gI complex results in severe
deficiencies in virion morphogenesis and cell-to-cell spread, leading
to drastically decreased virus titers and a small-plaque phenotype (A. Brack, J. Dijkstra, H. Granzow, B. G. Klupp, and T. C. Mettenleiter, J. Virol. 73:5364-5372, 1999). Serial passaging in
noncomplementing cells of a virus mutant unable to express gM, gE, and
gI resulted in a reversion of the small-plaque phenotype and
restoration of infectious virus formation to the level of a
gM
mutant. Genetic analyses showed that reversion of the
phenotype was accompanied by a genomic rearrangement which led to the
fusion of a portion of the gE gene encoding the cytoplasmic domain to the 3' end of the glycoprotein D gene, resulting in expression of a
chimeric gD-gE protein. Since this indicated that the intracytoplasmic domain of gE was responsible for the observed phenotypic alterations, the UL10 (gM) gene was deleted in a PrV mutant, PrV-107, which specifically lacked the cytoplasmic tail of gE. Regarding one-step growth, plaque size, and virion formation as observed under the electron microscope, the mutant lacking gM and the gE cytoplasmic tail
proved to be very similar to the gE/I/M triple mutant. Thus, our data
indicate that it is the cytoplasmic tail of gE which is responsible for
the observed phenotypic effects in conjunction with deletion of gM. We
hypothesize that the cytoplasmic domain of gE specifically interacts
with components of the capsid and/or tegument, leading to efficient
secondary envelopment of intracytoplasmic capsids.
 |
INTRODUCTION |
Herpes virions consist of four
morphologically differentiable structures. The nucleoprotein core
contains the linear double-stranded genomic DNA associated with
proteins which is contained within an icosahedral capsid consisting of
162 capsomers. Capsids are assembled and DNA is packaged in the nucleus
of infected cells. During virion formation, a proteinaceous layer of
electron-dense material, designated the tegument, is added to capsids,
which, in turn, is enclosed in a lipid bilayer envelope containing
virus-encoded (glyco)proteins (35, 47). How and where herpes
virions gain the tegument and final envelope is still a matter of
debate. It has been proposed for herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1)
that intranuclear capsids bud through the inner nuclear membrane and retain this first envelope during passage through the endoplasmic reticulum and the secretory pathway (7, 24). On the other hand, for the alphaherpesviruses varicella-zoster virus (19, 59) and pseudorabies virus (PrV) (21, 57) and for the
betaherpesvirus human cytomegalovirus (46), it is proposed
that capsids which acquired a primary envelope by budding through the
inner nuclear membrane subsequently fuse with the outer nuclear
membrane, leading to release of capsids into the cytoplasm. The final
envelope containing mature glycoproteins is then acquired by budding of
intracytoplasmic capsids into vesicles of the trans-Golgi
network. This model is based on data obtained from electron microscopic
or confocal laser scan analysis, in part after treatment of infected
cells with drugs such as brefeldin A. Recently, elegant mutational
analysis uncovered results which favor this de-/reenvelopment model for HSV-1 also (6, 58).
In the past, we identified several gene products of PrV which play a
role in virion morphogenesis. In the absence of the UL3.5 protein,
capsids are detected adjacent to vesicles but budding does not occur
(18). Lack of the UL20 gene product results in accumulation
of enveloped virions within huge vesicles (17). Deletion of
the gK (UL53) gene led to release of enveloped virions, which, however,
appear to immediately fuse with the cell they left (28). Any
one of these gene products is required for virus replication, and
respective viral mutants could only be obtained and propagated on
trans-complementing cell lines. Recently, we described
another egress phenotype after deletion of glycoproteins gM, gE, and gI
from PrV (4). Glycoproteins gE and gI form a noncovalently
linked complex which is assumed to represent the functional unit
(22, 61). Mutants with either gM or gE/I deleted can be
isolated on normal cells, indicating that these proteins are not
essential for viral replication (9, 36). Deletion of gM
results in a decrease in virus titers of ca. 50- to 100-fold (9), whereas deletion of gE/I has only a slight effect on
virus titers in vitro (this report). In the absence of either gM
(10) or gE/I (36, 60), plaque size is slightly
diminished, which testifies for a somewhat impaired capability for
direct cell-to-cell spread. However, simultaneous deletion of gM and
gE/I is strongly detrimental to the virus, and virus titers drop to low
levels. Electron microscopy showed that in the absence of these three glycoproteins, numerous large intracytoplasmic inclusions containing capsids associated with amorphous material, presumably tegument, were
formed. There also was a lack of secondary envelopment and, consequently, an absence of extracellular enveloped virus particles (4).
Whereas deletion of gE/I has no dramatic effect on virus replication in
tissue culture, it is one of the prime determinants for neuroinvasion
and neurovirulence of PrV in model systems such as mice and rats and in
the natural host, pigs (2, 8, 15, 30, 32, 38, 39, 56).
