Previous Article | Next Article ![]()
Journal of Virology, October 2002, p. 9920-9933, Vol. 76, No. 19
0022-538X/02/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JVI.76.19.9920-9933.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
and Max L. Nibert1*
Department of Microbiology and Molecular Genetics, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02115,1 Cell and Molecular Biology Program, University of WisconsinMadison, Madison, Wisconsin 537062
Received 2 April 2002/ Accepted 26 June 2002
| ABSTRACT |
|---|
|
|
|---|
70-nm), particle with active transcriptases for viral mRNA synthesis directly into the cytoplasm. This process is likely initiated by a particle form that resembles infectious subvirion particles (ISVPs), disassembly intermediates produced from virions by proteolytic uncoating. Consistent with that idea, ISVPs, but not virions, can induce disruption of membranes in vitro. Both activities ascribed to ISVP-like particles, membrane disruption in vitro and membrane penetration within cells, are linked to N-myristoylated outer-capsid protein µ1, present in 600 copies at the surfaces of ISVPs. To understand how µ1 fulfills its role as the reovirus penetration protein, we monitored changes in ISVPs during the permeabilization of red blood cells induced by these particles. Hemolysis was preceded by a major structural transition in ISVPs, characterized by conformational change in µ1 and elution of fibrous attachment protein
1. The altered conformer of µ1 was required for hemolysis and was markedly hydrophobic. The structural transition in ISVPs was further accompanied by derepression of genome-dependent mRNA synthesis by the particle-associated transcriptases. We propose a model for reovirus entry in which (i) primed and triggered conformational changes, analogous to those in enveloped-virus fusion proteins, generate a hydrophobic µ1 conformer capable of inserting into and disrupting cell membranes and (ii) activation of the viral particles for membrane interaction and mRNA synthesis are concurrent events. Reoviruses provide an opportune system for defining the molecular details of membrane penetration by a large nonenveloped animal virus. | INTRODUCTION |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Nonenveloped animal viruses, in contrast to their enveloped counterparts, cannot utilize membrane fusion to enter cells. The mechanisms employed by these viruses to cross the cellular membrane barrier are less well understood but may include the formation of small protein-lined pores through the bilayer analogous to those made by protein toxins such as colicin A (55) or larger disruptions in bilayer integrity analogous to those caused by membranolytic peptides such as magainin (59). Nonenveloped viruses generally contain a capsid protein or proteins that mediate membrane penetration. It has been proposed that these "penetration proteins" also undergo primed and triggered conformational transitions that allow them to interact with the cellular membrane during entry. For example, poliovirus virions incubated with receptor externalize the N-myristoylated VP4 peptide and expose amphipathic sequences of VP1 that can insert into liposomes (5, 26). Adenovirus (Ad) virions incubated at low pH are thought to undergo a conformational change in the penton base protein that renders the particles hydrophobic and capable of permeabilizing liposomes (7, 58). As a step toward understanding the membrane penetration mechanism of the nonenveloped mammalian orthoreoviruses (reoviruses), we undertook studies to identify and characterize entry-related changes in their capsid proteins.
Reovirus virions are 85-nm particles comprising the double-stranded RNA genome enclosed by two concentric icosahedral protein capsids (reviewed in reference 52) (Fig. 1A). The outer capsid mediates delivery of viral particles into the cytoplasm of host cells, where viral replication occurs. It has been proposed that protein µ1 (76 kDa, 200 trimers per particle), which appears to be found in virions mostly as autolytic fragments µ1N (4 kDa) and µ1C (72 kDa) (53), participates directly in membrane penetration during entry into cells (16, 35, 42, 43, 51, 53).
3 (41 kDa, 600 monomers per particle), the major surface protein of virions, interacts closely with the trimers of µ1 (42, 61), thereby protecting them from the extracellular environment and regulating their activities. Protein
1 (50 kDa, 12 trimers per particle) forms fibers that extend from the fivefold axes of virions and that mediate viral attachment to cellular receptors (4, 27, 41). The fourth outer-capsid protein,
2 (144 kDa, 12 pentamers per particle), is involved in viral mRNA capping and outer-capsid assembly but is not known to participate directly in entry (22, 45).
|
3 and contain protein µ1C as particle-bound fragments
(59 kDa) and
(13 kDa) (37, 51). Cores lack not only
3 but also µ1 and its fragments as well as
1 (37). Numerous observations suggest that subvirion particles resembling the ISVP and core play essential roles in reovirus infection. Proteolytic removal of
3 from an infecting virion is thought to prime the particle for membrane penetration by freeing µ1 to interact with a cellular membrane (15, 42, 66) (also see below). Membrane penetration initiated by the ISVP-like particle is then believed to result in cytoplasmic delivery of the primary transcriptase particle. Like the core, this primary transcriptase particle is activated to synthesize the viral mRNAs for translation and packaging (38, 62).
