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Journal of Virology, June 2001, p. 5703-5710, Vol. 75, No. 12
0022-538X/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JVI.75.12.5703-5710.2001
Copyright © 2001, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Conservation of the Conformation and Positive Charges of
Hepatitis C Virus E2 Envelope Glycoprotein Hypervariable Region 1 Points to a Role in Cell Attachment
François
Penin,1,*
Christophe
Combet,1
Georgios
Germanidis,2,
Pierre-Olivier
Frainais,2
Gilbert
Deléage,1 and
Jean-Michel
Pawlotsky2
Institut de Biologie et Chimie des
Protéines, CNRS-UMR 5086, 69367 Lyon,1 and
Department of Bacteriology and Virology and INSERM U99,
Hôpital Henri Mondor, Université Paris XII, 94010 Créteil,2 France
Received 7 November 2000/Accepted 28 March 2001
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ABSTRACT |
Chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection is a major cause of liver
disease. The HCV polyprotein contains a hypervariable region (HVR1)
located at the N terminus of the second envelope glycoprotein E2. The strong variability of this
27-amino-acid region is due to its apparent tolerance of amino acid
substitutions together with strong selection pressures exerted by
anti-HCV immune responses. No specific function has so far been
attributed to HVR1. However, its presence at the surface of the viral
particle suggests that it might be involved in viral entry. This would imply that HVR1 is not randomly variable. We sequenced 460 HVR1 clones
isolated at various times from six HCV-infected patients receiving
alpha interferon therapy (which exerts strong pressure towards
quasispecies genetic evolution) and analyzed their amino acid sequences
together with those of 1,382 nonredundant HVR1 sequences collected from
the EMBL database. We found that (i) despite strong amino acid sequence
variability related to strong pressures towards change, the
chemicophysical properties and conformation of HVR1 were highly
conserved, and (ii) HVR1 is a globally basic stretch, with the basic
residues located at specific sequence positions. This conservation of
positively charged residues indicates that HVR1 is involved in
interactions with negatively charged molecules such as lipids,
proteins, or glycosaminoglycans (GAGs). As with many other viruses,
possible interaction with GAGs probably plays a role in host cell
recognition and attachment.
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TEXT |
Hepatitis C virus (HCV) is a small
enveloped RNA virus that belongs to the Flaviviridae family.
It causes chronic liver disease, including chronic active hepatitis in
up to 80% of infected individuals, as well as cirrhosis and
hepatocellular carcinoma (3). The presently approved
treatment is based on the combination of alpha interferon (IFN-
) and
ribavirin, and sustained clearance of HCV replication is achieved in
about 40% of patients (31, 39). HCV exists within its
hosts as a pool of genetically distinct but closely related variants,
referred to as quasispecies (29, 48). This confers a
significant survival advantage, as the simultaneous presence of
multiple variant genomes allows rapid selection of mutants better
suited to new environmental conditions. The fittest infectious
particles are continuously selected as a result of selective pressures
exerted by their interactions with host cell proteins and host immune responses.
Sequence analysis of a large number of HCV isolates has revealed
hypervariable genomic sequences. Hypervariable region 1 (HVR1) is a
27-amino-acid sequence located at the N terminus of the second envelope
glycoprotein E2. This region is highly tolerant for amino acid substitutions. Being a target for anti-HCV neutralizing antibodies and, possibly, cytotoxic responses, it is also subjected to strong positive selection pressure (18, 24, 48). For these
reasons, HVR1 has been widely used as a model to study HCV genome
quasispecies distribution. It was recently shown that, in treated
patients who did not clear HCV RNA, IFN-
therapy generates shifts in
virus populations (35, 36). IFN-
therapy thus provides
a good model to study constraints on HVR1 quasispecies sequences in
drastically changing environmental conditions.
