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Journal of Virology, March 2001, p. 2634-2645, Vol. 75, No. 6
0022-538X/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JVI.75.6.2634-2645.2001
Copyright © 2001, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Modified FGF4 Signal Peptide Inhibits Entry of
Herpes Simplex Virus Type 1
Hermann
Bultmann,1
James S.
Busse,2 and
Curtis R.
Brandt1,3,*
Department of Ophthalmology and Visual
Sciences1 and Department of Medical
Microbiology and Immunology,3 Medical School,
and Department of Biochemistry, College of Agriculture and Life
Sciences,2 University of Wisconsin
Madison,
Madison, Wisconsin
Received 31 July 2000/Accepted 14 December 2000
 |
ABSTRACT |
Entry of herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) into host cells occurs
through fusion of the viral envelope with the plasma membrane and
involves complex and poorly understood interactions between several
viral and cellular proteins. One strategy for dissecting the function
of this fusion machine is through the use of specific inhibitors. We
identified a peptide with antiviral activity that blocks HSV-1
infection at the entry stage and during cell-to-cell spreading. This
peptide (called EB for "entry blocker") consists of the FGF4 signal
sequence with an RRKK tetramer at the amino terminus to improve
solubility. The activity of EB depends exclusively but not canonically
on the signal sequence. Inhibition of virus entry (hrR3)
and plaque formation (KOS) strongly depend on virus concentrations and
serum addition, with 50% inhibitory concentrations typically ranging
from 1 to 10 µM. Blocking preadsorbed virus requires higher EB
concentrations. Cytotoxic effects (trypan blue exclusion) are first
noted at 50 µM EB in serum-free medium and at
200 µM in the
presence of serum. EB does not affect gC-dependent mechanisms of virus
attachment and does not block virus attachment at 4°C. Instead, EB
directly interacts with virions and inactivates them irreversibly
without, however, disrupting their physical integrity as judged by
electron microscopy. At subvirucidal concentrations, EB changes the
adhesive properties of virions, causing aggregation at high virus
concentrations. This peptide may be a useful tool for studying viral
entry mechanisms.
 |
INTRODUCTION |
Herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1)
is a significant human pathogen causing mucocutaneous lesions primarily
in the oral mucosa but also in other sites as well. More serious
manifestations of HSV-1 infection include encephalitis and blinding
keratitis. Indeed, HSV-1 is the leading cause of sporadic viral
encephalitis and the leading cause of blindness due to infection in the
United States (65). HSV-1 also has the capacity to
latently infect the host, with important consequences for transmission,
treatment, and difficulties in eradication of the latent infection.
Obtaining more precise information about many aspects of the viral life cycle is critical for designing prevention and intervention strategies. One critical aspect of the life cycle is the ability of HSV to enter
host cells. Previous studies have shown that entry occurs at the cell
surface due to fusion of the viral envelope with the plasma membrane of
the cell (54). The combined processes of attachment and
entry involve a number of components and require a number of steps.
This complexity makes the study of these processes exceedingly difficult.
HSV encodes at least 12 glycoproteins, 10 of which are structural
components of the viral envelope (54). Of these, five are
clearly involved in attachment and entry. The proteins involved in
attachment and entry are gC, gB, gD, and a complex of the gH and gL
proteins (4, 10, 13, 21, 24, 25, 31, 34, 38, 47, 62). Of
these five, four (gB, gD, gH, and gL) are essential in that their loss
results in noninfectious virus. The one nonessential protein, gC, is
likely to be nonessential only in cell culture. Under circumstances of
a natural infection, gC is likely to be essential because of its
greater receptor binding activity (22), its ability to
enhance the infectivity of the virus (21), and its role in
infection via apical rather than basolateral surfaces of epithelial
cells (50). Other glycoproteins (e.g., gE and gI) appear
to be involved in egress or cell-to-cell spreading (54).
The initial attachment of HSV to cells occurs primarily through binding
of gC to heparan sulfate proteoglycans (HSPG) (5, 21, 23, 30, 33,
52, 53, 57). In the absence of gC, gB mediates binding to HSPG,
but the specific infectivity is substantially reduced (21,
22). In the absence of HSPG, virus can bind to chondroitin
sulfate proteoglycan with lower efficiency, but the significance of
this is not clear (2). The function of the heparin binding
of gB is unknown. In addition to the glycoproteins, the product of the
UL45 gene is located in the envelope (7, 60) and may also
be involved in regulating the functions of gB (18).
Using a variety of methods, several studies have shown that gB, gD, and
gH/gL are required for fusion (reviewed in reference 54).
It appears that gB, gD, and gH/gL together are necessary and sufficient
to mediate membrane fusion (59), suggesting these proteins
work together as a fusion machine (64). The gL protein is
required for proper folding, processing, and surface expression of gH
but, to date, does not appear to be specifically involved in fusion
(10, 25, 47, 62). Of the fusion proteins, the potential
role of gD has been characterized best. Several studies indicate that
gD binds to cell surface proteins (coreceptors). These include
observations that soluble gD inhibits infection (14, 40,
57) and that cells expressing gD are resistant to infection
(26). Expression cloning studies have been used to
identify the host cell coreceptors that interact with gD. Four different gD binding coreceptors (HveA to HveD) have been identified and appear to function in different cell types (39, 41,
63). The Prr1 (HveC) protein may be the main cell mediator of
HSV-1 entry, since it is widely distributed on several cell types
(15, 29).
The molecular mechanisms by which gB and gH/gL participate in entry and
fusion are unknown, except that the UL45 protein may regulate the
fusogenic activity of gB during entry (18). Neutralizing monoclonal antibodies to gB or gH/gL block entry but not attachment, and virions lacking these proteins bind but do not enter cells (10, 13, 24, 31, 38, 47, 54). Cross-linking studies have
also shown that during entry, interactions between gB, gH, and gD occur
and are in flux during the process, but the significance of these
interactions is presently not clear (20).
One strategy for dissecting the functions of gB, gH, and gD in the
entry process is to use specific inhibitors. Compounds with antiviral
activity have proven to be useful tools for studying the functions of
their targets. For example, inhibitors of HSV polymerase and thymidine
kinase have been used to identify active site residues and have
contributed greatly to our understanding of catalytic mechanisms.
(8, 16, 19, 28, 35, 48). There are few known inhibitors of
HSV attachment and entry. The majority, such as soluble heparan
sulfate, primarily block attachment and have been useful in
understanding this process. If specific inhibitors of fusion and entry
could be identified, discovery of their targets and mechanism of
inhibition would provide important details for explaining the processes involved.
In a project originally designed to determine if peptides with the
ability to enter cells could be used to deliver poorly penetrating
antiviral peptides, we discovered a peptide with antiviral activity,
which blocks the entry and fusion steps of HSV-1 infection. This
peptide consists of the 16-amino-acid FGF4 signal peptide with an RRKK
tetramer attached to its amino-terminal end to improve solubility in
aqueous solutions. Earlier studies had shown that the FGF4 signal
peptide (32) is one of several unrelated peptides that can
penetrate membranes and deliver potentially useful covalently linked
molecules into cells (1, 9, 11, 43-45, 49, 58, 61). Here
we show that the modified FGF4 signal peptide, called EB (for entry
blocker) inhibits HSV-1 entry whereas a scrambled sequence peptide
(EBX) is significantly less active. This peptide may serve as a useful
tool for studying the entry and fusion process in HSV-1 infection.
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Cell culture and virus.
The procedures for growing Vero
cells and preparing high-titer stocks of HSV-1 KOS have been described