Recent studies indicated that a gE lacking the cytoplasmic domain is
still capable of complexing with gI and of proper maturation and
transport (54). However, a mutant virus expressing tailless
gE exhibited neurovirulence properties different from those of
wild-type viruses. In the absence of the gE cytoplasmic tail, virulence
in rats is reduced to that of a gE
mutant, although viral
spread in the rodent nervous system still occurs quite efficiently
(54). Interestingly, the gE proteins of varicella-zoster
virus and PrV have been shown to contain endocytosis signals in their
cytoplasmic domains which result in retrieval of the membrane-bound
protein from the plasma membrane into vesicles (1, 41, 51,
52). However, the role of gE endocytosis in the viral life cycle
is unclear, and all endocytosis is shut off by 6 h after infection
(51).
The HSV-1 gE/I complex (23) has also been shown to be
involved in neurovirulence of the virus (14). Moreover, it
localizes to components of cell junctions in polarized cells in culture (13), which led to the hypothesis that interaction of gE/I
with cell junctions is responsible for transfer of HSV-1 across cell borders by direct cell-to-cell spread (12). However, up till now it is unclear how cell-to-cell spread is effected at the molecular level.
Deletion of gM in HSV-1, PrV, and equine herpesvirus type 1 (EHV-1)
resulted in a decrease in virus titers of 10- to 100-fold and slightly
reduced plaque size (9, 10, 33, 42). Interestingly, deletion
mutants were attenuated in both model hosts (HSV-1 and EHV-1) and the
natural host (PrV), presumably due to a defect in neuroinvasion and/or
neuronal spread (11, 33, 40). However, the molecular basis
for these defects is not known.
In this report, we further define the function of gM and uncover an
important role for the gE cytoplasmic tail in the formation of mature virions.
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Viruses and cells.
The viruses used in this study included
wild-type PrV strain Kaplan (PrV-Ka) (25) and isogenic
mutants unable to express gM (PrV-gM
) (11),
gE/I (PrV-gE/I
) (36), or gM and gE/I
(PrV-gE/I/M
) (4). In PrV-gE/I
and PrV-gE/I/M
, the first 322 nucleotides of the gI gene
are still present and fused out of frame to the last 312 nucleotides of
the gE gene (see Fig. 4). Thus, these mutants still carry sequences
encoding the gE cytoplasmic tail but are unable to express it.
PrV-1112, which carries a
-galactosidase expression cassette in the
nonessential gG gene, exhibits growth properties similar to those of
the parental strain PrV-Ka (37). PrV-107 is derived from
wild-type PrV strain Becker (PrV-Be) (3) and contains a stop
codon introduced after the sequences coding for the gE transmembrane
domain. Therefore, this virus expresses a membrane-anchored gE which
lacks the cytoplasmic domain (52). Viruses were propagated
on rabbit (RK13), porcine (PSEK), bovine (MDBK), or African green
monkey kidney (Vero) cells or on trans-complementing cell
lines. Rabbit kidney cells expressing gM (RK13-gM) or gE/I (RK13-gE/I)
have been described (4). Cells were cultured in Eagle's
minimum essential medium supplemented with 5% (10% for RK13 cells)
fetal calf serum. Cotransfections were performed by calcium phosphate
coprecipitation (20).
Construction of mutant PrV-107-gM
.
For
isolation of PrV-107-gM
, plasmid
UL10
(11) was cotransfected with DNA from PrV-107 (52)
into RK13-gM cells. Recombinant viruses were identified by their
blue-plaque phenotype under an agarose overlay containing 300 µg of
Bluo-Gal (Life Technologies, Eggenstein, Germany) per ml. Blue plaques
were picked by aspiration and purified until all plaques stained blue.
One plaque isolate, designated PrV-107-gM
, was chosen for
further analysis. Correct recombination was verified by Southern blot
analysis of mutant virus DNA.
Passaging of PrV-gE/I/M
.
Confluent Vero cells
in a 75-cm2 tissue culture flask were inoculated at a
multiplicity of infection (MOI) of 0.01 with PrV-gE/I/M
.
Cells were repeatedly split 1:1 until a complete cytopathic effect
(CPE) was observed. After development of complete CPE, the supernatant
was removed, and residual adherent cells were trypsinized and reseeded
with ca. 107 noninfected Vero cells in 15 ml of medium.
This procedure was performed 20 times, and one plaque isolate of the
20th passage, designated PrV-gE/I/M
Pass, was further characterized.
Southern blot analysis.
Southern blot analysis of
BamHI-restricted viral DNA was performed by standard
procedures (31, 48).
Determination of plaque size.
Plaque size was measured after
titration of wild-type PrV and the different mutants on the various
cell lines. After 2 days of incubation at 37°C under methylcellulose
medium, cells were fixed and stained with X-Gal
(5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolyl-
-D-galactopyranoside) as
described previously (4). Cells infected with
-galactosidase-negative PrV-Be, PrV-107, or PrV-gE/I
were fixed with 5% formaldehyde and stained with crystal violet. Thirty plaques per virus strain and cell line were measured
microscopically, and average plaque sizes were determined.