The biological role of HVR1 is unknown. It was recently proposed that
HVR1 could serve as a decoy for the immune system during acute
infection (40). Antibodies directed against HVR1 have been
shown to be neutralizing in vitro, protecting chimpanzees against HCV
infection after in vitro neutralization of the corresponding strain
(18, 19). In addition, anti-HVR1 antibodies apparently inhibit viral adsorption to the surface of cultured cells of various types (44, 50, 51). It was recently reported that an HCV clone lacking HVR1 was infectious but attenuated in a chimpanzee (21). Thus, although HVR1 may not be essential for
infection in chimpanzees, it probably plays a role in HCV strain
infectivity. In addition, HVR1 is always present in strains infecting
humans, suggesting that any virus containing the intact HVR1 has a
significant survival advantage over emerging mutants lacking a part of
or the full-length HVR1. Together, these findings suggest a role of
HVR1 in viral entry. This would imply that HVR1 is not randomly variable and that its chemicophysical properties must be at least partly conserved. Previous studies have identified both invariant and
variable positions within the HVR1 sequence (30, 42, 43). McAllister et al. (30), comparing HVR1 sequences in
quasispecies variants isolated from individuals infected from a common
source, found evidence that amino acid substitutions in HVR1 are not
only due to random accumulation of mutations but are also driven by positive selection pressures and constrained by negative selection pressures. In addition, strong selection pressure to maintain the size
of HVR1 has been reported (8).
Although HVR1 is reported to be structurally flexible and antigenically
variable, little attention has been paid to its conformation. In this
study we combined two complementary approaches to assess HVR1
variability and conservation, including a longitudinal study of HVR1
quasispecies evolution in six patients receiving IFN-
therapy, i.e.,
subjected to strong pressures towards change, and an analysis of the
largest possible number of nonredundant HVR1 sequences of natural HCV
variants collected from the EMBL database. The data presented here
indicate that HVR1 conformation is well conserved and that HVR1 is a
basic stretch likely involved in intermolecular interactions with
negatively charged molecules such as lipids, proteins, or
glycosaminoglycans (GAGs). HVR1 could thus be involved in viral
attachment and possibly cell tropism.
HVR1 sequence collection and genetic characterization.
In the
longitudinal study of HVR1 quasispecies evolution, six patients
infected with HCV genotype 1 who did not clear HCV RNA after 6 months
of treatment with 3 MU of IFN-
-2a three times per week (patients A
to F) were randomly selected for extensive HVR1 quasispecies analysis
(see reference 35 for further information). Patient E was
re-treated with the same IFN-
regimen 3 months after the end of the
first course (i.e., from month 9 to month 15) and was monitored until
month 21, i.e., 6 months after IFN-
withdrawal (Fig.
1A); he did not clear
HCV RNA after the second course of IFN-
. Blood samples were taken at
various times before, during, and after IFN-
treatment, and a total
of 460 HVR1 clones (20 clones per time point per patient) were
generated from the six patients. Partial genetic analyses of these
sequences have been reported elsewhere (35). Briefly, in
all but one case (patient D) HVR1 genetic evolution during and after
IFN-
therapy was characterized by successive shifts of the virus
populations, as illustrated in Fig. 1A, which shows the HVR1
quasispecies sequences isolated from patient E at indicated times
during follow-up. HVR1 quasispecies changes were evolutionary in all
instances, and HVR1 genetic evolution appeared to be related to
positive pressures towards change rather than to random
accumulation of mutations during HCV replication (35).
These results were in keeping with the view that HVR1 is highly
tolerant of amino acid substitutions and is a target for anti-HCV
immune responses.

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FIG. 1.
Analysis of HVR1 quasispecies sequences from patient E
(genotype 1b) based on sequences of 20 clones per time point at five
time points, i.e., 100 distinct clones. (A) Alignment of HVR1
quasispecies sequences at month zero (M0, before IFN- treatment),
M7 (1 month after the end of the first IFN- course), M9
(beginning of the second IFN- course), M15 (end of the second
IFN- course), and M21 (6 months after the end of the second IFN-
course). The frequency of each sequence in the quasispecies is given as
a percentage in the left-hand column. Cons, the derived consensus amino
acid sequence. Amino acids identical to those in the consensus sequence
are represented by a hyphen. (B) Repertoire of patient E's HVR1 amino
acids per position from the analysis of the 36 nonredundant sequences
observed at the five time points. Amino acids are listed in decreasing
order of observed frequency, from top to bottom. (C) Histogram showing
the hydropathic character of the residues at each position in HVR1. The
height of the box in each bar indicates the number of sequences with a
given residue at a given position. The boxes are presented in order of
decreasing hydrophobicity, from bottom to top, according to the
hydrophobicity scale of Black and Mould (4). Each box is
colored according to the hydrophobic character of the residue: dark
gray for hydrophobic (F, I, W, Y, L, V, M, P, C, A), light gray for
neutral (G, T, S), and white for hydrophilic (K, Q, N, H, E, D, R). (D)
Consensus hydropathic pattern of HVR1 quasispecies deduced from the
latter. o, hydrophobic residue; n, neutral residue; i, hydrophilic
residue; v, variable residue. (E) Antigenicity profiles of HVR1
sequences calculated according to the method of Parker et al.