previously (17). Vero cells were maintained in
carbonate-buffered Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium (DMEM)
supplemented with 5% calf serum and 5% fetal bovine serum (regular
medium). For some studies, cells were switched to serum-free DMEM
buffered with 25 mM HEPES (pH 7.4) and allowed to adapt to that medium
for 30 min prior to experimental treatments. Vero cells were seeded
into wells (0.28 cm2) of microtiter plates either at
3.5 × 104 cells/well for use 1 day later (8 × 104 cells/well) or at 1 × 104 cells/well
for use 3 days later (2 × 105 cells/well). The
gC-null mutant HSV-1 KOS
gC2-1 has a deletion of 900 bp of gC coding
sequence between two NaeI sites with a concurrent insertion
of the Escherichia coli lacZ gene. The gC+
revertant HSV-1 KOS
gC2-3rev was generated by replacing the
lacZ insertion of HSV-1 KOS
gC2-3 with wild-type gC
sequence by marker transfer. The construction and characterization of
these viruses has been described previously (2, 22).
Plaque reduction assay.
Confluent Vero cell cultures in
microtiter plates were infected for 1 h at 37°C in 40 µl of medium.
Except where indicated, peptide treatments in 40 µl of medium lasted
from 1 h before through 1 h after infection. At the end of
the adsorption period, the cultures were refed with 100 µl of regular
medium. Plaque formation was scored 2 days later, and the number of
plaques scored per well was normalized to the number counted in the
absence of peptide. Using an ocular micrometer, plaque size (
/2 × L × S) was determined by measuring the
largest plaque diameter (L) and the diameter at a 90°
angle to that (S). The size of each of the first 40 scored plaques was measured, except when a plaque included less than 10 rounded cells or touched the side of the well.
Yield reduction assay.
At 3 days postinfection, Vero cell
cultures in microtiter plates were frozen (
80°C) and thawed
(37°C) three times. The cells were suspended by repeated pipetting,
and microtiter plates were centrifuged for 10 min at 700 × g in a Beckman model TJ-6 tabletop centrifuge. The
virus-containing supernatant were serially diluted in regular medium
and subjected to titer determination on Vero cells. Plaques were
counted after the monolayers were stained with crystal violet
(17).
Attachment assay.
HSV-1 KOS was labeled with
[32P]orthophosphate to a specific activity of 0.01 cpm/PFU. Briefly, Vero cells were infected at a multiplicity of
infection (MOI) of 5.0 and [32P]orthophosphate (0.5 mCi/ml) was added 6 h postinfection. At 18 h postinfection,
the cells and culture medium were harvested separately. The cells were
subjected to three freeze-thaw cycles, and cell debris was pelleted by
centrifugation at 2,000 × g for 10 min. The
freeze-thaw supernatant was combined with the medium, and virus was
pelleted by centrifugation through a 26% sucrose gradient cushion
(60). The viral pellet was resuspended in
phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) for use. Confluent Vero cell cultures
in microtiter plates were switched to serum-free DMEM, chilled on ice,
and maintained at 4°C. After 30 min, peptides were added, and 60 min
later the cells were incubated for 2 h with
32P-labeled virus (2 × 104 cpm/well).
After labeling, the cells were rinsed with ice-cold medium. Bound
32P was then quantitatively extracted with 1% sodium
dodecyl sulfate-1% Triton X-100 in PBS and counted in a Beckman
LS5801 liquid scintillation counter.
lacZ+ virus (hrR3) entry
assay.
Confluent Vero cell cultures in 96-well microtiter plates
were switched to HEPES-buffered serum-free DMEM, cooled on ice to 4°C
for 30 min, and infected with hrR3 for 1 h at 4°C in
40 µl of medium. Unattached virus was removed by rinsing the mixture with ice-cold medium. Treatments with EB or EBX (Table
1) or mock treatments with peptide-free
medium were carried out in serum-free DMEM as indicated. Virus entry
was initiated by transferring cultures to 37°C. To inactivate any
remaining extracellular virus, the cultures were rinsed with PBS and
exposed to low-pH citrate buffer (40 mM citric acid, 10 mM KCl, 135 mM
NaCl [pH 3.0]) (24) for 1 min at 23°C. The citrate was
rinsed off with PBS, and cultures were maintained in serum-supplemented
DMEM until they were fixed with 0.5% gluteraldehyde in 5× PBS for 30 min at 23°C; stained for
-galactosidase activity for 1 h or
overnight at 23°C with 5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolyl-
-D-galactopyranoside (X-Gal)
(Fisher Biotech; BP1615-1) in 1× PBS containing 2 µM
MgCl2, 1.3 mM K4Fe(CN)6, and 1.3 mM
K3Fe(CN)6; and scored for the presence of blue
lacZ+ cells.
Virucidal assay.
hrR3 (1.2 × 106 PFU/ml) was incubated with various concentrations of EB
or EBX for 1 h at 37°C in 70 µl of serum-free DMEM (pH 7.4).
The treated virus was diluted 200-fold with serum-supplemented DMEM and
assayed for infectivity approximately 1 h later in microtiter wells seeded with Vero cells (3.5 × 104 cells/well) 1 day earlier. Then 40- or 100-µl volumes of diluted virus were
adsorbed for 1 or 2 h at 37°C, and lacZ+
cells were scored 8 h later. In some experiments, aliquots of diluted
virus were first dialyzed (Spectra/Por; molecular weight cutoff, 12,000 to 14,000) overnight at 4°C against a 60-fold excess volume of
HEPES-buffered serum-supplemented DMEM or forced by syringe through
0.22-µm-pore-size membranes (Millex-GV; Millipore) before the
remaining infectious virus was assayed.
Trypan blue exclusion assay.
Uninfected Vero cells in
serum-free or serum-supplemented DMEM were treated for 1 h at
37°C with EB or EBX, rinsed with PBS, stained for 5 min at 23°C
with 0.4% trypan blue in PBS, rinsed again with PBS, and air dried.
Electron microscopy.
Purified HSV-1 KOS virions (2.5 × 107 PFU/ml) (60) were treated for 5 to 60 min
at 4 or 23°C with 25 µM EB or the control peptide (EBX) in 40 µl
of serum-free DMEM buffered with 25 mM HEPES (pH 7.4). Aliquots (10 µl) were adsorbed to pioloform poly-L-lysine-coated grids
for 5 min at 23°C. The grids were rinsed with PBS, stained with 2%
phosphotungstic acid (PTA) in water adjusted to pH
6, and air
dried. Alternatively, virus was preadsorbed to grids and treated with
peptides thereafter. A total of 4 × 109 PFU of
purified HSV-1 KOS per ml in 5 µl of PBS was applied to the coated
grids for 5 min at 23°C, and the grids were rinsed once with
serum-free DMEM buffered with 25 mM HEPES (pH 7.4) and treated with 15 µl of 5 mM EB or EBX in the same medium for 30 min at 37°C. The pH
of highly concentrated solutions of EB and EBX was readjusted to 7.4 with NaOH prior to use. To prevent evaporation of the
peptide-containing solutions, each grid was held in a Hiraoka flexible
staining plate and covered with a miniature bell jar made from a 0.5-ml
polypropylene microcentrifuge tube, small enough for the 15 µl to
fill half of the bell jar facing the coated surface of the grid. The
entire assembly was then incubated in a moist chamber for 30 min at
37°C. After treatment, grids were rinsed twice with DMEM and once
with PBS before they were stained with PTA and dried. Grids were
examined in a JEOL JEM-1200EX electron microscope at magnifications of
×15,000 and ×40,000.
Peptide synthesis.
Synthesis and analysis of peptides were
done at the Biotechnology Center of the University of
Wisconsin
Madison. Synthesis was carried out at a 25-pmol scale using
an automated synthesizer (Applied Biosystems model 432A "Synergy")
following the principles initially described by Merrifield
(37) with modifications by Meienhofer et al.
(36) and Fields et al. (12). The cleaved peptides were precipitated with cold t-butylmethylether,
dissolved in water, and examined by analytical high-pressure liquid
chromatography (purity) and electrospray ionization mass spectroscopy
(molecular mass) (Table 1). Peptide concentrations in solution were
determined from absorbance readings at 215 and 225 nm
(51).
 |
RESULTS |
Antiviral activity of peptides.
The EB peptide, consisting of
the RRKK tetrapeptide attached to the FGF4 signal sequence (sequence
data are given in Table 1) was an effective antiviral agent when
present during infection of Vero cell cultures with HSV-1 KOS, blocking
plaque formation (Fig. 1A and B,
) and
reducing virus yields by up to 8 orders of magnitude depending on the
concentration (see below). Compared to the EBX peptide (Fig. 1A and B,
), in which the RRKK tetrapeptide was attached to a scrambled
version of the signal sequence, the EB peptide was a far more effective
antiviral, blocking infections at 10- or 100-fold-lower concentrations
depending on the presence (Fig. 1A) or absence (Fig. 1B) of serum.