One-step growth analysis.
For analysis of growth
characteristics, RK13 cells were infected with PrV-1112,
PrV-gM
, PrV-gE/I
,
PrV-gE/I/M
Pass, PrV-Be, PrV-107, or phenotypically
gM-complemented PrV-gE/I/M
or PrV-107-gM
at
an MOI of 5. After incubation for 1 h at 4°C, the inoculum was
replaced with warmed medium, and cells were further incubated for 90 min at 37°C to allow virus penetration. Thereafter, remaining extracellular virus was inactivated by low-pH treatment
(34). Supernatants and cells were harvested separately
immediately thereafter (0 h) and after 4, 8, 12, 24, and 36 h of
incubation at 37°C. Titers of progeny virus were determined by plaque
assays on RK13 cells. Since no significant difference in the ratio of
intra- and extracellular infectious virus was observed between the
different viruses, the titers were added, and the average values and
standard deviations of two independent experiments were calculated.
Electron microscopy.
RK13 cells were infected with virus at
an MOI of 1, fixed 16 h after infection, and prepared for
ultrathin sectioning as described before (4, 21). Sections
were examined with an electron microscope (EM400T; Philips, Eindhoven,
The Netherlands). For intracellular labeling of viral proteins, RK13
cells were infected with PrV-gE/I/M
and analyzed 16 h after infection (4). Cells were fixed with 0.5%
glutaraldehyde in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) (pH 7.2) for 30 min,
embedded in low-melting-point agarose (Biozym), and postfixed for
another 30 min. Thereafter, samples were incubated in 0.5 M
NH4Cl in PBS for 60 min, washed with PBS, stained in 0.5%
aqueous uranyl acetate for 15 min, dehydrated in ethanol with
progressive lowering of the temperature, embedded in the acrylic resin
Lowicryl K4M (Lowi, Waldkraiburg, Germany) at
35°C, and polymerized
with UV light (
= 360 nm). Postembedding labeling of ultrathin
sections was performed after surfaces were blocked with 1% coldwater
fish gelatin-0.02 M glycine-1% bovine serum albumin fraction V
(Sigma, Deisenhofen, Germany) in PBS, by either overnight incubation at
4°C or 2 h of incubation at room temperature with a rabbit
antiserum directed against a glutathione-S-transferase-UL49 fusion protein, diluted in PBS-bovine serum albumin. Gold-tagged antispecies antibodies (GAR15; Biocell International, Cardiff, United
Kingdom) were added for 60 min at room temperature, and excess
conjugate was removed by washing. The specificity of the reaction was
controlled by incubation of noninfected cells, by using gold conjugate
without primary antibody, and by using antisera directed against
non-PrV proteins (anti-Newcastle disease virus and anti-rabbit
hemorrhagic disease virus), as well as by incubation with normal rabbit serum.
Sequence determination.
Sequencing was performed by the
method of Sanger et al. (49) on double-stranded DNA with
pUC19-specific primers (New England Biolabs) and PrV-gD-, PrV-gI-, and
PrV-gE-specific primers (Life Technologies), which were derived from
the available sequence information (43-45). For sequence
determination, the 3.3-kb BamHI fragment 7 of
PrV-gE/I/M
Pass was isolated and cloned into vector pUC19
(New England Biolabs). The sequenced portion of the fragment extended
from the start of the gD gene to the BamHI site in the
US2 gene. The gD-, gI-, and gE-specific sequences of
PrV-gE/I/M
Pass were compared with the respective
sequences of wild-type PrV strain Ka determined by us (accession no.
AJ271967 and AJ271966).
Western blot analyses of purified virions.
Confluently grown
MDBK cells in 150-cm2 tissue culture flasks were infected
at an MOI of 0.1. After a complete CPE was observed, cells were lysed
by freezing (
70°C) and thawing (37°C), and cellular debris was
removed by low-speed centrifugation. For reduction of volume, the
virus-containing supernatant was centrifuged for 1 h at 22,000 rpm. The pellet was resuspended in 10 ml of TBSal (10 mM Tris-HCl [pH
7.4], 200 mM NaCl, 1.8 mM CaCl2, 20 mM MgCl2) and ultracentrifuged for 1 h at 20,000 rpm through a sucrose
cushion (30% sucrose in TBSal). Virions were resuspended in TBSal and lysed in sample buffer. A total of 10 µg of protein per lane was electrophoresed through discontinuous sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)-10 or 13% polyacrylamide gels. Western blotting was performed essentially as described previously (27, 55) using monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) directed against PrV gE and gC (B. G. Klupp and E. Weiland, unpublished data) or antisera directed against PrV gD (26), gI (A. R. Brack, B. G. Klupp, and T. C. Mettenleiter,
unpublished data), gM (9), the gE cytoplasmic tail
(53), or the US9 protein (5) at the
indicated dilutions.
 |
RESULTS |
Reversion analysis of PrV-gE/I/M
.