(34) with a window of 7 amino acids. Therefore, the
antigenicity of the first three HVR1 positions could not be
estimated.
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To better characterize HVR1 tolerance of amino acid substitutions,
together with its chemicophysical properties and the constraints
on its
sequence, we studied the HVR1 amino acid repertoires in
the six
patients' quasispecies at each time point. The hydropathic
and
chemicophysical features of the residues were characterized,
and the
antigenicity profiles of the variants were compared. To
determine
whether our findings on genotype 1 HVR1 quasispecies
would also apply
to other HVR1 sequences of the most frequent
HCV genotypes, we extended
the analysis to the 1,382 HVR1 sequences
recovered from the EMBL
database, including unambiguously genotyped
HVR1
sequences.
For this, all HCV sequences in the EMBL database were downloaded
to our HCV database website (HCVDB;
http://hepatitis.ibcp.fr).
The first 30 amino acid residues
of envelope glycoprotein E2 taken
from published HCV
polyproteins representative of the most frequent
HCV genotypes
(
9,
41) were used to select HVR1 sequences
by means of the
FASTA program (
37). HVR1 sequences were aligned
with
CLUSTAL W (
46) by using HCVDB Network Protein Sequence
Analysis website facilities (
http://pbil.ibcp.fr/NPSA) (
5,
14). A final set of 1,382 nonredundant HVR1 sequences was
analyzed.
To select unambiguously genotyped HVR1 sequences, HVR1
sequences
reported together with the flanking E1 sequence were sought
with
FASTA by using the sequence of a stretch spanning the C terminus
of E1 and the N terminus of E2 (nucleotide positions 915 to 1,632
in
the HCV-H prototype strain). The HCV clade and subtype were
determined
for each HVR1 sequence on the basis of the flanking
E1 sequence using
representative clade and subtype sequences (
9),
including
clades 1 to 6 and subtypes 1a, 1b, 1c, 2a, 2b, 2c, 3a,
3b, 4a, 5a,
6a, 10a (classified into clade 3), and 11a (classified
into clade 6).
Among the unambiguously genotyped HVR1 sequences,
by far the most
numerous were subtypes 1a and 1b (85 and 119 HVR1
sequences,
respectively).
HVR1 amino acid repertoire.
The amino acids observed at
various time points at each of the 27 HVR1 positions in patient E's
quasispecies are presented in Fig. 1B. Like in the other five patients
(data not shown), residues were conserved at certain HVR1 positions,
whereas most positions were variable. This was also the case when the
repertoires of 119 unambiguously genotyped HCV genotype 1b sequences
(Fig. 2A) and 85 HCV genotype 1a
sequences (data not shown) were analyzed. Figure
3A presents the HVR1 amino acid
repertoire for the 1,382 HVR1 sequences of 13 different genotypes from
the EMBL database. Again, certain positions in HVR1 appeared to be far
more variable than others.

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FIG. 2.
Analysis of 119 unambiguously genotyped HCV genotype 1b
HVR1 sequences from the EMBL database. Residues observed at a given
position in only one sequence were not taken into consideration. (A)
Repertoire of genotype 1b HVR1 residues per position. Residues are
listed in decreasing order of observed frequency, from top to bottom.
Residues within the box correspond to those observed in more than 10%
of the sequences. (B) Histogram showing the hydropathic character of
residues at each position (see the legend to Fig. 1C). (C) Consensus
hydropathic pattern of genotype 1b sequences (see the legend to Fig.