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FIG. 1.
Specific antiviral and cytotoxic effects of EB and
related peptides. (A and B) Antiviral activities of EB ( ), EBX
( ), and RRKK ( ) were compared in serum-supplemented (A) or
serum-free (B) DMEM using cell cultures (2 × 105
cells/well) infected with 4000 PFU of HSV-1 KOS per well and scored for
plaque formation 2 days later (control scores; 25 ± 2.5 plaques/well; n 3). Note that the effectiveness of
the EB peptide ( ) strongly depended on the presence of serum
(IC50 = 6.4 µM [A] versus IC50 = 0.7 µM [B]) whereas that of the EBX peptide ( ) did not
(IC50 = 77 [A] versus IC50 = 64 [B]). (C) Cytotoxic effects were measured in uninfected cells. In
serum-free medium, EB inhibited trypan blue exclusion in 50% of the
cells at 68 µM ( ) whereas EBX had no effect ( ). In
serum-supplemented medium, nearly all the cytotoxic effects of EB were
alleviated ( ). (D) Antiviral activities of EB (IC50 = 2.1 µM [ ]) and EBPP (IC50 = 1.1 µM [ ])
were compared in serum-free DMEM in cultures (2 × 105
cells/well) infected with 5,000 PFU of HSV-1 KOS per well. Control
scores were 35 ± 3.6 plaques/well (n = 4). All
points are means of three to six determinations with standard errors of
the means.
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|
The cytotoxic effects of EB, as measured by trypan blue exclusion in
the absence of serum, were seen only at concentrations
100-fold higher
(Fig.
1C,

