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Journal of Virology, November 2002, p. 11265-11272, Vol. 76, No. 22
0022-538X/02/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JVI.76.22.11265-11272.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Department of Biochemistry, Microbiology and Immunology, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Ontario K1H 8M5, Canada
Received 15 April 2002/ Accepted 13 August 2002
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The first step in a viral infection is the binding of the virus to a specific cell surface receptor. This step is often an important determinant of virus host range, tissue tropism, and pathogenesis (for a review see reference 34) and may contribute to the molecular basis for the unusual tissue tropism and host range of EV70. Previous work in our laboratory demonstrated that EV70 binds to the complement control protein decay-accelerating factor (DAF/CD55) on susceptible cells (18). Although DAF is expressed in the epithelia of the eye and in the CNS (the sites of EV70 replication) (26), it is also widely expressed in other tissues in vivo, and thus the fact that EV70 binds to DAF cannot alone account for the tissue tropism of the virus. Furthermore, DAF is utilized as an attachment receptor by a range of human enteroviruses, whose patterns of tropism and pathogenesis vary widely (11). For many of these DAF-binding viruses, additional molecules, possibly associated with DAF at the cell surface or involved at a post-DAF binding stage, are required for virus entry; these accessory molecules may confer a more limited tissue specificity (11). Early work on EV70 receptor utilization indicated that sialic acid, a terminal, negatively charged sugar molecule commonly found on cell surface glycoproteins and glycolipids, was required for viral hemagglutination of human erythrocytes (46). However, the significance of this interaction to the life cycle of the virus is unclear. Here, we extend these observations by demonstrating that sialic acid is required for EV70 binding to susceptible nucleated cells and that this binding is important for productive infection. Further, we demonstrate that critical sialic acid residues for EV70 binding do not reside in either the N-linked or O-linked glycosylation domains of DAF, implicating additional factors in EV70 attachment and entry.
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Virus binding assay. Adherent cells were detached by incubation in 15 mM EDTA in Tris-buffered saline (TBS). For each replicate, 5 x 105 cells were washed once in TBS and a nonsaturating amount (1,000 to 10,000 cpm) of 35S-radiolabeled EV70 or 35S-E11 in serum-free medium (prepared as in reference 18) was added to the cells. After incubation at 33 (EV70) or 37°C (E11) for 1 h, the cells were pelleted and the supernatant was removed. The cells were washed once with serum-free medium and pelleted again, and the resulting supernatant was pooled with that obtained previously; this pooled supernatant represented the unbound fraction of input virus. The cells, with associated virus particles, representing the bound fraction of input virus, were resuspended, and samples were analyzed by liquid scintillation counting.
Neuraminidase treatment of cells. Cells were processed as in the virus binding assay described above. Prior to the addition of 35S-labeled virus, cells were incubated in protease-free Vibrio cholerae neuraminidase (Roche) in 150 µl of serum-free medium for 30 min at 37°C and then washed twice with TBS.
Elimination of the N-linked glycosylation site of DAF. A mutagenic positive-sense primer (5'-ATCTGCCTTAAGGGCAGTCAATGGTCAGATATTGAAGAGTTCTGCAGTCGTAGCTGCGAGGTG-3') spanning nucleotides 291 to 353 of the DAF cDNA (numbering as in reference 25) was synthesized; it was designed to introduce an A-to-G mutation at position 337, altering the derived amino acid sequence from Asn to Ser at position 61 of the mature polypeptide (N61S). This primer also incorporated the unique AflII site in the DAF cDNA. The negative-sense primer, 5'-GTTGGTGGGACCTTGGAA-3', incorporated a unique PpuMI restriction site and spanned residues 919 to 937 of the DAF cDNA. The resulting PCR amplicon was inserted between the AflII and PpuMI sites in the wild-type DAF cDNA sequence.