1D). (D) Antigenicity profiles of the 10 most distantly related
sequences of genotype 1b sequences (see the legend to Fig. 1E).
Selection of these 10 among 119 sequences was based on the HVR1
phylogenetic tree of genotype 1b.
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FIG. 3.
Analysis of 1,382 HVR1 sequences from the EMBL database.
Amino acids observed at a given position in fewer than five distinct
sequences (<0.3%) were not taken into consideration. (A) Repertoire
of HVR1 residues per position in the 1,382 unrelated EMBL HVR1
sequences. Amino acids are listed in decreasing order of observed
frequency, from top to bottom. Residues within the box correspond to
those observed in more than 10% of the sequences. (B) Histogram
showing the hydropathic character of residues at each position in HVR1.
The height of the box in each bar indicates the frequency of sequences
with a given residue at a given position. (C) Consensus hydropathic
pattern from the 1,382 HVR1 sequences. (D) Comparison of the
antigenicity profiles of HVR1 sequences representative of the principal
HCV subtypes of clades 1 to 6 (the EMBL accession number of each
sequence is indicated in parentheses): 1a (M67463), 1b (D90208), 1c
(D14853), 2a (D00944), 2b (D10988), 2c (D50409), 3a (D28917), 3b
(D49374), 4a (Y11604), 5a (Y13184), 6a (Y12083), 10a (D63821;
classified in clade 3), and 11a (D63822; classified in clade 6).
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Conservation of the hydropathic characters of HVR1 residues.
Comparisons of HVR1 sequences using the Kyte and Doolittle method
(26) showed very similar hydrophobicity profiles
among quasispecies variants and HCV isolates of various genotypes
(data not shown). The small size of the HVR1 stretch allowed a more precise analysis of the hydropathic character of the residues at each
HVR1 position. HVR1 hydropathic patterns are shown in Fig. 1C for
patient E's quasispecies and in Fig. 2B for the 119 unambiguously
genotyped HCV genotype 1b sequences. A letter-coded motif summarizing
the corresponding HVR1 hydropathic patterns is shown in Fig. 1D and 2C,
respectively. Typically, in patient E's quasispecies 12 positions bore
exclusively one type of residue: hydrophobic, neutral, or hydrophilic;
13 positions were occupied by two classes of residues only; and all
three classes of residues were observed at only two positions
(positions 1 and 8), which were considered truly variable (Fig. 1D).
Thus, despite HVR1 variability, the hydropathic characters of the
residues were conserved at most positions in patient E's quasispecies
variants. Findings for the five other patients were similar, and only
minor differences were observed when compared to findings for patient
E. These differences were related to the isolate rather than to the HCV
genotype. Indeed, the hydropathic patterns of unambiguously genotyped
1a and 1b HVR1 sequences from EMBL differed from each other at only
five positions (positions 5, 7, 9, 18, and 25; Fig. 2D and data not shown).
Regardless of the HCV genotype, common features were again found when
this analysis was extended to the 1,382 EMBL HVR1 sequences
(Fig.
3B
and C). The consensus hydropathic pattern shown in Fig.
3C highlights
the positions in HVR1 that are conserved or variable
for the
hydropathic character. In summary, a glycine residue is
always found at
position 23; three positions (positions 16, 19,
and 20) are exclusively
hydrophobic; two positions (positions
26 and 27) are exclusively
hydrophilic; two positions (positions
2 and 6) are always neutral; six
positions (positions 4, 5, 10,
13, 17, and 24) are either hydrophobic
or neutral; and the remaining
13 positions can harbor any of the three
classes of amino acids
and constitute the truly hypervariable positions
(positions 1,
3, 7, 8, 9, 11, 12, 14, 15, 18, 21, 22, and 25). Overall,
as many
as 12 HVR1 positions exclusively harbor hydrophobic or neutral
residues (positions 2, 4, 5, 6, 10, 13, 16, 17, 19, 20, 23, and
24).