; 50% inhibitory concentration [IC
50]
= 68 µM) than antiviral concentrations (Fig.
1B,

;
IC
50 = 0.7
µM). In the presence of serum, cytotoxic
effects were seen first
at 200 µM EB (Fig.
1C,

). No cytotoxic
effects were associated
with the EBX peptide (Fig.
1C,

).
The charged amino-terminal RRKK tetramer is critical for enhancing the
solubility of the otherwise hydrophobic EB peptide
but does not have
any important antiviral activity by itself.
In the presence of serum,
no antiviral activity was associated
with the free RRKK tetramer at
concentrations as high as 200 µM
(Fig.
1A,

). In separate
experiments, we found that free RRKK
tetramer inhibited
hrR3
infection of Vero cells under serum-free
conditions at an
IC
50 of 1.3 mM (data not shown). We also found
that high
(up to 100-fold molar excess) but nonantiviral concentrations
of the
free RRKK peptide did not compete with EB activity and
could not
relieve the inhibition of
hrR3 infections due to EB
(data
not shown). Together with the results obtained with the
scrambled EBX
control peptide, we conclude that the antiviral
activity of EB is
associated primarily, if not exclusively, with
the FGF4 signal peptide
in a sequence-specific
manner.
To inquire whether the FGF4 sequence per se was important for antiviral
activity, we tested a modified EB peptide in which
the central proline
residue was moved to the carboxy-terminal
end. This EBPP peptide (Table
1) was twice as active as the original
EB peptide in both plaque (Fig.
1D) and yield (data not shown)
reduction assays. Since all other
residues (except for proline)
are compatible with