We previously
showed in two instances that PrV can overcome supposedly lethal defects
in virus entry by compensatory mutations which were acquired by
copassaging virus-infected cells with noninfected cells (29,
50). A prerequisite for this approach is a minimal capacity of
the virus mutant to perform direct cell-to-cell spread. PrV-gE/I/M
has this capacity (4). Therefore,
Vero cells infected with PrV-gE/I/M
were copassaged with
noninfected cells as described before (29, 50). For each
passage, one parallel plate was used for determination of plaque size.
As early as passage 4, larger plaques appeared among the progeny
viruses and the average plaque size of the virus population started to
increase, reaching the level of either gM or gE/I-deleted virus mutants
after passage 14 (Fig. 1). Thus, the
defect in plaque formation appears to have been overcome by a
compensatory mutation(s).

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FIG. 1.
Reversion of small-plaque phenotype by passaging of
PrV-gE/I/M in Vero cells. Vero cells were infected with
PrV-gE/I/M . After development of CPE, cells were
trypsinized and reseeded with uninfected cells. For each second
passage, a parallel plate was fixed, stained with X-Gal, and used for
determination of plaque size. The average diameters of plaques are
shown. Bars indicate standard deviation. A total of 30 plaques were
measured for each assay.
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Identification of genomic rearrangement correlating with phenotypic
reversion.
To identify the compensatory mutation(s), Southern blot
hybridizations were performed on the passaged virus stock. As shown in
Fig. 2, there appear to be at least two
distinct mutational events resulting in alteration of BamHI
fragment 7 which correlate with the increase in plaque size. A first
deletion of about 300 bp was observed as early as passage 4 (Fig. 2,
lanes 6), resulting in a loss of the parental truncated
BamHI fragment 7 as present in PrV-gE/I/M
(Fig. 2, lanes 4). After passage 6, the virus population contained only
the smaller fragment (Fig. 2, lanes 7). However, at passage 10, another
even smaller fragment was detected resulting from deletion of
approximately 700 bp (Fig. 2, lanes 8), which was the predominant
fragment found after 20 passages (Fig. 2, lanes 9). From the virus
population at passage 20, one plaque isolate possessing the short
BamHI fragment 7 (Fig. 2, lanes 10) was designated PrV-gE/I/M
Pass and characterized further.

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FIG. 2.
Southern blot analysis of PrV-gE/I/M Pass.
Southern blot analysis was performed with DNAs from wild-type PrV-Ka
(lanes 1), PrV-gE/I (lanes 2), PrV-gM
(lanes 3), PrV-gE/I/M (lanes 4), and
PrV-gE/I/M passaged 2 (lanes 5), 4 (lanes 6), 6 (lanes
7), 10 (lanes 8), and 20 times (lanes 9) as well the single-plaque
isolate PrV-gE/I/M Pass (lanes 10) after cleavage with
BamHI. (A) Ethidium bromide-stained gel. (B) Hybridization
with genomic BamHI fragment 7 derived from the
US region (see Fig. 4 for location). The locations of the
BamHI fragments of PrV wild-type DNA are on the left.
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To determine the effect of these mutations on the expression of
proteins from this genomic region, purified virions of either wild-type
PrV (Fig. 3A, lanes 1),
PrV-gE/I/M
(Fig. 3A, lanes 2) or
PrV-gE/I/M
Pass (Fig. 3A, lanes 3) were analyzed by
Western blotting for the presence of viral proteins gD, gI, gE, gC, gM,
US9, and the gE cytoplasmic tail. As expected, neither
PrV-gE/I/M
or PrV-gE/I/M
Pass reacted with
the anti-gE MAb, the anti-gI serum, or the anti-gM serum. Thus,
reversion of the phenotype was not due to inadvertent rescue of either
of these genes or contamination of the mutant virus stock with
wild-type PrV. Surprisingly, whereas gC was expressed similarly by all
viruses, there was a distinct difference in the appearance of gD. The
gD of PrV-gE/I/M
Pass migrated with an apparent molecular
mass about 15 kDa higher than those for the gD proteins of wild-type
PrV-Ka and PrV-gE/I/M
. A protein of similar size was also
recognized in PrV-gE/I/M
Pass virions by an antiserum
specific for the gE cytoplasmic tail (53), whereas in
PrV-Ka, a protein of the size of mature gE was detected. In addition,
expression of the US9 protein was no longer detectable in
PrV-gE/I/M
Pass.

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FIG. 3.