Interestingly, the HVR1 consensus hydrophobic pattern presents
some
analogy with HLA binding motifs that contain both highly
conserved
anchor residues and variable ones. It is likely that
conserved
hydrophobic and neutral residues ensure HVR1 anchoring
to the E2
glycoprotein. Typically, the fully conserved hydrophobic
residues at positions 16, 19, and 20 probably interact with the
hydrophobic core of E2. Overall, hydrophobic and neutral residue
conservation at specific HVR1 positions indicates that HVR1
conformation
is conserved and suggests that these residues play an
important
role in maintaining HVR1 conformation within the E2
glycoprotein.
Conservation of the predicted HVR1 antigenicity profile.
To
further assess HVR1 conformation conservation, we compared the
antigenicity profiles of HVR1 sequences. These profiles were calculated
according to the guidelines of Parker et al. (34) using
the ANTHEPROT package 5 program (http://antheprot-pbil.ibcp.fr) (16). Parker's method uses a combination of the best
three parameters for hydrophilicity, accessibility, and flexibility to
predict antigenic protein surface sites. No prediction was made for the first three HVR1 positions because this method uses a calculation window of seven residues. In patient E (Fig. 1E), although the position
with the highest antigenic score differed from one quasispecies variant
to the next, the antigenicity profiles defined two antigenic segments,
between residues 1 and 13 and between residues 19 and 25. In contrast,
segments 14 to 18 and 24 to 27 were never predicted to be antigenic.
Similar profiles were obtained for the five other patients (data not shown).
Although individual profiles could differ markedly, the same two
antigenic regions were predicted when we analyzed the 10
most distantly
related HCV genotype 1b sequences (Fig.
2D), the
10 most distantly
related HCV genotype 1a sequences (data not
shown), and sequences
representative of the principal HCV genotypes
(Fig.
3D). In all
instances the two antigenic regions were comprised
between positions 1 and 13 and positions 19 and 24, whereas regions
14 to 18 and 25 to 27 were never predicted to be antigenic. These
results strongly support
HVR1 conformation conservation among
HCV quasispecies variants and
isolates of the most frequent HCV
genotypes.
Prediction of HVR1 secondary structure.
The secondary
structures of HVR1 sequences were predicted by using a large set of
methods available at the NPSA website
(http://npsa-pbil.ibcp.fr) (14). A secondary
structure was consistently predicted for a segment comprised between
positions 16 and 20, but the predicted conformation state (
-helix or
-strand) varied according to the HVR1 sequence and the method used
(data not shown). The prediction scores for the two conformational
states were close, suggesting that, as reported for glucagon, for
instance (13), this HVR1 segment may be able to adopt
either conformation. A turn was predicted in the region comprised
between positions 21 and 24 in almost all the HVR1 sequences. Indeed,
most of the residues observed at these positions were those frequently
involved in
-turns, namely Pro, Gly, Asp, Asn, and Ser
(12). This turn might explain Gly conservation at position
23. In contrast, the 1 to 15 segment appears to be rich in small and
neutral residues and to be rather flexible. This flexibility, together
with the variability of the predicted conformation state in segment 16 to 20 (
-helix or
-strand), suggests that conformational changes
might occur in HVR1, possibly as a consequence of intermolecular interactions.
HVR1 amino acid composition.
The frequency of each of the 20 amino acids was calculated in the 1,382 HVR1 sequences and
compared with their average frequency in protein sequences from the
complete SWISS-PROT database (http://www.expasy.ch). Overall, with only 35% of hydrophobic residues versus 47% in the SWISS-PROT database, HVR1 tended to be hydrophilic. However, neutral residues were more frequent in HVR1 than in SWISS-PROT (42 and 20%,
respectively), whereas hydrophilic residues were less frequent (23 and
33%, respectively).
Examination of amino acid repertoires (Fig.
1B,
2A, and
3A and data not
shown) revealed that residues known to constrain polypeptide
conformation were uncommon in HVR1 sequences. Indeed, Cys (which
can
form disulfide bridges) and Trp were almost never present,
while Pro
was only observed at positions 22 and 24, both of which
are predicted
to be involved in a turn (see above). Large hydrophobic
residues were
rare, except at specific positions (positions 16,
19, and 20). In
contrast, small, flexible residues Ala, Gly, Thr,
and Ser were found at
most positions. As these residues are able
to adopt any conformation,
their presence might be required to
compensate for structural
constraints imposed by the large and
poorly flexible residues present
at certain
positions.
