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Journal of Virology, November 2002, p. 11166-11171, Vol. 76, No. 21
0022-538X/02/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JVI.76.21.11166-11171.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
The Influenza A Virus NS1 Protein Inhibits Activation of Jun N-Terminal Kinase and AP-1 Transcription Factors
Stephan Ludwig,1 Xiuyan Wang,2,3 Christina Ehrhardt,1 Hongyong Zheng,2 Nicola Donelan,2,3 Oliver Planz,4 Stephan Pleschka,5 Adolfo García-Sastre,2 Gudrun Heins,6 and Thorsten Wolff6*
Institut für Molekulare Medizin, Heinrich Heine-Universität, 40225 Düsseldorf,1
Institut für Immunologie, Bundesforschungsanstalt für Viruskrankheiten der Tiere, 72076 Tübingen,4
Institut für Virologie, Fachbereich Veterinärmedizin, Justus-Liebig-Universität, 35392 Giessen,5
Robert Koch-Institut, 13353 Berlin, Germany,6
Department of Microbiology,2
Microbiology Graduate School Training Program, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York, New York 100293
Received 4 March 2002/
Accepted 23 July 2002

ABSTRACT
The influenza A virus nonstructural NS1 protein is known to
modulate host cell gene expression and to inhibit double-stranded
RNA (dsRNA)-mediated antiviral responses. Here we identify NS1
as the first viral protein that antagonizes virus- and dsRNA-induced
activation of the stress response-signaling pathway mediated
through Jun N-terminal kinase.

TEXT
Cells respond to a variety of stress conditions such as UV irradiation
and endotoxin exposure by activation of Jun N-terminal kinase
(JNK) (also termed stress-activated protein kinase [SAPK]),
which in turn phosphorylates and thereby upregulates the activity
of transcription factors of the AP-1 family (
21,
44). JNK activation
is also critical in the innate response to acute viral infections,
because JNK-dependent AP-1 factors transactivate several antiviral
and proinflammatory cytokine genes following infection. Importantly,
the AP-1 heterodimer c-Jun::ATF-2 cooperates with the transcription
factors NF-

B and IRF to transactivate the beta interferon (IFN-ß)
gene (
40,
43). Secretion of IFN-ß is the initial event
that triggers the expression of several IFN-dependent gene products
with antiviral activity (
7,
15,
38). One of the main triggering
agents of this reaction is thought to be double-stranded RNA
(dsRNA) produced during viral replication, because synthetic
dsRNA is capable of activating JNK and the IFN system (
5,
18,
31). However, neither the activating structures in viral RNAs
nor their intracellular localization has been precisely identified.
It has been proposed that the influenza A virus NS1 protein is a viral regulator of gene expression that inhibits pre-mRNA processing and nucleocytoplasmic export of cellular mRNAs and enhances translation (1, 4, 6, 9, 10, 25, 28, 33, 34, 46). On the other hand, the NS1 protein, which has RNA-binding activity (16), was also shown to antagonize antiviral dsRNA-dependent enzymes and processes. These include activation of protein kinase R (PKR) (2, 17, 29) and of the transcription factors NF-
B, IRF-3, and IRF-7 (37, 39, 42). As a result, the NS1 protein effectively restrains IFN-
/ß functions in infected cells (12). Recently, we and others have shown that influenza A virus replication stimulates the transcriptional activity of nuclear AP-1 factors and their target genes via the MKK4/7-JNK pathway (22, 27, 30). Moreover, these studies suggested that induction of AP-1 factors is detrimental to virus production, because expression of dominant-negative mutants of JNK or its substrate c-Jun increased viral titers (30). Thus, the question was raised whether the NS1 protein might affect this cellular response.
Influenza virus-induced JNK and c-Jun activation is upregulated in the absence of NS1 protein.
To study the role of the NS1 protein in JNK activation, we compared the influenza A/PR/8/34 wild-type (WT) virus with its two isogenic variants delNS1 and NS- IAmut1, which were generated by the ribonucleoprotein transfection method (12, 42). The delNS1 virus completely lacks the NS1 gene, whereas NS-IAmut1 expresses an NS1 protein of wild-type length (230 amino acids) with five amino acid replacements at positions 181 to 185 (LIGGL to KQRRS). These mutations mediate a shift from a nuclear to a predominantly cytoplasmic NS1 localization in infected and transfected cells and slightly slow migration on sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)- polyacrylamide gels (Fig. 1A to E). The introduced amino acid changes do not appear to alter the general structure of the viral NS1 protein because they do not affect its dimerization as judged by binding of the NS-IAmutI protein to corresponding glutathione S-transferase (GST)-NS1 mutant or WT fusion proteins (Fig. 1F). Also, the mutation did not reduce the ability of the NS1 protein to form stable complexes with dsRNA (Fig. 1G). Currently we cannot tell whether the altered intracellular localization of the NS-IAmutI protein is the consequence of an enhanced activity of the proposed nuclear export signal at NS1 amino acids 138 to 147 (26) or, rather, is due to cytoplasmic retention. However, replication of the NS-IAmutI virus seems not to be compromised by the mutation since the variant could be grown to titers of up to 10 8 PFU/ml in embryonated chicken eggs, which is comparable to WT growth (data not shown).
Permissive Vero cells were infected with WT and mutant viruses,
and cell lysates were analyzed for JNK activation and phosphorylation
of its downstream effector c-Jun at 4 and 8 h postinfection
(Fig.
2A). While JNK activity and c-Jun phoshorylation increased
only moderately on infection with the WT and NS-IAmut1 viruses,
these parameters were strongly enhanced by the
delNS1 virus.
These results suggest that expression of nuclear and/or cytoplasmic
NS1 proteins opposes signaling through the JNK pathway. Furthermore,
we conclude that JNK activation is not mediated by an autocrine
I IFN-