One line of evidence that supports the involvement of an ISVP-like particle in membrane penetration is the capacity of ISVPs, but not virions or cores, to promote permeabilization of membranes in vitro. The target membranes include murine L929 cell membranes (10), human and bovine red blood cell (RBC) membranes (15, 16, 36), planar phospholipid bilayers (67), and liposomes (K. Chandran and M. L. Nibert, unpublished data). In some of these previous experiments, Cs+ ions were needed to promote the membrane interaction, for reasons that have remained largely mysterious but that may relate to the capacity of Cs+ to promote reovirus uncoating (9, 11, 57). The M2 gene (which encodes µ1) was identified as the genetic determinant of a viral strain difference in the ISVP-associated permeabilization of L929 cell membranes (43), suggesting that µ1 is a participant in this process. Also consistent with a role for µ1 in membrane permeabilization are observations that (i) µ1 is modified with a myristoyl (C14 fatty-acyl) group at its N terminus (53), (ii) viral particles containing mutant forms of µ1 show a reduced capacity to permeabilize membranes (35), and (iii) in vitro addition of µ1 to cores is sufficient to restore the membrane-permeabilizing activity of the particles (16). The crystal structure of the µ1 trimer in complex with three
3 monomers was recently determined at 2.8-Å resolution and suggested additional aspects of the functions of µ1 in membrane penetration (42). Of particular note for the present study was an indication that large conformational changes in the µ1 trimer must be required for externalization of the N-myristoylated µ1N peptide, which, it was proposed, inserts into the cellular membrane as a part of the penetration mechanism (42, 53).
For a description of the molecular mechanism of reovirus membrane penetration that can take advantage of the recently determined µ1 crystal structure (42), more information about the biochemical and structural changes in µ1 and other viral proteins that accompany the membrane interactions is needed. In the present study, we determined that ISVPs undergo a major structural transition involving outer-capsid proteins µ1,
1, and
2 that precedes, and is required for, virus-induced membrane permeabilization and activation of the core-associated viral transcriptases. The nature of the structural changes in µ1 and
1 and their roles in membrane permeabilization by viral particles were also investigated. Our results provide mechanistic insights into two key steps in reovirus entry: membrane penetration and generation of the primary transcriptase particles.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Virions, ISVPs, and cores.
Virions of reoviruses T1L, T3D, and the T1L x T3D reassortants in Fig. 2 were obtained by the standard protocol (27) and stored in virion buffer (150 mM NaCl, 10 mM MgCl2, 10 mM Tris [pH 7.5]). Purified T1L ISVPs were obtained by the same protocol. Unless mentioned otherwise, nonpurified ISVPs were obtained by digesting virions at a concentration of 1013 particles/ml with N
-p-tosyl-L-lysine chloromethyl ketone-treated chymotrypsin (200 µg/ml) for 8 to 20 min at 32°C. Digestion was stopped by addition of ethanolic phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride (2 to 5 mM). Purified cores were obtained from virions as described previously (54). Particle concentrations were estimated on the basis of A260 (20).
|
1-specific rabbit antisera raised against a glutathione S-transferase-
1 fusion protein (to be described elsewhere) were employed at a 1:1,000 dilution as primary antibodies. Mouse- or rabbit-specific goat immunoglobulin Gs conjugated to alkaline phosphatase (Sigma) were used at a 1:2,000 dilution as secondary antibodies. Antibody binding was detected with colorimetric reagents p-nitroblue tetrazolium chloride and 5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolylphosphate p-toluidine salt (Bio-Rad) according to the manufacturer's instructions. Hemolysis. Citrated bovine calf RBCs (Colorado Serum Co., Denver, Colo.) were washed with phosphate-buffered saline supplemented with 2 mM MgCl2 (PBS-Mg2+) and suspended in PBS-Mg2+ at a stock concentration of 30% (vol/vol) just prior to use. All experiments were performed in a 4°C cold room to minimize variability in results. Viral particles were incubated with RBCs (3% [vol/vol]) in virion buffer or hemolysis reaction buffer (50 mM Tris-Cl [pH 7.5]) in a total volume of 20 to 100 µl. Na+ or Cs+ ions were added to hemolysis reaction mixtures as their chloride salts from stock solutions prepared in water. Reactions were initiated by transfer of samples to the experimental temperature (ice or 32°C) and terminated by their removal onto ice. After resting on ice for at least 5 min, cells within each sample were pelleted by centrifugation (300 x g for 5 min at 4°C), and 10 to 20 µl of the supernatant was diluted into virion buffer (100 µl total) in a 96-well microplate (Costar, Cambridge, Mass.). The amount of hemoglobin released from RBCs was quantitated by measuring A415 with a microplate reader (Molecular Devices, Sunnyvale, Calif.) and by using the equation percent hemolysis = {[A415 (sample) - A415 (blank)]/[A415 (detergent) - A415 (blank)]} x 100%, where the blank lacked viral particles but contained all other components of the reaction mixture and the detergent was either Triton X-100 (Sigma; 1% [vol/vol]) or Nonidet P-40 (Sigma; 0.5% [vol/vol]). Addition of either detergent to the hemolysis reaction mixture effected complete RBC lysis.