As the HVR1 sequences contained a large number of Thr, Ser, and Asn
residues, we checked the presence of putative N-glycosylation
sites, characterized by the N-{P}-[S,T]-{P} PROSITE
pattern (
http://www.expasy.ch/prosite/),
in the 1,382 EMBL HVR1
sequences. This analysis yielded only 13
hits, i.e., 0.9% of HVR1
variants, indicating a negative selection
of variants with
N-glycosylation sites in HVR1. Glycosylation
is known to reduce protein
accessibility by steric hindrance.
Thus, negative selection of variants
with N-glycosylation sites
suggests that HVR1 should remain accessible
at the surface of
the E2 envelope glycoprotein to be
functional.
HVR1 is a basic stretch.
Among the hydrophilic residues,
acidic ones (Asp and Glu) were much less frequent in HVR1 sequences
than in SWISS-PROT proteins (1.7 and 11.6%, respectively), whereas the
difference in the frequency of basic residues was weak (11.2 and 13.3%
for HVR1 and SWISS-PROT, respectively). This paucity of acidic residues
has already been noted by McAllister et al. (30). As a
result, the basic/acidic ratio was much higher in HVR1 than in common
proteins (6.50 instead of 1.15). Detailed analysis of the 1,382 EMBL
HVR1 sequences revealed that nearly all of them contained at least one
basic residue (Table 1); about 87% of
them contained two to four, including 41.2% that contained three, and
7% contained five or more. In contrast, only 41% of the examined HVR1
sequences contained acidic residues; the presence of two was rare
(6.5%) and that of three was exceptional (0.4%) (Table 1). Among the
1,382 HVR1 sequences, only 31 (2.2%) were globally neutral (i.e.,
contained the same number of acidic and basic residues), and only three
sequences (0.2%) were globally acidic. The remaining 1,348 HVR1
sequences (97.5%) were globally basic. Thus, HVR1 is intrinsically a
basic stretch.
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TABLE 1.
Number of acidic and basic residues among the 27 HVR1 amino acids in each of the 1,382 HVR1 sequences from the EMBL
database
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Basic residues are located at specific positions.
Figure
4A shows that acidic residues, when
present, were mainly found at position 1. The remaining acidic residues
were principally observed at positions 8, 12, and 27. Basic residues
were most frequently observed at positions 1, 3, 11, 14, 15, 25, and 27 (Fig. 4B). Interestingly, positions 3, 11, 14, 15, and 25 were almost
never occupied by acidic residues, whereas they correspond to variable
positions of HVR1 (see above). Moreover, 51, 77, 31, 13, 38, and 46%
of HVR1 sequences had a basic residue at positions 3, 11, 14, 15, 25, and 27, respectively. These positions are involved in the consensus
basic patterns observed among the 1,382 EMBL HVR1 sequences (Fig. 4C).
Although 311 different basic patterns were encountered in the 1,382 sequences, a small set of only 14 basic patterns accounted for 46% of
sequences (Fig. 4C), and the five most frequent patterns accounted for
28%. In addition, most of the remaining basic patterns were close to
the 14 most frequent and could thus be considered as variants of these
patterns. Taken together, these results clearly indicate that both
basic residues and basic patterns are conserved within the HVR1
sequence, arguing for positive selection of positively charged residues
in HVR1 and their involvement in a biological function.

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FIG. 4.
Frequency of acidic and basic residues and conserved
basic patterns in the 1,382 HVR1 sequences from EMBL. The frequency of
the residues at each position was calculated by dividing the number of
observed acidic or basic residues by the total number of examined
sequences (n = 1,382). (A) Frequency of acidic
residues. (B) Frequency of basic residues. (C) Fourteen most common
basic patterns among the 1,382 HVR1 sequences from EMBL. Basic residues
(Arg, Lys, and His) are represented by a B, while nonbasic residues are
represented by a hyphen. The observed frequency of each pattern is
given in the left-hand column.
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Role of HVR1 on the basis of conserved structural features.