Western blot analysis. Purified virions of PrV-Ka (A,
lanes 1), PrV-gE/I/M (A, lanes 2),
PrV-gE/I/M Pass (A, lanes 3), PrV-Be (B, lanes 1), PrV-107
(B, lanes 2), and PrV-107-gM (B, lanes 3) were lysed, and
proteins were separated in an SDS-10 or 13% polyacrylamide gel. After
electrophoretic transfer, nitrocellulose membranes were probed with
antibodies against gD, gI, gE, the gE cytoplasmic tail, gC, gM, or the
US9 protein. After incubation with peroxidase-conjugated
secondary antibody, bound antibody was visualized by chemiluminescence
recorded on X-ray films.
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Phenotypic reversion is associated with creation of a gD-gE hybrid
gene.
To identify the mutational events at the DNA level, a 3.3-kb
fragment of PrV-gE/I/M
Pass was isolated and partially
sequenced. As summarized in Fig. 4, two
deletion events must have occurred during passaging. A 309-bp deletion
removed the last 42 nucleotides of the gD gene, resulting in deletion
of the carboxy-terminal 14 codons extending into the remnant of the gI
gene, thereby eliminating the first 244 nucleotides encoding the
amino-terminal 82 amino acids (aa). By this fusion event, the remaining
sequences of the gE gene, which comprise 312 nucleotides encoding the
carboxy-terminal 104 aa, are fused in-frame behind the transmembrane
domain of gD with a spacer of 26 aa derived from the gI gene, which,
however, are not related to gI sequences due to a frameshift in the
remaining gI gene. The resulting chimeric protein thus consists of the
first 386 aa of gD fused to 26 nonsense amino acids derived from the gI
gene and the carboxy-terminal 104 aa of gE. The predicted increase in
molecular mass for the gD(I)E hybrid protein of about 13 kDa matched
well with the apparent molecular mass determined from gel
electrophoresis (see above).

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FIG. 4.
Genomic arrangement in the US region of
PrV-gE/I/M Pass. (A) Schematic diagram of the PrV genome.
(B) BamHI restriction fragment map. UL, unique
long region; US, unique short region. Open boxes, inverted
repeat sequences which bracket the US region. (C)
Enlargement of BamHI fragment 7 located in the
US region, with relevant cleavage sites (B,
BamHI; St, StuI; Sp, SphI). (D)
Genomic arrangement in the US regions of
PrV-gE/I and PrV-gE/I/M . It is evident that
by deletion of gI sequences from the StuI site and gE
sequences up to the SphI site (36), the 5'
terminus of the gI gene had been fused to the 3' terminus of the gE
gene. Note that the gE sequences in the gI/gE fusion gene are out of
frame with the gI sequences. (E) Deletion events that occurred during
passaging were mapped by sequencing. One deletion resulted in the
formation of a chimeric gD(I)E hybrid gene, in which the gE sequences
are in frame with the gD sequences and the gI remnant is out of frame.
Another rearrangement led to truncation of the US9 gene and
at least partial deletion of the US2 gene. The locations of
the gene sequences encoding the transmembrane portions of the gD, gI,
gE, and US9 proteins are indicated by black boxes.
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A second deletion removed at least 740 bp from the 3' end of the
US9 gene, extending into the 5' part of the US2 gene.
Role of the gE cytoplasmic tail in plaque formation.
Since
these data implied a role for the gE cytoplasmic tail in the phenotypic
reversion of plaque size, we analyzed whether deletion of gM in a PrV
mutant which expressed a C-terminally truncated gE protein resulted in
the same phenotype as after complete deletion of gE/I. To this end, DNA
from PrV-107, which contains a stop codon engineered behind the coding
sequences for the gE transmembrane domain (52), was
cotransfected with plasmid
UL10
(11) into
gM-expressing cells. Blue plaques were purified from the transfection
progeny and analyzed by Southern and Western blotting. One single
plaque isolate, PrV-107-gM
, which contained the correct
deletion in the UL10 gene encoding gM, expressed
-galactosidase and
the truncated gE (Fig. 3B), and lacked gM in the Western blot (Fig. 3B)
was further analyzed. As shown in Fig.
5A, PrV-107 produced plaques which were
about 30% smaller than isogenic wild-type PrV-Be plaques on RK13,
Vero, MDBK, and PSEK cells. However, deletion of gM drastically reduced plaque size to approximately that observed after deletion of gE/I and
gM (4). This defect in PrV-107-gM
could be
rescued on cells expressing either gM or gE/I (Fig. 5B), which was
again similar to the situation with PrV-gE/I/M
. Thus, the
absence of only the cytoplasmic tail of gE has the same consequences in
combination with deletion of gM as elimination of gE and gI.

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FIG. 5.
Plaque sizes of PrV-107 and PrV-107-gM .
RK13, Vero, MDBK, and PSEK cells (A), and RK13, RK13-gM, and RK13-gE/I
cells (B) were infected under plaque assay conditions with PrV-107 and
PrV-107-gM . Two days after infection, plaque diameters
were measured microscopically and compared with the average diameter of
plaques induced by parental PrV-Be (WT, solid bars), which was set at
100%. Average values and standard deviations after measurement of at
least 30 plaques in three independent experiments each are indicated.