Proteolysis assay for conformational changes in viral proteins. Viral particles were chilled on ice for at least 5 min and incubated with trypsin (100 µg/ml) for 20 to 60 min on ice. Reactions were stopped by addition of soybean trypsin inhibitor (300 µg/ml) and further incubation for 5 to 10 min on ice. Incubation of samples containing viral particles with trypsin for longer times (up to 2 h tested; data not shown) did not appear to alter the pattern of digestion observed. Following addition of Laemmli sample buffer, samples were disrupted by boiling for 2 to 5 min and were subjected to SDS-PAGE.
bis-ANS fluorescence.
High-purity bis-ANS (4,4'-dianilino-1,1'-binaphthyl-5,5'-disulfonic acid, dipotassium salt) was obtained from Molecular Probes (Junction City, Oreg.). bis-ANS stock solutions (5 to 10 mM) were prepared in methanol and stored in the dark at 4°C. The concentration of bis-ANS in these solutions was measured from its molar extinction coefficient (
24,000 M-1 cm-1) just prior to use. Viral particles were incubated with bis-ANS (25 µM) at the same reaction conditions used for hemolysis experiments (see above), except that RBCs were not added. Reactions were initiated by transfer of samples to the experimental temperature (ice or 32°C) and were terminated by their removal onto ice. After resting on ice for at least 5 min, 10 to 20 µl of each sample was diluted into virion buffer (100 µl total) in a 96-well black microplate designed for fluorescence applications (Costar). bis-ANS fluorescence was measured at an excitation wavelength (
ex) of 405 nm and an emission wavelength (
em) of 485 nm with the Spectramax Gemini XS fluorescence microplate reader (Molecular Devices). An emission cutoff filter (
cut < 475 nm) was employed to minimize detection of scattered light from the excitation beam. bis-ANS fluorescence intensity (I) was calculated from Icorrected = Isample - Iblank, where the blank lacked viral particles but contained all other components of the reaction mixture.
Triton X-114 partitioning assay. Werck-Reichhart and coworkers' (71) modification of Bordier's original Triton X-114 partitioning protocol (8) was employed. Viral particles were diluted to a volume of 1 ml with virion buffer, chilled for at least 5 min on ice, and incubated with ice-cold Triton X-114 (2% [vol/vol]; Sigma) for 1 h on ice with occasional mixing. Glycerol (40% [vol/vol]) was then added. Samples were incubated for 10 min at 37°C, followed by centrifugation (500 x g, 5 min, room temperature) to induce separation into detergent-poor and -rich phases. Inclusion of glycerol in the partitioning mixture allowed flotation, rather than sedimentation, of the detergent-rich phase (71), thereby removing the concern that the detergent-rich fraction contained particles merely due to pelleting during centrifugation. The bottom of each centrifuge tube was punctured with a needle, and both detergent-poor and -rich phases were harvested by collecting drops. The detergent-poor fraction was reextracted with fresh Triton X-114 and glycerol as described above. Detergent-rich fractions from both extractions were pooled, and the second detergent-poor fraction was discarded. Viral proteins within the detergent-poor and -rich fractions were precipitated with trichloroacetic acid (TCA) as follows. Samples were incubated with TCA (10% [wt/vol]) and purified carbonic anhydrase (5 µg) as a carrier protein for at least 1 h on ice. Precipitated material was concentrated by centrifugation (10,000 x g for 30 min at 4°C), washed twice with ice-cold acetone, and dried under reduced pressure. Dried pellets were solubilized in room-temperature virion buffer. Following addition of Laemmli sample buffer, samples were disrupted by boiling for 5 min. Viral proteins were resolved by SDS-PAGE.
| RESULTS |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Genome segment M2, which encodes µ1, determines a difference in hemolytic capacity between T1L and T3D ISVPs. To extend our findings to particles of other reovirus strains, we tested the capacity of T1L ISVPs to mediate hemolysis in a Cs+-free buffer. T1L ISVPs failed to induce RBC lysis upon incubation at the conditions used with T3D ISVPs above (data not shown; Fig. 2A). To determine whether this difference between T1L and T3D ISVPs arises from one or more genetic differences between the two strains, we analyzed the behavior of a panel of T1L x T3D reassortant strains in the hemolysis assay. The capacity of ISVPs to induce hemolysis segregated with the parental origin of their M2 genome segments (Fig. 2C). All reassortant ISVPs containing an M2 segment derived from T3D were positive for hemolysis, whereas all containing an M2 segment derived from T1L were negative. No other genome segment contributed significantly to the phenotypic difference between T1L and T3D ISVPs (Fig. 2C). Lucia-Jandris and coworkers (43) previously found that M2 also genetically controls the difference between T1L and T3D ISVPs in their capacity to release 51Cr from preloaded L929 cells (T1L ISVPs were inactive in that assay as well). The simplest hypothesis based on these results is that µ1, the protein encoded by M2 and the major surface protein of ISVPs (Fig. 1A), participates directly in permeabilization of both RBC and L929 cell membranes. A related hypothesis is that the µ1 proteins encoded by the T1L and T3D alleles of M2 must differ in their capacities to induce permeabilization at the assay conditions.
Protein µ1 changes conformation in association with hemolysis.