/ß loop, since Vero cells are deficient in IFN
production (
8). Essentially the same effects of NS1 expression
during influenza A virus infection on c-Jun phosphorylation
were observed with retarded kinetics in A549 lung epithelial
cells (Fig.
2B) and in human HEK293 cells (data not shown),
suggesting that these observations are of general importance
in influenza virus infections of epithelial cells. Interestingly,
active JNK was still present in
delNS1 virus-infected A549 cells
at 16 h postinfection while JNK activity was back to basal levels
in Sendai virus-infected cells.
The viral NS1 protein downregulates AP-1-dependent gene expression.
To evaluate the role of NS1 in regulating JNK-dependent gene
expression, we studied the induction of the IFN-ß
reporter plasmid p125-Luc (
47) in response to infection by PR8
WT or
delNS1 virus (Fig.
3A). This comparison showed that NS1
expression reduced viral promoter activation in our experimental
setting by approximately threefold. Thus, virus-induced hyperphosphorylation
of c-Jun in the absence of NS1 (Fig.
2) correlated with enhanced
transcriptional activity of AP-1 factors. We confirmed that
JNK and c-Jun are involved in
delNS1-mediated IFN-ß
promoter activation by transfecting cells, prior to infection,
with empty vector or plasmids expressing either dominant-negative
JNK (SAPKß KK>RR) or dominant-negative c-Jun (TAM67)
(Fig.
3B). Coexpression of the two mutants decreased reporter
gene activity, demonstrating that activation of the IFN-ß
promoter in
delNS1 virus- infected cells requires activation
of the JNK pathway. Inhibition was less pronounced than in cells
expressing the NS1 protein (Fig.
3B). This outcome is consistent
with additional inhibitory effects of NS1 on NF-