-helicity
(
6), this suggests that a more
compact

-helical (EBPP)
or partially

-helical (EB) peptide is
more efficient than a peptide
with two (EBX) internal proline
residues.
EB acts early in the viral life cycle.
To determine
whether EB acted before or after attachment and entry, we studied the
effect of varying the time of peptide addition. As shown in Fig.
2A, EB was substantially more effective
when present during infection and 1 h pre- and postinfection than
when present continuously starting 1 hour postinfection
(IC50 = 5.5 µM [
] and 24 µM [
],
respectively). Furthermore, when present before and during
adsorption, EB had no effect on plaque size. When the EB peptide
was present continuously after infection, plaque expansion was
inhibited in a dose-dependent manner (Fig. 2A,
;
IC50 = 12 µM). To ensure that individual plaques
were measured reliably, cell cultures were infected at very low
multiplicity (MOI < 0.01) and plaque sizes were measured
microscopically very early (1 day postinfection). As shown in Fig. 2B,
in untreated control wells, the plaque size was broadly distributed
(black bars; mean: 66,000 ± 6,200 µm2) whereas
addition of increasing concentrations of EB 1 h postinfection progressively shifted the distribution toward smaller size classes (e.g., 25 µM EB significantly reduced the mean plaque size by 70% to
6,900 ± 2,600 µm2; t = 6.88; shaded
bars). In contrast, the presence of EB up to 1 h postinfection had
no effect on plaque size, even though the number of plaques was
severely reduced compared to that found for postinfection treatment.
Thus, the combined mean plaque size after transient treatments with 6 and 12 µM EB (68,000 ± 11,000 µm2) was
indistinguishable from the controls. In conclusion, EB appeared to act
at an early stage of viral infection and reduced the plaque size when
added after infection.

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FIG. 2.
Postinfection treatment with EB blocks viral
cell-to-cell spreading. (A) Cell cultures (8 × 104
cells/well) in serum-supplemented DMEM were infected with HSV-1 KOS
(700 PFU/well). EB either was added 1 h postinfection and remained
present throughout the experiment ( and ) or was present from
1 h before until 1 h after infection ( ). One day later,
the cells were fixed in 10% formaldehyde in PBS and the number of
plaques were scored ( and ; control score, 13 ± 1.7;
[n = 6]) and their size was determined ( ). All
data points are means of triplicate measurements with standard errors
of the means. (B) The distribution of plaque size in untreated controls
(black bars) and in cultures treated postinfection with 25 µM EB
(shaded bars) is shown.
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Pretreatment of cells with EB does not inhibit infection.
To
determine whether EB also blocked infection by interacting with cell
surface components of host cells, we examined the effects of
pretreating cells with EB on subsequent infections with the
lacZ expressing hrR3 virus. To avoid interactions
of EB with serum components, pretreatments of cells were done in serum-free medium. In the first experiment, cells were pretreated with
various concentrations of EB, rinsed to remove the peptide, and then
infected with hrR3 in the absence of EB.
lacZ+ cells were scored 8 h later. As shown
in Fig. 3 (
and
), pretreatments of
cells with EB inhibited subsequent virus infections in the absence of
EB, with an apparent IC50 = 29 µM irrespective of
the presence (
) or absence (
) of serum during rinses and
infections. These results are consistent with the notion that cellular
interactions of EB contribute to antiviral activity. However,
interpretation of the data is confounded by cytotoxic effects of EB at
concentrations
50 µM (Fig. 1C,
). Only the 20 to 40% inhibition
seen at 25 µM EB could possibly be attributed to any specific
cell-mediated antiviral activity.

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FIG. 3.
Effect of pretreating cells with EB on subsequent virus
infection. Cell cultures (2 × 105 cells/well) in
microtiter wells were switched to serum-free HEPES-buffered DMEM and
incubated for 30 min at 37°C. A first set of cells were then
pretreated for 1 h with EB, rinsed three times, and infected for
1 h with 7,400 PFU of hrR3 per well before they were
returned to regular medium. Rinses and infections were carried out in
the absence of EB in either serum-free ( ) or serum-supplemented
( ) DMEM. A second set of cells was pretreated for 1 h with
( ) or without ( ) EB and infected for 1 h with 7,400 PFU of
hrR3 per well in the presence of EB before they were
returned to regular medium. Triplicate counts of
lacZ+ cells were performed 8 h postinfection
(all points are means with standard errors of the means; control score,
265 ± 13 [n = 3]).
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To avoid the problem of cytotoxicity, we reexamined the effects of
cellular pretreatments with EB in cultures that were subsequently
infected with
hrR3 in the presence of various EB
concentrations.
In this second experiment, both, pretreatments and
infections
were done in serum-free medium. As shown in Fig.
3 (

),
the presence
of EB during infection alone shifted the IC
50
to 7 µM. The additional
pretreatment of cells with EB, however, was
completely ineffective
(Fig.
3,

), indicating that interactions of
EB with cells just
prior to infection could at best make only a minor
contribution
to the antiviral activity of the
peptide.
EB does not block virus adsorption.
To measure the effect of
EB on adsorption, the binding of 32P-labeled virus to live
or formaldehyde-fixed cells was measured in binding assays carried out
at 4°C essentially as we described previously (2, 22).
As expected (22, 67), soluble heparin inhibited virus
adsorption by as much as 75% in this assay (Fig. 4A,
and
). EB, however, had no
inhibitory effect. Instead, it actually enhanced binding, maximally
about 2.5-fold, at concentrations between 10 and 50 µM (Fig. 4A,
and
), although in comparable assays viral yields were severely
reduced at these concentrations of EB (Fig. 5B). The EBX peptide
neither inhibited nor enhanced 32P-labeled virus binding to
cells (Fig. 4A,
).