We used sensitivity to protease digestion to monitor conformational changes in viral particles during hemolysis reactions. T1L or T3D ISVPs were incubated with RBCs at 32°C for different times. At each time point, samples were removed to ice and divided into two aliquots. One aliquot was analyzed for RBC lysis. The other was incubated with trypsin for 60 min on ice. Viral proteins in the trypsin-treated samples were resolved by SDS-PAGE and detected by immunoblotting with protein-specific antibodies. Evidence for a change in protease sensitivity over time was obtained only in the case of T3D µ1 (Fig. 2B; data not shown for the other viral proteins, but see Fig. 3C). Specifically, the
fragment of µ1 in T3D ISVPs became sensitive to trypsin cleavage after between 8 and 12 min of incubation at 32°C. This corresponded to the onset time of hemolysis induced by T3D ISVPs (Fig. 2A). When we repeated the experiment with T1L ISVPs, which did not mediate hemolysis under these conditions (Fig. 2A), we found that T1L µ1 remained resistant to cleavage by trypsin over the entire time course (Fig. 2B). Essentially identical results were obtained with several other proteases (data not shown). These findings indicate that protein µ1 acquires a protease-sensitive conformation when T3D ISVPs are incubated with RBCs at 32°C, but not at 4°C, and that this conformational change in µ1 occurs in temporal correlation with hemolysis.
|
Rates of hemolysis and µ1 conformational change increase in parallel in the presence of Cs+ ions. T3D ISVPs are proteolytically digested to cores more efficiently when incubated with K+, Rb+, or Cs+ ions in place of Na+ or Li+ ions (9, 11). Since differences among viral strains in the susceptibility of ISVPs to undergo proteolytic digestion to cores are genetically determined by M2, encoding µ1 (10), these results suggest that K+, Rb+, and Cs+ ions allow more efficient conversion of ISVPs to cores by increasing the capacity of µ1 to undergo protease digestion (12, 13). Based on these previous findings, we speculated that the propensity of T1L µ1 to acquire a protease-sensitive conformation when ISVPs are incubated with RBCs may be enhanced by inclusion of K+, Rb+, or Cs+ ions in the hemolysis reaction. Accordingly, we repeated the hemolysis experiments in a low-Na+ buffer supplemented with K+ or Cs+ ions. Consistent with our hypothesis, the µ1 protein in T1L ISVPs became protease sensitive upon incubation with RBCs at 32°C in the presence of K+ (data not shown) or Cs+ ions (Fig. 3B), indicating that T1L µ1 had indeed changed conformation. Moreover, T1L ISVPs induced hemolysis at these conditions (Fig. 3A), consistent with previous evidence that they have that capacity (15, 16, 36). In addition, the presence of Cs+ in the hemolysis reaction decreased the onset time of µ1 conformational change with T3D ISVPs (compare Fig. 3A and 2A), and for both T1L and T3D ISVPs, there was a correspondence between the onset times of µ1 conformational change and hemolysis (Fig. 3A). Thus, Cs+ ions accelerate in parallel both µ1 conformational change and hemolysis. The consistent temporal correlation between these phenomena argues that they are mechanistically linked.
RBCs are dispensable for µ1 conformational change. In the experiments described thus far (Fig. 2 and 3), µ1 conformational change was observed in hemolysis reactions with RBCs. To test whether interaction of viral particles with one or more components of the RBC membrane are required for induction of µ1 conformational change, we repeated the experiments described above but omitted RBCs from the samples. Protein µ1 acquired a protease-sensitive conformation when either T1L or T3D ISVPs were incubated with Cs+ ions at 32°C in the absence of RBCs (Fig. 3C). Moreover, the kinetics of µ1 conformational change in the absence or presence of RBCs were essentially indistinguishable (Fig. 3C). RBCs also had little or no effect on the rate of µ1 conformational change in experiments carried out in the presence of Na+ ions (data not shown). Therefore, induction and maintenance of a protease-sensitive conformation of µ1 do not require interaction of viral particles with a component of RBC membranes.
µ1 conformational change is required for hemolysis.
We investigated the causal relationship between µ1 conformational change and hemolysis by attempting to decouple the two events. T1L ISVPs were incubated for different times at 32°C in the absence of RBCs and then removed to ice. RBCs were then added, and hemolysis reactions were allowed to proceed on ice (see Fig. 4A for a schematic diagram). The conformational status of µ1 after the incubation at 32°C was assessed by protease treatment of parallel samples on ice. The only samples in which hemolysis occurred at 4°C were those containing a protease-sensitive conformer of µ1 generated by preincubation of the ISVPs at 32°C (Fig. 4B and C). These results strongly suggest that µ1 conformational change is required for hemolysis. They also suggest that hemolysis is normally blocked at 4°C because the conformational change cannot occur at that temperature. The RBC lysis step(s) is, by comparison, less dependent on temperature: hemolysis mediated by samples containing a protease-sensitive conformer of µ1 was slowed from a few seconds at 32°C to
5 min at 4°C but occurred efficiently at both temperatures (data not shown).