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One-step growth analyses.
Mutant viruses were analyzed for
their replication in noncomplementing RK13 cells by establishing
one-step growth kinetics. As shown in Fig.
6A, PrV-Ka and PrV-gE/I
exhibited similar growth properties. In contrast, as described before
(4, 9), PrV-gM
replicated to ~100-fold-lower
titers. The titers of the triple mutant PrV-gE/I/M
were
again about 100-fold lower than those of PrV-gM
, with
final titers reaching only 103 PFU/ml.
PrV-gE/I/M
Pass exhibited a growth performance similar to
that of PrV-gM
, indicating that the compensatory
mutation(s) present in PrV-gE/I/M
Pass rescued the gE/I
defect but not the gM-associated defect. The role of the cytoplasmic gE
tail in the growth deficiency of PrV in the absence of gM was also
analyzed. The data in Fig. 6B demonstrated that the absence of the gE
tail has no significant effect on the growth properties of PrV-Be. In
contrast, additional deletion of gM resulted in a growth curve which
was very similar to that seen for PrV-gE/I/M
. Thus, the
absence of the gE cytoplasmic tail yielded the same results as the
absence of the whole gE/I complex.

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FIG. 6.
One-step growth analysis. RK13 cells were infected at an
MOI of 5 with PrV-1112, PrV-gE/I , PrV-gM ,
PrV-gE/I/M , and PrV-gE/I/M Pass (A) or
PrV-Be, PrV-107, and PrV-107-gM (B). At the indicated
times after infection, supernatant and cells were harvested, titers
were determined on RK13 cells, and the titers were added. Average
values and standard deviations of two independent experiments are
shown.
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Role of the gE cytoplasmic tail in formation of infectious
virus.
Ultrastructural studies revealed that in the absence of
gE/I and gM, large intracytoplasmic inclusions were formed which
contained electron-dense material, presumably tegument components,
associated with capsids. In addition, secondary envelopment and release
of enveloped virions were not observed. This correlated with
dramatically decreased titers of PrV-gE/I/M
(4). To analyze the contribution of gE/I, gM, and the gE
cytoplasmic tail to this phenotype, several isogenic virus mutants were
analyzed under the electron microscope. These included
PrV-gE/I/M
, PrV-gE/I/M
Pass,
PrV-gE/I
, and PrV-gM
, which were all
derived from wild-type PrV-Ka. PrV-107 and PrV-107-gM
,
derived from PrV-Be, were also assayed. As already reported (4), in PrV-gE/I/M
-infected cells, capsids
accumulated in large intracytoplasmic inclusions (Fig.
7B and C) which were absent from
wild-type-virus-infected cells (Fig. 7A). In addition, neither
secondary envelopment nor extracellular virions were detected. In
PrV-gE/I/M
Pass-infected cells, enveloped particles were
easily detected intra- and extracellularly, and only small
accumulations of capsids and amorphous protein material were observed
(Fig. 7D and E). Surprisingly, and in contrast to our previous
observations, inclusions containing capsids, although less numerous and
generally smaller, were also present in cells infected with
PrV-gM
(Fig. 8A and B).
Thus, it appears as if the formation of these inclusions is primarily
due to the absence of gM. However, despite the formation of inclusion
bodies, secondary envelopment was observed and extracellular enveloped
virions were detected (Fig. 8A). In the absence of gE and gI in
PrV-gE/I
, accumulations of electron-dense material in the
cytoplasm were occasionally observed, but they did not contain capsids.
Moreover, virion morphogenesis appeared to be uninhibited by these
inclusions, since secondary envelopment and extracellular virions were
readily observed (Fig. 8C and D). Interestingly, cells infected with
PrV-107, which expresses a C-terminally truncated gE, gave a picture
similar to that with PrV-gE/I
-infected cells, i.e.,
occasional intracytoplasmic accumulations of electron-dense material
devoid of capsids as well as secondary envelopment and extracellular
virions (Fig. 9A and B). Deletion of gM
resulted in the formation of intracytoplasmic inclusions containing
capsids, absence of secondary envelopment, and failure to detect
extracellular virions (Fig. 9C and D). In conclusion, the absence of
the cytoplasmic tail of gE in conjunction with the deletion of gM
resulted in the same inhibition of formation of enveloped infectious
virus as did the concomitant absence of gE/I and gM.

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|
FIG. 7.
Electron microscopy of RK13 cells infected with (A)
PrV-Ka, (B and C) PrV-gE/I/M , and (D and E)
PrV-gE/I/M Pass, analyzed 16 h after infection. Bars:
(A, B, and D) 1 µm; (C and E) 250 nm.
|
|

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FIG. 8.
Electron microscopy of RK13 cells infected with (A and
B) PrV-gM and (C and D) PrV-gE/I , analyzed
16 h after infection. Bars: (A and C) 1 µm; (B and D) 250 nm.
|
|

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FIG. 9.