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FIG. 4.
Effect of EB on virus adsorption. (A) Live (solid
symbols) and formaldehyde-fixed (open symbols) cells (2 × 105 cells/well) were exposed to 32P-labeled
HSV-1 KOS (2 × 104 cpm/well; 0.01 cpm/PFU) in the
presence of EB ( and ), EBX ( ), or heparin ( and ), and
the bound labeled was extracted and counted (100% corresponds to
~1.8 × 103 cpm/well). (B) Under identical
conditions, cells were also infected with unlabeled HSV-1 KOS (2 × 106 PFU/well) and then returned to regular medium for 3 days before the effect of EB on virus yields was measured. Inhibition
of virus production (IC50 10 µM) coincides with
maximal EB-induced virus binding (10 to 50 µM). All data points in
are means of triplicate measurements with standard errors of the means
(error bars are mostly smaller than the symbols).
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Since the initial attachment of HSV-1 to cells occurs by gC binding to
heparan sulfate on the cell surface, we measured the
antiviral activity
of EB on a gC-null virus (HSV-1 KOS

gC2-3)
previously constructed in
our laboratory (
2,
22). A revertant,
HSV-1 KOS

gC2-3rev,
served as a control. As shown in Fig.
5,
with
increasing concentration of EB, the yield reductions of the gC
mutant and the revertant were essentially the same
(IC
50 
5 µM)
and comparable to the results
obtained in plaque reduction assays
with wild-type virus (Fig.
1A,

). It seems clear, therefore,
that EB does not require gC for
blocking infection, which supports
the general conclusion that EB does
not target virus adsorption
to exert its inhibitory effect.

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FIG. 5.
EB inhibits gC-deficient virus. Cell cultures (8 × 104 cells/well) in serum-supplemented DMEM were infected
for 1 h with 4.7 × 103 PFU of the gC-deficient
HSV-1 KOS gC2-3 per well ( ) or 3.5 × 103 PFU of
a wild-type revertant, HSV-1 KOS gC2-3 rev per well ( ), and viral
yields were measured 3 days later. EB was added to the cultures 1 h prior to infection and remained present throughout the experiment.
All data points represent means of triplicate measurements with
standard errors of the means.
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EB can aggregate virus.
To test whether the enhancing effects
of EB on virus binding were due to aggregation of virus, we examined
EB-treated virions by electron microscopy. When purified virus
particles at high concentrations, as required for efficient
visualization, were incubated with 25 µM EB, adsorbed to coated
grids, and stained with PTA, nearly all of the particles were seen in
relatively few large aggregates (Fig.
6A). In contrast, untreated virus (data not shown) or virus particles treated with 25 µM EBX were nearly all
found individually and uniformly scattered over the grid surface (Fig.
6B). The individual PTA-stained virus particles within aggregates were
virtually indistinguishable from control particles, indicating that EB
did not induce gross structural abnormalities in the virus particles.
The EB-induced aggregates were formed rapidly (<5 min) at room
temperature as well as at 4°C (data not shown).

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FIG. 6.
EB promotes virus aggregation. Purified HSV-1 KOS
(2.5 × 107 PFU) was exposed to 25 µM EB (A) or EBX
(B) for 1 h at 23°C in serum-free DMEM. Aliquots (10 µl) were
applied to coated grids, and the grids were stained with PTA. The
electron micrographs compare EB-treated aggregated virus (A) with
nonaggregated EBX-treated virus (B) particles.
|
|
The antiviral activity of EB varies with virus input and is
distinct from aggregation effects.
Initial results with wild-type
virus had shown that the antiviral activity of EB was strongly
dependent on the virus titer used for infection (data not shown). To
further examine the effect of viral input, cultures were infected with
hrR3 at inputs of 19,210, and 5,700 PFU/well in the presence
of various concentrations of EB and scored 8 h later for
lacZ+ cells; the IC50s obtained were
0.66, 1.2, and 11 µM, respectively (Fig.
7).

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FIG. 7.
The antiviral activity of EB depends on virus input.
Cell cultures (2 × 105 cells/well) were switched to
serum-free DMEM and infected with 19 ( ), 210 ( ), or 5,700 PFU
( ) of hrR3 per well EB was present from 1 h before
through 1 h after infection. lacZ+ cells
were scored 8 h postinfection. All data points are means of
triplicate measurements with standard errors of the means. The insert
shows the dependence of IC50s (0.66, 1.2, and 11 µM,
respectively) on the virus inputs.
|
|
Significantly, above the intermediate input of 210 PFU/well, there was
a greater increase in the IC
50 with increasing virus
titer
than below that input (inset in Fig.
7). The inverse relationship
between IC
50 and virus titer would be expected if EB merely
acted
as an aggregation agent, which should operate more efficiently,
i.e., with lower IC
50, at the higher virus input. We
conclude,
therefore, that viral aggregation does not make any major
contribution
to the antiviral activity of EB in these experiments.
Furthermore,
the fact that the antiviral activity of EB strongly
depended on
the virus concentrations suggests that the EB peptide
interacts
with viral
components.
EB inhibits viral entry.
Additional studies with
preadsorbed hrR3 virus demonstrated that the antiviral
effect or effects of EB are related neither to virus adsorption nor to
virus aggregation but, rather, to inhibition of virus entry. In these
studies, the hrR3 virus was preadsorbed to cells for 1 h at 4°C before ice-cold 25 µM EB or EBX was added in serum-free
DMEM. After an additional 1 h at 4°C, the cultures were shifted to
37°C to initiate virus entry. At 15-min intervals following the
temperature shift, any virus remaining outside the cells was
inactivated by washing the cultures with low-pH citrate buffer. The
cultures were then rinsed and returned to peptide-free serum-supplemented DMEM until they were fixed and stained for
-galactosidase 8 h after the temperature shift.
As shown in Fig.
8A, virus entry in
mock-treated control cultures (

) was initiated 15 to 30 min after
transfer to 37°C and
was completed by about 60 min at a level of
about 340
lacZ+ cells per 6.5 mm
2
(or 1,450
lacZ+ cells/well). In cultures treated
with the EB peptide, the number
of
lacZ+ cells
was reduced by >90% (

). The EBX peptide did not significantly
reduce the number of
lacZ+ cells (

).
Essentially the same results were obtained when EB
and EBX were added
prior to virus adsorption (data not shown).
When peptide was added
immediately after each citrate treatment,
EB no longer had any effect
on the development of
lacZ+ cells (Fig.
8B,

;
cf. Fig.
8A,

). EBX also did not significantly
inhibit the
development of
lacZ+ cells when added
immediately after the citrate treatments (Fig.
8B,

). Thus, EB had
no effect on the expression of the
lacZ gene
from the early
ICP6 promoter but selectively blocked viral entry.