|
|
bis-ANS fluorescence. bis-ANS is essentially nonfluorescent in aqueous solution but becomes strongly fluorescent when dissolved in nonpolar solvents or when bound to surface-accessible hydrophobic sites within proteins (46). T1L ISVPs were incubated with bis-ANS and either Na+ or Cs+ ions for different times at 32°C and then removed to ice. Fluorescence in each sample was measured in a microplate reader. Parallel samples were exposed to trypsin on ice to assess the conformational status of µ1 (data not shown). Little or no change in bis-ANS fluorescence was seen when T1L ISVPs were incubated with Na+ ions (i.e., at conditions that did not induce µ1 conformational change over the entire time course) (Fig. 6A). In contrast, when T1L ISVPs were incubated with Cs+ ions, a large increase in bis-ANS fluorescence was observed. The onset time of this increase corresponded to that of µ1 conformational change (Fig. 6A). Experiments with T3D ISVPs in the presence of Na+ ions confirmed that bis-ANS fluorescence increased in concert with the acquisition of a protease-sensitive conformation by protein µ1 (data not shown). These findings suggest that viral particles expose hydrophobic sequences to the aqueous milieu in association and temporal correlation with µ1 conformational change.
|
|
80%) relative to that in aliquots 1 and 3. Comparison of the protein compositions of the three samples revealed that loss of fluorescence correlated with a substantial reduction in the complement of µ1 in aliquot 2 (data not shown). The findings suggest that µ1 exposes previously buried hydrophobic regions as a result of its conformational change.
Receptor-binding protein
1 is lost from particles in concert with µ1 conformational change.
Closer examination of Coomassie-stained gels from the Triton X-114 experiment revealed that, although most viral proteins from the particles preincubated with Cs+ ions were predominantly located in the detergent-rich fraction, a 50,000-Mr band migrating at the expected position of receptor-binding protein
1 appeared to be enriched in the detergent-poor fraction (Fig. 7A). Immunoblot analysis of detergent-rich and -poor fractions with a
1-specific antibody confirmed that most
1 proteins did not partition into the detergent-rich phase along with other viral proteins (Fig. 7B). This observation suggests that µ1 conformational change is associated with the loss of
1 from viral particles and that the hydrophobicity of
1 does not increase substantially in conjunction with its elution from particles.
To test further whether viral particles that had undergone µ1 conformational change had also lost
1, we attempted to purify those particles. T1L ISVPs were incubated with Na+ or Cs+ ions at 32°C and then transferred to ice. Trypsin treatment of aliquots removed prior to purification confirmed that µ1 had acquired a protease-sensitive conformation in the viral particles incubated at 32°C with Cs+ ions but not Na+ ions (data not shown). Remaining samples were loaded atop preformed CsCl gradients, and viral particles (density [
]
1.38 g/cm3) were separated from particle-free proteins (
1.30 g/cm3) according to density by ultracentrifugation. Visual inspection of the gradients revealed that viral particles incubated with Na+ ions before centrifugation had formed a homogeneous band with an opalescent appearance, as typically seen when ISVPs are concentrated on CsCl density gradients (Fig. 8A). In contrast, particles incubated with Cs+ ions before centrifugation produced an inhomogeneous band composed of white flocculated material (Fig. 8A). A flocculent band was also obtained with T3D ISVPs that had been incubated with Na+ ions at 32°C (data not shown). The opalescent and flocculent bands migrated at similar positions in CsCl gradients, indicating that the particles in them had similar densities (data not shown). The change in morphology of the particle band from opalescent to flocculent suggested that viral particles that had undergone µ1 conformational change were prone to aggregation at high concentrations. This agrees with our finding that µ1 conformational change enhances the hydrophobicity of particles (Fig. 6 and 7). To determine the protein compositions of viral particles in the opalescent and flocculent bands, the samples were subjected to SDS-PAGE and monitored by Coomassie staining or immunoblot analysis with a
1-specific antibody. As expected, particles in the opalescent band closely resembled ISVPs; the resemblance extended to the presence of µ1 fragment
and protein
1 (Fig. 8B). Particles comprising the flocculent band also resembled ISVPs in containing an approximately full complement of the
fragment of µ1; however, they contained little or no
1 (Fig. 8B). These findings confirmed that viral particles that had undergone µ1 conformational change had also lost
1. They also indicated that the central
fragment of µ1 remained associated with particles even after µ1 acquired a protease-sensitive conformation.
|
1 from particles. T1L ISVPs were incubated with Na+ or Cs+ ions for different times at 32°C and then removed to ice. Each sample was loaded onto a sucrose cushion, and viral particles were pelleted by ultracentrifugation. A portion of supernatant from the top of each tube (Fig. 8C) and the particle pellet at the bottom of each tube (data not shown) were subjected to SDS-PAGE and immunoblot analysis with a
1-specific antibody. Particles incubated with Na+ ions did not undergo µ1 conformational change and released little or no
1 over the time course. In contrast, particles incubated with Cs+ ions underwent µ1 conformational change and released most or all of their
1 fibers, with similar onset times for both structural changes. These findings indicate that
1 is lost from viral particles in concert with acquisition of the protease-sensitive conformation of µ1.