Electron microscopy of RK13 cells infected with (A and
B) PrV-107 and (C and D) PrV-107-gM , analyzed 16 h
after infection. Bars: (A and D) 2 µm; (B and C) 500 nm.
|
|
Inclusion bodies contain tegument protein.
We hypothesized
that the electron-dense material surrounding the capsids in the
intracytoplasmic inclusions may consist of tegument proteins. To prove
this assumption, we prepared an antiserum against the PrV homolog of
the HSV-1 tegument protein VP22, the product of the UL49 gene, and used
it in immunoelectron microscopic analyses of thin sections of RK13
cells infected with PrV-gE/I/M
. As shown in Fig.
10A and B, the anti-PrV UL49 antiserum
specifically labeled the amorphous material in the inclusion bodies,
whereas a control antiserum did not (Fig. 10C). Thus, the inclusion
bodies contain at least one prominent tegument protein, which
substantiates our hypothesis that they indeed consist of tegument
material.

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|
FIG. 10.
Immunoelectron microscopy of
PrV-gE/I/M -infected RK13 cells analyzed 16 h after
infection. Thin sections were incubated with either a
monospecific anti-PrV UL49 antiserum (A and B) or a control antiserum
directed against Newcastle disease virus (C). Bars: (A) 750 nm; (B and
C) 250 nm.
|
|
 |
DISCUSSION |
The formation of infectious PrV virions involves budding of
capsids through the nuclear membrane, acquisition of tegument, secondary envelopment by budding into trans-Golgi vesicles,
and release of intravesicular enveloped virus at the cell surface (21, 57). However, so far it is unclear how the different components find and interact with each other. Our observation that
combined deletion of the gE/I complex and gM resulted in a severe block
in the formation of infectious virus, a phenotype which has not been
observed after deletion of either gE/I or gM, for the first time
pointed to a role of these "nonessential" glycoproteins in an
important step of virion morphogenesis which precedes secondary envelopment (4).
The data presented in this report show that deletion of the cytoplasmic
domain of gE resulted in a deficiency in the formation of infectious
virus in the absence of gM similar to that caused by deletion of the
gE/I complex. Thus, the cytoplasmic tail of gE is responsible for gE
function in virion morphogenesis. This has been shown by deletion of gM
in a genetically engineered PrV mutant expressing a tailless gE and by
the spontaneous creation in a phenotypic revertant of a hybrid gene in
which sequences encoding the complete extracellular and transmembrane
portions of gD have been fused to the gE cytoplasmic tail. The latter
result was obtained after passaging of a gE/I/M-negative PrV mutant in cell culture, a procedure which we have used with success in isolation of infectious revertants of otherwise lethal mutations (29, 50).
Surprisingly, although parallel passage experiments were performed on
Vero and RK13 cells, restoration of the phenotype occurred only in the
virus population passaged in Vero cells. However, the resulting
revertant virus exhibited a large-plaque phenotype on all cell types
studied, including primate, swine, bovine, and rabbit kidney cells
(data not shown). This can be explained by the infrequent and chance
event of recombination occurring so that the functionally important gE
tail is hooked onto a different glycoprotein, processed and transported
properly, and presented in such a way that virion morphogenesis can
occur. However, we cannot exclude a cell type-specific effect, as
already observed for PrV-gE/I/M
, which exhibited larger
foci (or even small plaques) on MDBK cells than on Vero, PSEK, or RK13 cells.
Several functions have been attributed to the gE cytoplasmic tail. It
contains two YXXL endocytosis motifs, of which the first is responsible
for retrieval of gE/gI from the cytoplasmic membrane (52).
However, the role of endocytosis in viral replication is largely
unclear. A defect in endocytosis did not affect the incorporation of gE
into virions, gE-mediated virulence, or virus spread in the central
nervous system of the rat (51). However, there was a
correlation between the endocytosis defect and a moderate reduction in
plaque size. Whether this phenotype is connected to the inhibition of
virion morphogenesis described in this report remains to be analyzed.
In addition, the gE cytoplasmic tail appears to be involved in the
antibody-induced redistribution of viral glycoproteins in the
cytoplasmic membrane (16). The biological relevance of this
phenomenon is unclear, however.
The role of the cytoplasmic tail of gE in virulence is unclear. An
attenuated mutant virus initially thought to specifically lack the gE
tail proved to contain a second mutation resulting in a frameshift and
translation of a novel cytoplasmic tail (54). Analysis of a
clean tailless gE mutant, PrV-107 (52), showed that in the
absence of the cytoplasmic tail, gE is still incorporated into virions
and is defective in endocytosis, and the virus is still capable of
infecting and spreading in the rat central nervous system. However, the
animals survived longer and showed markedly less severe symptoms than
those infected with wild-type virus. We report here that the absence of
the gE cytoplasmic tail only slightly affects the plaque size of PrV,
similar to the deletion of gE/I. However, additional deletion of gM
severely impairs viral replication, and the mutant virus exhibits the
same phenotype as the triply deleted PrV-gE/I/M
. This
also correlates with electron microscopic observations: the prominent
intracytoplasmic inclusions containing capsids associated with
electron-dense material were regularly observed in large numbers in
PrV-gE/I/M
- and PrV-107-gM
-infected cells.