Transient expression of DAF and DAF N61S. DAF and DAF N61S sequences were inserted between the NcoI and EcoRI sites of the pCITE-2a(+) vector (Novagen). Twelve-well tissue culture dishes were seeded with NIH 3T3 cells and transfected with the different constructs with Lipofectamine reagent (Invitrogen Life Technologies) according to the manufacturer's instructions. After 24 h, cells were infected with vaccinia virus strain vTF7-3, encoding the T7 RNA polymerase (12), at a multiplicity of infection of 15 PFU/cell. After an additional 24 h, cells were detached from the culture dishes. A fraction of the cells was processed for 35S-labeled virus binding, as described above, while the remaining fraction was used to measure transgene expression by flow cytometry, as described previously (17). Briefly, separate analyses were performed using monoclonal antibodies EVR1 (complement control protein domain 1 [CCP1] specific) (18), 11D7 (CCP1 specific) (9), IF7 (CCP2 specific) (5), and 8D11 (CCP4 specific) (9) as primary antibodies, each at a final concentration of 0.2 µg/ml. 11D7 and 8D11 were from W. Rosse (Duke University Medical Center, Durham, N.C.), and IF7 was from R. Finberg (Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Boston, Mass.). Goat anti-mouse immunoglobulin G (heavy plus light chains) conjugated to fluorescein isothiocyanate (Roche) was used as the secondary antibody (diluted 1:1,000 from the supplied stock). Virus binding data were normalized for DAF construct expression by using the average of the mean fluorescence intensities for all of the monoclonal antibodies used; expression levels of wild-type DAF and DAF N61S varied by twofold or less.
Use of metabolic inhibitors of glycosylation.
To inhibit N-linked glycosylation, cells were incubated in culture medium containing 0.2 µg of tunicamycin (Sigma)/ml for 24 h prior to assaying virus binding. Benzyl N-acetyl-
-D-galactosaminide (benzyl GalNAc; Sigma), included in culture medium at a final concentration of 3 mM for 48 h prior to 35S-labeled virus binding, was used to inhibit O-linked glycosylation.
Immunoblot analysis. Adherent cells were detached by incubation in 15 mM EDTA in TBS and washed twice. To release DAF from the cell surface, cells were resuspended in phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C (PI-PLC) buffer (RPMI 1640 medium, 0.2% bovine serum albumin, 50 µM 2-mercaptoethanol, 10 mM HEPES, 0.1% sodium azide) containing 6 U of PI-PLC/ml from Bacillus cereus (Sigma) and 1% (vol/vol) broad-specificity protease inhibitor cocktail (Sigma). Following incubation at 37°C for 4 h, cells were pelleted and samples of the supernatant were subjected to sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and immunoblotting. DAF was visualized by incubation in rabbit anti-human DAF polyclonal immunoglobulin G (1:500 dilution; Research Diagnostics Inc.), followed by protein A-alkaline phosphatase conjugate (1:1,250 dilution; Sigma) and a colorimetric substrate (5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolylphosphate/nitroblue tetrazolium; Promega).
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FIG. 1. Neuraminidase pretreatment inhibits EV70 binding to several susceptible cell lines. Cells were incubated in the presence of the indicated concentrations of neuraminidase for 30 min at 37°C. After being washed, cells were incubated for 1 h with 35S-labeled EV70 (33°C) or E11 (37°C) (2,000 to 10,000 cpm). Virus binding data are presented as the means ± standard deviations for binding to treated cells relative to binding to untreated cells (i.e., 0 mU of neuraminidase/ml) from at least three experiments. (A) EV70 and E11 binding to HeLa cells. Untreated cells bound 33 and 67% of input EV70 and E11, respectively. (B) EV70 and E11 binding to U-937 cells. Untreated cells bound 51 and 16% of input EV70 and E11, respectively. (C) EV70 binding to NIH 3T3 cells constitutively expressing human DAF. Untreated cells bound 30% of input EV70. ND, not determined.
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FIG. 2. Neuraminidase pretreatment inhibits EV70 infection of U-937 cells. Cells were incubated in 50 mU of neuraminidase/ml for 30 min at 37°C. After being washed twice with TBS, cells were infected with EV70 at a multiplicity of infection of 5 PFU/cell and incubated at 33°C. Aliquots were removed at the indicated times, and EV70 titers ± standard deviations for duplicate experiments were determined by plaque assay on LLC-MK2 cells.