Viral particles that contain a protease-sensitive µ1 conformer and lack
1 are activated for mRNA synthesis.
Both virions and ISVPs are inactive with regard to genome-dependent synthesis of viral mRNAs. In contrast, cores, which lack outer-capsid proteins µ1,
3, and
1 are activated for mRNA synthesis (3, 21, 37, 60). Derepression of the core-associated transcriptases correlates with protease digestion of µ1, and a difference among strains in the capacity of particles to undergo transcriptase activation is genetically determined by M2 (11, 21, 37). Conversely, addition of µ1 and
3 to cores represses mRNA synthesis (24). These observations strongly suggest that the outer capsid in general, and protein µ1 in particular, play a role in regulating the activity of the core-associated transcriptases. Other experiments showed that incubation of ISVPs with K+ or Cs+ ions at 37°C is sufficient for derepression of transcriptase activity and that proteolytic removal of µ1 from viral particles is not required (9, 12, 23, 57). In the present study, we found that incubation of ISVPs with Cs+ ions accelerates, in concert, both conformational change in µ1 (Fig. 3) and loss of
1 from particles (Fig. 7 and 8). Putting previous and present findings together, we speculated that one or more structural changes in ISVPs identified in this study may also play a role in transcriptase activation. To test that hypothesis, T1L virions or ISVPs were incubated with Na+ or Cs+ ions at 32°C and then removed to ice. Samples were incubated at 37°C in a transcription reaction mixture containing all four ribonucleoside triphosphates, [
-32P]GTP, Mg2+ ions, and an ATP-regenerating system. Long transcription products were separated from oligonucleotides and free nucleotides by precipitation with TCA, and 32P incorporation into the precipitated RNA was quantitated by scintillation counting. Viral particles containing a protease-resistant conformer of µ1 (i.e., virions incubated with Na+ or Cs+ ions and ISVPs incubated with Na+ ions) remained inactive at mRNA synthesis (Fig. 9). In contrast, particles containing a protease-sensitive conformer of µ1 (i.e., ISVPs incubated with Cs+ ions) were active for mRNA synthesis (Fig. 9). These results suggest that µ1 conformational change or loss of
1 from particles or both are necessary for derepression of the core-associated viral transcriptases.
|
| DISCUSSION |
|---|
|
|
|---|
1 (Fig. 7, 8, and 10). Induction of the ISVP-to-ISVP* transition is required for permeabilization of RBC membranes (Fig. 4) and activation of the core-associated viral transcriptases (Fig. 9). Furthermore, the µ1* conformer is itself required for hemolytic activity (Fig. 5). Our findings support an entry model in which the ISVP per se does not mediate membrane penetration but, instead, is first converted to the ISVP* form, which then plays the central role in membrane penetration. We propose that the µ1 conformational change occurring as part of the ISVP-to-ISVP* transition is analogous to the entry-related conformational transitions in enveloped-virus fusion machines, such as the influenza virus HA and TBEV E proteins, and nonenveloped virus penetration machines, such as the poliovirus VP1 and VP4 proteins (Fig. 10).
|
The proteolytic degradation of
3 and/or more-limited cleavage(s) of µ1 by lysosomal proteases (1, 2, 40) may represent analogous priming mechanisms for reovirus particles (Fig. 10). Virions, which contain
3 in complex with uncleaved µ1 homotrimers, do not undergo the µ1-to-µ1* change (Fig. 9) and cannot mediate hemolysis (Fig. 1). In contrast, ISVPs, which lack
3 and which contain µ1 mostly as cleaved fragments, are competent to do both (Fig. 2). The endolytic cleavage of µ1 at the
-
junction during conversion of virions to ISVPs appears to play no part in priming µ1 (15, 16), however, suggesting a primary role for
3 degradation in this process (36). How might
3 degradation prime µ1 for its conformational change? Examination of the recently determined crystal structure of the (µ1)3/(
3)3 heterohexamer (42) reveals that each
3 monomer interacts extensively with two adjacent subunits in the µ1 trimer.
3 may thus function as a molecular clamp, inhibiting the conformational freedom of individual µ1 subunits within the trimer.
Primed HA1-HA2 trimers and E dimers change conformation in response to a low-pH trigger. HA can also be induced to change conformation by nonphysiological stimuli such as elevated temperature and pressure (14, 28). For both HA and E, the conformationally rearranged form of the fusion protein is more thermostable than its precursor (18, 65). Such observations led to the hypothesis that the primed fusion proteins are kinetically trapped in a metastable state (14, 65). We show here that reovirus ISVPs, but not virions, are accelerated to undergo the µ1-to-µ1* change by Cs+ ions (Fig. 3). The rate of this change is also increased by other monovalent cations, such as K+, and by elevated particle concentration (57; M. L. Nibert and K. Chandran, unpublished data). Moreover, we recently showed that thermal inactivation of ISVPs is associated with a conformational change in µ1 that renders it protease sensitive and that ISVPs are less thermostable than virions (36, 47). Although the mechanistic bases for the accelerating effects of monovalent cations, particle concentration, and temperature on µ1 conformational change are poorly understood, the above findings lead us to speculate that removal of
3 renders the µ1 trimers in ISVPs metastable, that is, energetically poised to undergo a conformational change in response to a triggering stimulus (Fig. 10). The identity of the physiological trigger for the µ1-to-µ1* change is not yet known (but see below).