The reactivity of the amorphous material surrounding the capsids in the
inclusion bodies with the anti-UL49 serum substantiates our hypothesis
that it contains tegument proteins.
In contrast to our previous observations, similar inclusions were also
observed in PrV-gM
-infected cells, although they are less
numerous and generally smaller. Thus, the absence of gM appears to be
predominantly responsible for the formation of these aggregates.
However, in the absence of gM and continuous presence of gE/I,
secondary envelopment and extracellular virions are still observed,
which correlates with the decrease in titer in PrV-gM
compared with wild-type PrV or PrV-gE/I
. In the
additional absence of gE/I or the gE cytoplasmic tail, secondary
envelopment and extracellular virions could no longer be detected. This
again matches the results from growth analyses which showed only very
little infectious virus being formed in these cells. It is surprising
in this context that deletion of gE/I or the gE tail alone had only a
slight effect on virus titers. However, cells infected with
PrV-gE/I
or PrV-107 occasionally contained
intracytoplasmic aggregates of amorphous material which resembled those
detected in PrV-gM
- or PrV-gE/I/M
-infected
cells but did not contain any capsids.
During passaging of PrV-gE/I/M
, two deletion events
appeared to have occurred in BamHI fragment 7. An early
deletion of 309 bp which correlated with a first increase in plaque
size resulted in the creation of a fusion gene containing the gE
cytoplasmic tail fused in frame to the gD transmembrane region, with
intervening nonsense amino acids originating from the remnant of the gI
gene. It might be argued that PrV-gE/I
, which contains a
remnant of the 5' portion of the gI gene fused out of frame to the 3'
portion of the gE gene, is not a "clean" deletion mutant. This is
certainly correct, although expression of the hypothetical chimeric
protein has never been detected. However, it was fortunate for the
reversion analysis that the mutant still contained sequences encoding
the cytoplasmic tail of gE. Thus, the spontaneous formation of the
gD(I)E hybrid gene led us to the role of the gE tail in virion
morphogenesis. The second deletion of at least 740 bp extending beyond
the terminal BamHI site was again accompanied by an increase
in plaque size. Its 3' boundary has not yet been determined exactly,
but portions of the US9 and US2 genes have been
removed (Fig. 4). What role this second deletion plays in increasing
plaque size is unclear. It may be that either one of these proteins is
directly involved in direct viral cell-to-cell spread. Alternatively,
the second deletion may have increased expression of the chimeric
gD(I)E gene, which in turn further increased plaque size. However,
simultaneous deletion of the US9 and UL10 (gM)
genes did not result in a small-plaque phenotype (Brack et al.,
unpublished data).
Taken together, our data show that the absence of gM results in
accumulation of capsids with tegument material in the cytoplasm but
that virion morphogenesis still proceeds to produce infectious virus,
albeit at a lower level. In contrast, the absence of gE/I or the gE
tail does not markedly impair the production of infectious virus,
although infected cells were observed to occasionally contain intracytoplasmic aggregations of amorphous material devoid of capsids.
Deletion of gM and gE/I or of gM and the gE cytoplasmic tail
drastically impairs the formation of infectious virus. We previously
speculated that gM and gE/I act at a similar step in virion
morphogenesis in a synergistic fashion, either simultaneously or
sequentially. From the data presented here, we further hypothesize that
gM is primarily involved in directing tegumented capsids to the budding
site for secondary envelopment, presumably by its presence in the
vesicle membrane and interaction with tegument components. The gE
cytoplasmic tail may also be involved in this process but, in the
presence of gM, plays a subordinate role. However, if gM is missing,
gE/I is the only functional unit left which can provide the required
signals, albeit less efficiently than gM. Thus, gE/I function is of
paramount importance in the absence of gM. The relative contribution of
gE/I to virion morphogenesis may well be a cell type-specific effect
and thus may explain the striking phenotypes of gE-deleted PrV in vivo
compared with their only moderate alteration in cell culture.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
This study was supported by grant DFG Me 854/4-1 from the
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft to T.C.M. and by National
Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke grant 1R0133506 to
L.W.E.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Institute of
Molecular Biology, Friedrich-Loeffler-Institutes, Federal Research
Centre for Virus Diseases of Animals, D-17498 Insel Riems, Germany.
Phone: 49-38351-7102. Fax: 49-38351-7151. E-mail:
mettenleiter{at}rie.bfav.de.
 |
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Journal of Virology, May 2000, p. 4004-4016, Vol. 74, No. 9
0022-538X/00/$04.00+0
Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
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