Two complementary approaches-a prospective study of HVR1 quasispecies
evolution under strong pressure towards change and a retrospective
analysis of the largest available number of nonredundant HVR1
sequences-were used to assess the possible biological role of HVR1 on
the basis of conserved structural features. Comparison of 460 quasispecies sequences and 1,382 unrelated HVR1 sequences from the EMBL
database showed that amino acid changes in this region are strongly
constrained by a well-ordered structure that tolerates amino acid
substitutions as long as the chemicophysical properties of the residues
are conserved at specific positions. In addition, although the
frequency of basic residues in HVR1 was not statistically different
from that of the rest of HCV E2 (30), HVR1 appears to be
an intrinsic basic stretch with positively charged residues located at
specific positions determining specific basic motifs despite the
apparent hypervariability of residues. The principal structural
characteristics of HVR1 are summarized in Fig.
5.

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FIG. 5.
Summary of HVR1 structural analysis and predicted amino
acid functions. The HVR1 consensus hydropathic pattern was established
from the 1,382 HVR1 sequences from EMBL. o, n, i, and v, mean
hydrophobic, neutral, hydrophilic, and variable positions,
respectively; G is a fully conserved Gly residue. The black boxes
indicate the main anchoring regions, and the gray box indicates a
putative turn. The plus signs indicate positions often occupied by
basic residues.
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Experimental structural analysis of synthetic HVR1 peptides by circular
dichroism and nuclear magnetic resonance showed no
stable folding of
HVR1 alone (R. Montserret and F. Penin, unpublished
data). Therefore,
the stabilization of HVR1 conformation depends
on its interactions with
the rest of the E2 glycoprotein. Conservation
of the HVR1
conformation is supported by conservation of the hydropathic
characters
of amino acids at specific positions and the full conservation
of
predicted antigenicity profiles. We were able to define a
consensus
HVR1 hydropathic pattern distinguishing truly variable HVR1
positions
from positions exhibiting conserved hydropathic characters
despite
amino acid variability. In folded proteins, hydrophobic
residues
are generally oriented within the hydrophobic core of the
protein
and participate in maintaining protein-folding stability
(
15).
In contrast, hydrophilic residues are generally
located at the
protein surface and can be involved in molecular
interactions.
Our results suggest that HVR1 positions that bear
hydrophobic
and neutral residues likely play a role both in HVR1
anchorage
to the E2 glycoprotein core and in maintaining
the HVR1 conformation.
In contrast, variable positions and purely
hydrophilic positions
are probably accessible at the E2
glycoprotein surface and are
involved in molecular
interactions (Fig.
5). This type of organization
is similar to that of
immunoglobulins and T-cell receptor variable
domains. Indeed, these
latter can have very different sequences
but a highly conserved
conformation, as shown by 3D structural
analysis (
11,
22).
Furthermore, crystal structure analyses
of immunoglobulins have shown
that poorly variable regions are
framework regions, whereas variable
regions form the antigen binding
sites (
33). Thus, the
amino acid residues located at HVR1 truly
variable positions are very
likely involved both in HVR1 antigenicity
and in molecular
interactions.
The two viral glycoproteins E1 and E2 are considered to be
the major components of the viral envelope and form heterodimers
(
17). These heterodimers are probably involved in the
interaction
between HCV and molecules acting as receptors at the target
cell
surface. The molecules involved in HCV entry and the mechanisms
of
cell infection are unknown. It was recently shown that a truncated
form
of E2 can bind in vitro to the tetraspanin/CD81 molecule,
a ubiquitous
human cell surface molecule (
20,
38). The CD81
molecule
could therefore be involved in viral attachment, but
productive
infection has not yet been obtained through this interaction.
It has
also been shown that HCV associates with beta-lipoprotein
(
47) and has been proposed that the low-density
lipoprotein
(LDL) receptor could mediate internalization of HCV
particles
covered with LDL and very-low-density lipoprotein leading to
an
infectious cycle (
2). Again, productive infection has
not yet
been obtained after internalization through this pathway.
Finally,
it was recently suggested that HCV could interact with GAGs at
the cell surface (
45,
49). GAGs are unbranched
polysaccharides
ubiquitously present at the cell surface, acquiring a
net negative
charge through N and O sulfatation (
25).