Changes in µ1 structure.
µ1 folds into four domains in ISVPs. Domains I to III are mainly
-helical in nature and form the intertwined body of the µ1 trimer. Domain IV is a jelly roll ß-barrel that constitutes the top domain of each subunit within the trimer (42). The
region makes up portions of domains I to III and domain IV in its entirety. Our observation that
is extensively protease sensitive in µ1* (Fig. 2 and 3) indicates that sequences within this region have undergone refolding during the µ1-to-µ1* transition. The results of partial-proteolysis experiments suggest that most or all of these refolding events occur in the lower domains (I to III) and not in the top domain (IV) (35; M. L. Nibert and K. Chandran, unpublished data). Domains I to III contain several hydrophobic sequences and long amphipathic
-helices that may become reorganized during µ1 conformational change and that may account for the hydrophobicity of µ1* as well as the putative µ1*-membrane interactions that lead to hemolysis. Most of these sequences are buried within the µ1 trimer, and partial or total disruption of intersubunit interactions may be necessary to permit their exposure.
Although the present study focused on changes in the central
region of µ1, the N- and/or C-terminal regions of µ1 (µ1N and
, respectively) may also rearrange as part of the µ1 conformational change. The highly apolar µ1N region (N-myristoyl group and 41 amino acids), a prime candidate for mediating µ1*-membrane interactions, is buried within the base of the µ1 trimer in ISVPs (42). Its exposure during the µ1-to-µ1* change and the subsequent insertion into a membrane seem to require not only the reorganization of sequences from the
region that sandwich µ1N in the trimer but also autolytic cleavage at the µ1N-
junction (42, 53; A. L. Odegard and M. L. Nibert, unpublished data). The nature of changes in µ1 tertiary and quaternary structure during the µ1-to-µ1* transition, as well as identities of the µ1* sequences that insert into membrane, are currently unknown but are topics of ongoing investigation in our laboratory.
Common features of nonenveloped-virus penetration proteins. It has been proposed that externalization of a buried N-myristoylated peptide plays a role in membrane penetration by the nonenveloped picornaviruses and polyomaviruses (19, 34). With poliovirus, associated structural changes include externalization of the hydrophobic N terminus of capsid protein VP1 (26) and extensive "tectonic" movements throughout the capsid (5). These conformational changes in poliovirus are triggered by receptor binding to the capsid surface (30). In addition, cleavages of the poliovirus capsid polyprotein are required for these events (34), and the mature capsid is metastable (68). The rotavirus penetration protein (VP4) is not N-myristoylated but contains an internal hydrophobic sequence, similar to a fusion peptide, near which cleavage must occur before the protein is active (29, 49). The Ad penton base protein is neither N-myristoylated nor cleaved; moreover, conformational changes in this protein appear to occur but are not well characterized (58). Thus, although few if any features have been shown to be consistently shared by the penetration proteins of all nonenveloped viruses, some common features include N-myristoylation, priming by proteolytic cleavage(s), metastability of the primed proteins, and triggered conformational changes with exposure of the myristoyl group and/or other hydrophobic regions in association with membrane interaction (Fig. 10). The lack of uniformly consistent features may reflect the fact that several variations to the membrane penetration mechanism are employed by the different nonenveloped viruses.
Loss of
1 from particles and putative conformational change in
2.
Our finding that
1 loss and µ1 conformational change are temporally correlated (Fig. 8) suggests that the two events are mechanistically linked. Since these proteins are thought not to contact each other in particles,
1 loss may be coupled to µ1 conformational change via a third protein that interacts with both of them. Several observations implicate
2 as this protein. First,
1 binds at the center of the pentameric "shutter" atop the
2 turret and µ1 subunits make extensive contacts with the walls of the
2 turret around each fivefold axis (22). Second, when ISVPs are digested to cores in vitro,
2 becomes capable of opening the pentameric shutter (22). Third,
1 cannot stably bind to this more open conformer of the turret (K. Chandran and M. L. Nibert, unpublished data). We thus conclude that the
2 turret opens either constitutively or transiently during the ISVP-to-ISVP* transition and that
1 is lost from viral particles as a consequence of this change in the turret.
The recently determined structure of a portion of
1 revealed a striking resemblance to the Ad fiber protein (17, 69). Both proteins form trimers comprising a fibrous tail and a globular head. Both tails are composed in part of a ß-spiral motif, and both heads contain eight-stranded ß-barrel domains. Ad fiber and
1 are both bound to a pentameric structure at the fivefold axes of a viral particle, the penton base for the Ad fiber (64) and the
2 turret for
1 (22). Both proteins mediate attachment by binding to cell surface receptors (4, 6). Interestingly, in addition to their structural and functional similarities, the Ad fiber and
1 may have similar fates during the entry-related disassembly of their respective particles. The Ad fiber dissociates from particles after viral attachment but before penetration (31, 48), and
1 loss occurs in concert with activation of particles for membrane permeabilization (Fig. 8). We propose that
1, like the Ad fiber, dissociates from particles after attachment to cells but before or during the membrane penetration step.