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FIG. 8.
EB blocks virus entry. Virus (2.6 × 103 PFU of hrR3 per well) was preadsorbed for
1 h at 4°C to Vero cells (2 × 105 cells/well
in 96-well microtiter strip plates), and the cultures were switched to
ice-cold serum-free DMEM and kept for an additional 1 h at 4°C
before they were transferred to 37°C to initiate virus entry. Every
15 min following the temperature switch, strips of wells were treated
for 1 min with low-pH citrate buffer to inactivate any remaining
extracellular virus. After each citrate treatment, cultures were
returned to serum-supplemented medium. (A) EB ( ) or EBX ( ) at 25 µM was added immediately after preadsorption of the virus and
remained present until the citrate treatment. Mock-treated controls
were kept in peptide-free medium ( ). (B) EB ( ) or EBX ( ) at 50 µM was added immediately after each citrate treatment and remained
present until all cultures were fixed and stained for -galactosidase
8 h after the temperature shift to 37°C. Blue cells in areas of
6.5 mm2 were counted in triplicate wells. All data points
are means with standard errors of the means.
|
|
This conclusion is strengthened by the finding that the EB-sensitive
phase of infection with preadsorbed virus clearly precedes
the
expression of
lacZ genes in
hrR3-infected cells
(Fig.
9A).
Again,
hrR3 was preadsorbed to cells for 1 h
at 4°C, unattached
virus was rinsed off, and the cells were kept for
an additional
1 h at 4°C. Cultures were then transferred to
23°C for 30 min
before they were switched to 37°C. The more gradual
change to
37°C allowed cell layers to remain intact through
subsequent frequent
medium changes. Immediately following viral
adsorption, cells
were treated with 50 µM EB for 1-h periods at
consecutive 1-h
intervals. Between 1 and 4 h postinfection, virus
entry was inhibited
by 70 to 80%. Thereafter, infection was no longer
significantly
inhibited (Fig.
9B,

).
Parallel cultures were immediately fixed
after mock treatments and
stained with X-Gal. In these cultures,
blue
(
lacZ+) cells first appeared 7 h
postinfection and their number increased
nearly linearly for the next 3 h (Fig.
9A,

). By 7 h postinfection,
EB ceased to be
inhibitory. Thus, EB blocked virus entry only
during an early brief
sensitive period and had no effect on the
expression of the
lacZ gene and the development of

-galactosidase
activity
once the virus had entered the cell. As shown in Fig.
9B, EB inhibited
the entry of preadsorbed virus in a dose-dependent
manner with an
IC
50 = 15 µM (

), whereas EBX was less effective
(IC
50 
100 µM;

).

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FIG. 9.
Entry phase and dose response. (A) Cell cultures (2 × 105 cells/well) in 96-well strip plates were switched to
HEPES-buffered serum-supplemented DMEM, cooled on ice for 30 min, and
infected at 4°C with 6 × 103 PFU of hrR3
per well. Cells were kept at 4°C for an additional 1 h before
they were warmed to 23°C for 30 min and 37°C for the rest of the
experiment. At 1-h intervals immediately following infection, strips of
wells were treated for 1-h periods with 50 µM EB in serum-free DMEM
and returned to regular medium. Before and after each treatment, the
cells were rinsed three times with serum-free DMEM and
serum-supplemented DMEM, respectively. The number of
lacZ+ cells was scored 11 h postinfection
( ) and normalized to the number counted in mock-treated controls
(maximally 187 ± 20 [n = 3]). Separate strips
of infected control cells were fixed and stained immediately following
each mock treatment to monitor -galactosidase expression over time
( ). Data points represent means of triplicate measurements with
standard errors of the means. (B) Cell cultures (2 × 105 cells/well) were switched to serum-free DMEM, cooled on
ice, and infected at 4°C with 2.4 × 103 PFU of
hrR3 per well. After infection, the cells were rinsed and
treated with EB ( ) or EBX ( ) for 1 h at 4°C and for
additional 30-min periods at 23 and 37°C. Triplicate counts of
lacZ+ cells were performed 6 h later (all
points are means and standard errors of means; control score, 141 ± 5.9).
|
|
Virucidal effects of EB.
To determine if binding of EB to
virus particles leads to irreversible virus inactivation, routine
virucidal assays were performed with hrR3. In the first
experiment (Fig. 10A), EB inhibited the infectivity of virions in a concentration-dependent manner with an
IC50 of 44 µM (
) whereas EBX had no inhibitory effect
(
). In the second experiment, in which slightly higher
concentrations of EB were required to achieve inhibition (Fig. 10B,
; IC50 = 69 µM), we also found that the treated
virions were irreversibly inactivated. That is, aliquots of EB-treated
and then diluted virions could not be reactivated during overnight
dialysis against serum-containing medium that could have trapped any
reversibly bound EB (cf. Fig. 1A and B,
). Instead, virions
recovered after dialysis (31% at any EB concentration) remained
inactivated, exactly like the nondialyzed controls (Fig. 10B,
and
).

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FIG. 10.
Virucidal assay. (A) hrR3 virus (1.2 × 106 PFU/ml) was treated with EB ( ) or EBX ( ) at the
indicated concentrations for 1 h at 37°C in serum-free DMEM,
diluted 200-fold with serum-supplemented DMEM, and assayed for
remaining infectious virus. (B) hrR3 virus was again treated
with EB and assayed exactly as in panel A. In addition, aliquots of
diluted virus were dialyzed overnight at 4°C against
serum-supplemented DMEM ( ) or filtered through 0.22-µm-pore-size
membranes ( ) before they were assayed for remaining infectious
virus. Virions recovered after dialysis (31 ± 1.8%
[n = 8]), irrespective of the EB concentration,
remained inactivated exactly as in nondialyzed controls ( ,
normalized to untreated control [left scale]). Retention of virions
on membranes depended on EB concentrations ( , percentage of controls
[right scale]). Triplicate counts of lacZ+
cells were performed 8 h after infection. All points are means
with standard errors of the means. Scores of untreated controls were
1,245 ±11 (n = 3) (A) and 1,876 ±67 (n = 3) (B).
|
|
To assess possible contributions of viral aggregation to viral
inactivation, additional aliquots of EB-treated and subsequently
diluted virions were filtered through 0.22-µm-pore-size membranes
before they were assayed for remaining infectivity. In the absence
of
or at low concentrations of EB (

3 µM), 80 to 85% of the virions
were trapped on the membranes. The remaining virions, however,
were
retained only once they were exposed to higher EB concentrations,
which
enhanced membrane adhesion and/or caused viral aggregation
(Fig.
10B,

). Such changes in the adhesive properties of virions
were induced
well below the EB concentrations required for virus
inactivation (Fig.
10B,

versus

and

; also cf. Fig.
4A and
B,

).
The effects of the most severe EB treatments were examined by electron
microscopy of PTA-stained virions that had been preadsorbed
to grids
(to avoid aggregation) and exposed to 5 mM peptide. The
EB-treated
virions (Fig.
11A) looked essentially
the same as mock-treated
virions (Fig.
11B), except that the contours
of the viral envelopes
in the EB-treated particles were less
pleomorphic, suggesting
that EB stabilized the virions. At 5 mM, EBX
had the same effect
as EB (Fig.
11C). No attempt was made to find
peptide concentrations
at which the effects of EB and EBX on virion
structure might be
distinguishable.