B and IRF-3
activity in IFN-ß induction (
39,
42), while the JNK
and c-Jun mutants act only on a single pathway. Given the large
number of genes that are regulated by AP-1 factors, the NS1
protein is likely to suppress activation not only of the IFN-ß
promoter but also of other target genes.
The NS1 protein inhibits dsRNA-mediated JNK activation.
We finally examined whether NS1 expression would regulate JNK
and AP-1 activation by dsRNA or other known stimuli. Cells were
transfected with a plasmid encoding a GST-JNK fusion protein,
together with NS1 expression constructs or empty vector. Subsequently,
the cells were mock treated or stimulated with synthetic dsRNA
and analyzed for JNK activity. Figure
4 shows that both the
predominantly nuclear NS1 WT and the predominantly cytosolic
IAmut1 protein almost completely prevented JNK activation (compare
lanes vector with lanes WT and IAmut1). These results are consistent
with the observations made during virus infections (Figs.
1 and
2). These findings were unexpected because influenza virus
replication during which dsRNA might be generated by hybridization
of genomic and antigenomic RNA strands is most probably a nuclear
event (
23). Possibly, this instead indicates that NS1 inhibits
JNK activation by association with intramolecularly base-paired
regions in viral RNAs that are exported to the cytoplasm. Such
an interaction has been demonstrated previously (
32). Accordingly,
expression of the NS1 protein carrying the R38A/K41A double
mutation that attenuates binding to dsRNA (
39,
41) did not prevent
JNK activation (Fig.
4A, lanes R38AK41A). This finding gives
additional support to the conclusion that the NS1 protein antagonizes
JNK activation by virtue of its dsRNA-binding activity. However,
we cannot rule out the possibility that interactions between
NS1 and the cellular protein(s) involved in dsRNA-mediated activation
of JNK play a role in the prevention of JNK activation. The
specificity of the NS1 WT in repressing virus- and dsRNA-dependent
responses was shown by its inability to inhibit JNK activation
by the classical inducer sodium arsenite (Fig.
4B).
Influenza virus infection and dsRNA treatment trigger specific
signal transduction cascades that culminate in posttranscriptional
activation of AP-1 and other transcription factors (
11,
30).
This leads to the expression of antiviral (e.g., IFN-

/ß),
proinflammatory (e.g., tumor necrosis factor alpha and interleukin-6),
and chemotactic (e.g., RANTES) cytokines that combine to shape
the innate and adaptative immune response of mammals toward
the intruding virus (
3,
20). Activation of JNK and c-Jun have
also been linked to the induction of apoptosis (reviewed in
reference
36), which is known to occur during influenza virus
infection (22,
35). Thus, inhibition of JNK-dependent responses
by the NS1 protein is in the interest of efficient viral replication
and spread and is likely to influence viral pathogenicity. We
suggest that the lack of JNK inhibition contributes to the strong
attenuation of the
delNS1 virus in IFN-competent hosts and to
its increased propensity to induce apoptosis (
12,
48).
The present characterization of NS1 as a specific antagonist of virus- and dsRNA-induced activation of JNK and its downstream targets is, to our knowledge, the first report of such a property of a viral protein. We speculate that other viruses express gene products that are functionally equivalent to NS1. This hypothesis is supported by the recent finding that the rotavirus VP8* protein can block TRAF2-dependent JNK activation, although it is not known if this occurs during virus infection (24). JNK activity is regulated by phosphorylation through the dual-specificity kinases MKK4 and MKK7, which are controlled by farther upstream regulators (13). PKR and 2',5'-oligoadenylate synthetase have been implicated as potential dsRNA and/or viral RNA sensors that signal for JNK activation, but alternative pathways appear to exist (14, 18, 19). Based on the failure to inhibit JNK activation by chemotoxic stress and due to its dsRNA-binding capability, the NS1 protein is likely to exert its inhibitory function through its dsRNA-binding properties. Mechanistically, this would resemble the effect of NS1 in preventing the activation of NF-
B and IRF-3 (39, 42), although those factors may be controlled by at least partially different upstream sensors. For instance, genetic knockout of PKR ablated activation of NF-
B but not of JNK or IRF-3 in response to virus infections in mouse fibroblasts (5, 37). Whether the NS1-mediated inhibition of the JNK pathway is mediated by mere sequestration of dsRNA or by targeting of cellular dsRNA- sensor molecules through binding to shared dsRNA molecules will be a matter of future investigations. Taken together, our results characterize the NS1 protein as an antagonist of virus- and dsRNA-induced activation of JNK and AP-1. The precise identification of all the factors and pathways that participate in the induction of cytokine and chemokine genes in response to influenza virus infection remains an important challenge for future research.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
S.L., X.W., and C.E. contributed equally to this work.
We thank Takashi Fujita (Tokyo, Japan) for providing plasmid p125-Luc.
This work was supported by grants from the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (S.L., O.P., and S.P.) and the NIH (A.G.-S.).

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Robert Koch-Institut, NG2, Nordufer 20, 13353 Berlin, Germany. Phone: 49-30-4547 2278. Fax: 49-30-4547 2328. E-mail:
wolfft{at}RKI.de.


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Journal of Virology, November 2002, p. 11166-11171, Vol. 76, No. 21
0022-538X/02/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JVI.76.21.11166-11171.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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