Triggering the ISVP-to-ISVP* transition.
Loss of the fiber protein from Ad virions is thought to require a conformational change in the penton base, triggered by its binding to the integrin coreceptor (31, 48). Our observation that T1L ISVPs undergo
1 loss and the µ1-to-µ1* change only slowly at physiological temperature (Fig. 2 and 6 to 8) suggests that a triggering stimulus is also required to induce the ISVP-to-ISVP* transition within cells. One possibility is that the binding of
1 to the receptor induces the opening of the
2 turret and
1 loss. The
2 conformational change may then propagate to µ1 and trigger it to change conformation. In support of this idea, it has been suggested that reovirus attachment involves conformational changes in
1 that propagate to other outer-capsid proteins (17, 25). A
1-receptor interaction is unlikely to be the sole trigger for the ISVP-to-ISVP* transition, however, since viral particles can undergo this transition in the absence of the receptor (Fig. 3) or
1 (16; K. Chandran and M. L. Nibert, unpublished data). We favor, instead, a model in which the µ1-to-µ1* change initiates the ISVP-to-ISVP* transition. The µ1 conformational change then induces constitutive or transient opening of the
2 turret, which in turn results in
1 release. Consistent with this alternative model is our previous observation that addition of µ1, but not
1, to cores induces the reverse conformational change, namely, closure of the
2 turret (16). The µ1-to-µ1* transition may be triggered during entry by K+ ions (57) (data not shown), which, like Cs+ ions, accelerate the transition in vitro (Fig. 3). It is also conceivable that direct interaction of µ1 with a host cell factor such as a lipid or protein is the inducing signal.
Contributions of µ1,
1, and
2 to membrane penetration and derepression of the viral transcriptases.
Our present findings indicate that µ1 plays the major role in membrane penetration but do not exclude participation of the other outer-capsid proteins. The following observations, however, suggest that involvement of
1 and/or
2 is unlikely to take the form of protein interactions with the membrane bilayer. (i) The hydrophobicity of
1 does not increase in conjunction with its dissociation from particles (Fig. 7); (ii)
1 affects neither the extent nor the rate of hemolysis (16; K. Chandran and M. L. Nibert, unpublished data); and (iii) cores, which lack µ1 and contain a more open conformer of the
2 turret, do not lyse RBCs (Fig. 1) (16). An alternative possibility is that
1 and
2 participate not by interacting with the target membrane but by facilitating µ1*-membrane interactions. For example, the opening of the
2 turret followed by release of
1 during the ISVP-to-ISVP* transition may be necessary to allow µ1* to approach the membrane. In addition, loss of
1 may be necessary to disengage infecting particles from receptors and permit their release into the cytoplasm after penetration. We speculate that release of Ad fibers from particles may fulfill similar functions in membrane penetration by that virus.
Derepression of the reovirus core-associated transcriptases coincides with the ISVP-to-ISVP* transition (Fig. 8). A role for the µ1-to-µ1* change in this process is certain, given previous evidence implicating M2 and µ1 as determinants of both transcriptase activation and repression (21, 23, 24). How does µ1* allow derepression of the viral transcription machines located within the inner capsid? In ISVPs, large loops that extend from each µ1 trimer contact the raised nodules composed of inner-capsid protein
2 (22, 42, 56).
2 may therefore relay a signal from µ1* to the transcription machines. Alternatively or in addition, µ1* may signal the transcriptases by inducing the
2 turret to open. The
2 conformational change may effect activation by propagating to the capsid interior via inner-capsid protein
1 or
2 or both. Furthermore, because viral mRNAs are thought to exit the particle via the central channel of the
2 turret, both the opening of the turret and the loss of
1 may be necessary for unimpeded mRNA egress and continued transcription (24; M. Yeager, S. Weiner, and K. M. Coombs, Abstr. 40th Meet. Biophys. Soc., abstr. 116, 1996). Our hypothesis that ISVP*s are, or closely resemble, primary transcriptase particles is consistent with previous observations that the latter resemble ISVPs, and not cores, in protein composition (Fig. 8) (38, 62). Unlike activation of the virus-membrane interaction, however, activation of the core-associated viral transcriptases requires only the µ1-to-µ1* change and not the continued presence of µ1* (37) (data not shown). Thus, µ1* may be removed from particles during or after membrane penetration.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
This work was supported by NIH grants R29 AI39533 and R01 AI46440 (to M.L.N.). K.C. was additionally supported by a predoctoral fellowship from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute and a Fields postdoctoral fellowship made available to the Department of Microbiology and Molecular Genetics through the generosity of Ruth Peedin Fields.
| FOOTNOTES |
|---|
This paper is dedicated to the memory of Lakshmi Chandran. ![]()
Present address: ETAN Field Office, Social Justice Center, Madison, WI 53703. ![]()
| REFERENCES |
|---|
|
|
|---|