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FIG. 11.
Structural integrity of peptide-treated virions.
Purified HSV-1 KOS (5 µl of 4 × 109 PFU/ml) was
preadsorbed to grids under conditions allowing 28% of the virus to
bind. The adsorbed virus was then treated for 30 min at 37°C with 15 µM serum-free DMEM alone (A) or with 5 mM EB (B) or 5 mM EBX (C)
dissolved in the same medium. Electron micrographs of PTA-stained
material are shown at the same magnification.
|
|
 |
DISCUSSION |
We report that the FGF4 signal peptide, with an RRKK tetramer
attached to its amino terminus to improve solubility, inhibits both the
entry and cell-to-cell spreading of HSV-1 and that the inhibition
depends largely or entirely on direct irreversible interaction of EB
with virions. The conclusion that the EB peptide acts to inhibit viral
entry is supported by several findings. (i) Most important, EB
specifically blocked infection by preadsorbed virus prior to
inactivation of extracellular virus by treatment with low-pH citrate
buffer but had no effect after such inactivation. (ii) EB blocked
infection by preadsorbed virus at a stage that clearly preceded
lacZ gene expression from the early ICP6 promoter in
hrR3-infected cells. (iii) When added after infection, EB
did not inhibit immediate-early promoters or early-gene expression from
the ICP6 promoter, nor did it inhibit
-galactosidase activity in
hrR3-infected cells. (iv) EB did not block attachment of
virus to cells, as indicated by the fact that gC
and
gC+ viruses were inhibited equally well and by the finding
that binding of radiolabeled virus at 4°C was not inhibited. (v) In
studies varying the time of peptide exposure, EB inhibited infection
most efficiently when present during the adsorption period, indicating that it acted early in the life cycle.
The finding that EB was less effective in blocking infection by
preadsorbed rather than free virus is also consistent with the
conclusion that EB blocks the entry step. When corrected for different
virus inputs, the IC50 of EB obtained for preadsorbed hrR3 (15 µM; Fig. 8B,
) was approximately 10 times
higher than expected on the basis of the overall antiviral activity of
EB measured under comparable conditions, notably, in the absence of
serum (IC50 = 1.2 µM; Fig. 7,
). The
hrR3 virus had been preadsorbed at an input of 2,400 PFU/well. However, since maximally only about 10% of the virus was
bound to cells at 4°C (see below), the concentration of infectious
virus was closer to 240 PFU/well, comparable to the 210 PFU/well used
in the routine antiviral assay. Thus, higher concentrations of EB
appear to be required to block the entry of preadsorbed virus than to
inhibit infection by free virus. This seems reasonable, if only because
EB must act more rapidly and binding sites may be less accessible in
preadsorbed than in free virions.
The finding that EB reduced plaque size when added after infection
(Fig. 2) could be due either to EB blocking secondary infections of
neighboring cells or to EB blocking cell-to-cell spreading. Since the
infection was allowed to proceed for only 24 h, there was little
time for plaques to develop from secondary infections, suggesting that
EB primarily blocked cell-to-cell spreading. The mechanism by which EB
might block infection at this late stage in the viral life cycle is not
known, but it seems reasonable to suggest that it involves shared
functions of the virus entry and spreading (see below).
Our studies testing the attachment of radiolabeled virus to cells at
4°C showed that at EB concentrations from 10 to 50 µM, attachment
was actually enhanced. Analysis by electron microscopy confirmed that
EB was capable of inducing aggregation (Fig. 6), suggesting that
enhancement of binding of the labeled viruses was due to aggregation.
Presumably, attachment was artificially enhanced under the conditions
of the binding assay, because, for technical reasons, we had to infect
cell cultures with 2 × 106 PFU/well (MOI
10)
rather than the
6,000 PFU/well (MOI
0.03) used in our
antiviral assays. Infection with 2 × 106 PFU of
32P-labeled virus per well was required because the
detection of binding was limited by the specific activity of the virus
preparation (0.01 cpm/PFU), as well as by the efficiency of virus
adsorption (live and fixed cells bound 9.7 and 8.9% of the input
counts, respectively).
Some of the antiviral activity of EB may well be an artifact of viral
aggregation. However, even under conditions of high virus input,
aggregation would seem to play only a minor role in virus inactivation,
because neither enhanced virus binding (Fig. 4) nor enhanced virus
retention on filters (Fig. 10B) was closely coupled to any loss of
infectivity. These findings are most readily explained by the
assumption that EB-induced changes in the adhesive properties of
virions lead not only to self-adhesion (aggregation) but also to
enhanced cell adhesion. Such artificial cell attachment could
compensate for any loss of infectivity due to virus aggregation. In any
case, it seems clear that EB-induced changes in the adhesive properties
of virons are merely a prelude to final virus inactivation. For unknown
reasons, EB seems to enhance virus adhesion only within an intermediate
concentration range (1 to 50 µM) but not at higher concentrations
(Fig. 4A).
The fact that EB can inactivate preadsorbed virus clearly establishes
that the antiviral activity of EB depends neither on virus adsorption
nor on virus aggregation. Instead, the virucidal assays show that EB
can directly interact with virions and inactivate them irreversibly
(Fig. 10B,
and
). Interactions of EB with host cells seem to
make little or no contribution to viral inactivation (Fig. 3). Whether
inactivation is due to irreversible binding of EB or to irreversible
modifications of virions is not known. The electron micrographs of
preadsorbed PTA-stained virus leave no doubt, however, that even at a
concentration as high as 5 mM, EB does not cause any gross structural
abnormalities such as the collapse of the viral envelope, stripping of
the envelope, or disruption of the nucleocapsid (Fig. 11). Instead, the
images suggest that EB may actually stabilize viral envelopes and
render them more resistant to surface denaturation and dehydration
during specimen preparation. Conceivably, such changes in the viral
envelope may interfere with proper membrane fusion during infection.
The cytotoxicity of EB for host cells seems to be unrelated to
inactivation of virions, since EB could cause aggregation (Fig. 10) or
inactivation (Fig. 6) of virions not only at room temperature and at
37°C but also at 4°C. In contrast, the loss of cellular trypan blue
exclusion due to EB (cf. Fig. 1C,
) was highly temperature dependent
between 18 and 28°C. Below 18°C, at concentrations up to 100 µM,
EB had no effect on trypan blue exclusion, and above 28°C, the level
of cytotoxicity was no longer enhanced as the temperature was raised to
37°C (unpublished results). It would appear, therefore, that the
viral and cellular effects of EB involve quite different mechanisms.
Compared to cells (IC50 = 68 µM for the loss of
trypan blue exclusion in serum-free medium [Fig. 1C,
]), virions
(hrR3 in serum-free medium) could be inactivated at the same
or at 100-fold-lower EB concentrations (IC50 = 69 µM
[Fig. 10B,
and
] versus IC50 = 0.66 µM
[Fig. 7,
]) depending on the virus concentration (1.2 × 106 and 475 PFU/ml, respectively). Given such a wide range
of EB effects, the therapeutic index is clearly of limited value.
Still, it seems useful to point out that the therapeutic index for EB may be as large as 100.
Our results are consistent with three possible mechanisms of action:
(i) EB could interact with the lipid bilayer of the envelope; (ii) EB
could interact with one or more envelope proteins; or (iii) EB could
interact with some combination of the above. Studies with the free RRKK
tetramer and the scrambled EBX peptide (Fig. 1A and B) indicate that
the antiviral activity of EB resides primarily, if not exclusively,
with the FGF4 signal sequence. The finding that the EBPP peptide is
twice as active as the EB peptide (Fig. 1D) implies that the entire
FGF4 signal sequence is not a canonical requirement and that some
secondary-structure features may play a role in antiviral activity. In
any case, the fact that some aspect of the FGF4 signal sequence is
important for antiviral activity and that signal sequences are membrane
interactive invites the speculation that EB may act on the lipid
bilayer of the viral envelope. It should be noted, however, that
addition of four positively charged residues (RRKK) at the amino
terminus may have substantially altered any lipid-interactive
properties of the signal sequence. The membrane-transiting properties
of the FGF4 leader may also have been altered by the RRKK addition.
Alternatively, EB may block entry by interacting with one or more
glycoproteins on the virus envelope. Since in addition to inhibiting
entry, EB may inhibit cell-to-cell spreading, it could block a common
step in both processes. Initial entry through the plasma membrane and
cell-to-cell spreading involve shared functions of the viral
glycoproteins gB, gD, and gH/gL during membrane fusion (54). These three glycoproteins could therefore be
implicated as targets of EB action. So far, this is supported only by
indirect evidence. We are currently attempting to isolate EB-resistant mutant viruses in order to map any viral locus involved and are arranging to obtain purified viral glycoproteins for formal binding studies.
A BLAST search for homologies to the EB sequence identified a number of
matches (data not shown), as expected for such a short peptide.
Comparisons with the HSV-1 sequence failed to reveal any matches,
suggesting that EB does not mimic any viral proteins in their
interactions with a cellular component (i.e., EB is not a
sequence-specific mimic of a viral protein). A number of partial matches with cellular proteins were identified. These proteins constituted a diverse set, and we were unable to discern a common functional theme (e.g., not all were membrane proteins). Notably, no
homologies were identified in the HveA to HveD HSV coreceptor proteins,
suggesting the EB may not affect the binding of gD to HveA to HveD.
Several peptides that inhibit viral entry have been described. Srinivas
et al. (56) found that amphipathic helical segments derived from the HIV-1 gp 120 inhibited fusion. This peptide clearly had membrane-disrupting activity and probably functioned by altering the lipid environment (56). Another amphipathic peptide
derived from apolipoprotein A-1 has been shown to inhibit HSV entry
(55) and may also be acting at the level of the envelope
or cell membrane to destroy lipid organization. Peptides derived from
the heptad repeat sequences in the human parainfluenza virus F protein
inhibit viral entry and cell-to-cell spreading. These peptides do not appear to be amphipathic, however, and may act by interfering directly
with the function of the F protein (68). A pseudopeptide (HB-19) that blocks human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) attachment has also been described (42). Finally, a
peptide (T-20) derived from the transmembrane region of the HIV gp41
protein, which also has amphipathic properties, is a potent inhibitor
of HIV entry (46, 66) and is currently in clinical trials
(27). A comparison of these peptides with EB revealed no
sequence homologies. In addition, EB is not predicted to have
amphipathic properties, suggesting that it is acting through a
different mechanism(s). The EB peptide also has no homology to
membrane-disrupting peptides such as the magainins, cecropins, and
defensins (3).
In summary, we have identified a novel peptide with potent inhibitory
activity against HSV-1 and demonstrated that it acts to inhibit entry
of the virus and possibly cell-to-cell spreading. Although the peptide,
or some derivatives thereof, may be useful therapeutically as one of
the only two known peptidic inhibitors of HSV-1 entry, it may be more
valuable as a tool to study the poorly understood process of viral
entry. Future studies on the mechanism of action of EB may potentially
allow us to dissect the events underlying this important step in viral infection.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
We thank Gary L. Case and Amy C. Harms, Biotechnology Center at
the University of Wisconsin in Madison, for the synthesis and analysis
of peptides and for helpful discussions; Andrew Hitt for technical
assistance; Inna Larsen for administrative assistance; and Teresa
Compton and Donna Peters for critical comments on the manuscript.
This work was supported by grants from the Defense Advanced Research
Projects Agency (DARPA MDA 972-97-1-0005) and the NEI (EY07736) to
Curtis Brandt.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of
Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences, University of Wisconsin, 1300 University Ave., 6630 MSC, Madison, WI 53706-1532. Phone: (608)
262-8054. Fax: (608) 262-0479. E-mail:
crbrandt{at}facstaff.wisc.edu.
 |
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Journal of Virology, March 2001, p. 2634-2645, Vol. 75, No. 6
0022-538X/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JVI.75.6.2634-2645.2001
Copyright © 2001, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
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