Numerous viruses have
been shown to interact with GAGs (e.g., heparan
sulfate) in an
early step of virus-receptor interaction. This is the
case of
flaviviruses such as dengue virus (
10) and
pestiviruses such
as classical swine fever virus (
23),
both of which are members
of the
Flaviviridae family. An
early interaction between HCV and
cell surface GAGs could therefore
permit or facilitate viral attachment
to target
cells.
We found that basic residues are frequent in HVR1 sequences, whereas
acidic residues are rare, indicating that positively
charged HVR1
variants are positively selected. Moreover, not only
the global HVR1
conformation but also the number of basic residues
and their location
throughout the HVR1 sequence are conserved,
suggesting that basic
residues play an important role in HVR1
function. It is possible that
HVR1 basic residues could be involved
in interactions with negatively
charged groups borne by proteins
or phospholipids present at the cell
surface or in LDL. Alternatively,
HVR1 basic residues could be involved
in molecular interactions
with negatively charged molecules, such as
GAGs, present at the
cell surface. This is in agreement with the fact
that heparin-binding
domains are located in protein regions rich in
positively charged
residues that can exhibit specific consensus
structural motifs
(
7,
28). Other basic regions of the
viral envelope proteins
could also be involved in such interactions
with GAGs in association
with HVR1 (
49). Further work is
in progress to test HVR1-GAG
interaction using isolated E1-E2
glycoproteins deleted or not
for the HVR1
sequence.
The existence of extrahepatic sites of HCV replication remains
controversial (
27). It is, however, supported by the
observed
compartmentalization of HCV quasispecies variants in the
liver,
peripheral blood, and various peripheral blood mononuclear cell
subsets in a given patient (
1,
6,
27,
32). Typically,
HVR1
sequences are not randomly distributed among the different
cellular
compartments, including the liver and various peripheral
blood
mononuclear cell subsets (
1,
6,
27,
32), and the
basic
HVR1 motifs differ among different compartments (
1).
This
suggests that HVR1 might be involved in selective cell recognition.
At
the cell surface, the specificity of the interaction cannot
be ascribed
to putative receptor molecules such as CD81 and the
LDL receptor, which
are ubiquitously distributed. In contrast,
GAGs exhibit significant
cellular specificity. Interaction of
HVR1 basic residues with GAGs at
the surface of target cells equipped
with the appropriate receptor
molecules might therefore play a
role in the tropism of HCV variants in
vivo. HVR1 hypervariability
might thus not only result from host immune
pressure but might
also allow HCV to adapt to various cell phenotypes
in a given
host.
In conclusion, the present evolutionary and chemicophysical study
clearly indicates that the conformation of hypervariable
region 1 of
HCV envelope glycoprotein E2 is well conserved, pointing
to
a biological role in the virus life cycle. Conservation of
positively
charged amino acid residues at specific positions further
suggests that
HVR1 likely interacts with negatively charged compounds,
such as
lipids, proteins, and GAGs, and might be involved in target
cell
recognition and virus
attachment.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
We thank Daniel Dhumeaux for providing patients' samples and
Alexandre Soulier for excellent technical assistance in quasispecies studies. We are also grateful to Jean Dubuisson and Geneviève Inchauspé for their critical reviews of the manuscript.
This work was supported by the Centre National pour la Recherche
Scientifique, EU grant QLK2-1999-00356, and grant 1178 from the
Association pour la Recherche sur le Cancer (F.P., C.C., and G.D.), by
grant AOM 96-136 from the Programme Hospitalier de Recherche Clinique
(G.G., P.-O.F., and J.-M.P.), and the Réseau National Hépatite of the French Ministry for Education, Research, and Technology.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: IBCP-CNRS, 7 Passage du Vercors, 69367 Lyon Cedex 07, France. Phone: 33 (4)
72722648. Fax: 33 (4) 72722604. E-mail: f.penin{at}ibcp.fr.
Present address: First Department of Medicine, Papageorgiou General
Hospital, Thessaloniki 564-29, Greece.
 |
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Journal of Virology, June 2001, p. 5703-5710, Vol. 75, No. 12
0022-538X/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JVI.75.12.5703-5710.2001
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