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DAF is a member of the family of proteins called regulators of complement activation and consists of four CCP domains mounted on a rod-like, serine- and threonine-rich O-glycosylated region, bound to the outer leaflet of the plasma membrane by a glycosylphosphatidylinositol anchor (22). The site of EV70 binding on DAF has been localized to the N-terminal CCP domain, CCP1, with evidence also suggesting a role for CCP2 (17); the single N-linked glycosylation site of DAF is located in the same region, at the interface of CCP1 and -2 (9). Therefore, it was hypothesized that sialic acid residues in the complex-type N-linked oligosaccharide may contribute to EV70 binding to DAF. To test this hypothesis, a derivative of DAF was prepared by site-directed mutagenesis, altering the asparagine residue to serine in the N-linked glycosylation consensus sequence (Asn-X-Ser), resulting in Ser-Arg-Ser. When expressed in the receptor-negative cell line NIH 3T3, this mutant form of DAF (DAF N61S) was observed to bind EV70 as efficiently as the wild-type control (Fig. 3A). Additional experiments showed that the EV70 binding activity of cells expressing DAF N61S was sensitive to neuraminidase, similar to that of cells expressing wild-type DAF (Fig. 3B), further establishing that the sialic acid residues critical for EV70 binding are not a component of the N-linked glycan of DAF.
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FIG. 3. (A) Elimination of the N-linked carbohydrate of DAF has no effect on EV70 binding. An A-to-G mutation was introduced into DAF cDNA, resulting in an Asn-to-Ser substitution (N61S) in the DAF polypeptide. Vector-only control (vector), wild-type (DAF), and mutant (DAF N61S) constructs were transfected into the EV70 receptor-negative cell line NIH 3T3. 35S-EV70 binding was determined after 48 h and normalized for DAF construct expression as determined by flow cytometry (see Materials and Methods). (B) EV70 binding to both wild-type and mutant DAF is sensitive to neuraminidase. Transfection and virus binding were performed as for panel A, except that cells were incubated in serum-free medium (control) or in serum-free medium containing 50 mU of neuraminidase/ml for 30 min at 37°C before 35S-EV70 binding. For both panels, data are presented as means ± standard deviations for at least three experiments.
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FIG. 4. The O-glycosylated domain of DAF is not directly involved in EV70 binding. CHO cells constitutively expressing wild-type DAF or a chimeric construct consisting of the four CCP domains of DAF fused to the majority of the HLA-B44 molecule (DAF/HLA-B44) and control cells transfected with vector alone were assayed for EV70 binding. Virus binding results were normalized for DAF construct expression level.
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Tunicamycin is commonly used to test the role of N-linked glycoproteins in cellular processes; it specifically inhibits the transfer of N-acetylglucosamine to dolichol monophosphate, a very early step in the synthesis of the high-mannose core oligosaccharide (10). HeLa cells and U-937 cells were cultivated in the presence of 0.2 µg of tunicamycin/ml for 24 h and then processed for EV70 binding. As shown in Fig. 5, tunicamycin treatment had no effect on EV70 binding to either cell line. To verify that tunicamycin was effective at inhibiting N-linked glycosylation under these conditions, an immunoblot of DAF cleaved from the surface of intact cells by the action of PI-PLC was prepared. DAF released from HeLa cells cultivated in the presence of tunicamycin showed a decrease in relative molecular weight compared to DAF released from untreated control cells that was consistent with the loss of its single N-linked carbohydrate moiety, as reported previously (23) (Fig. 5B).
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FIG. 5. N-linked glycans are not involved in EV70 attachment. (A) HeLa and U-937 cells, as indicated, were incubated in cell culture medium alone (control) or in cell culture medium containing 0.2 µg of tunicamycin (tunic.)/ml for 24 h at 37°C prior to 35S-EV70 binding. Data are presented as means ± standard deviations for three experiments. (B) Immunoblot analysis of DAF released from tunicamycin-treated and untreated HeLa cells by digestion with PI-PLC. The apparent molecular weights (in thousands) of prestained protein markers are shown at the left.
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-D-galactosaminyltransferase, which catalyzes the first step in the biosynthesis of O-linked glycans (20). HeLa cells treated with benzyl GalNAc showed an approximately 75% decrease in EV70 binding compared to untreated control cells (Fig. 6A), and U-937 cells showed a greater-than-50% decrease in EV70 binding relative to untreated controls (Fig. 6B). To verify that the observed effect on EV70 binding was specific and not due to the toxicity of the inhibitor, E11 binding was once again measured as a control. No significant change in E11 binding to HeLa cells treated with benzyl GalNAc was observed (Fig. 6A), and E11 binding to U-937 cells was somewhat enhanced by the treatment (Fig. 6B). This enhancement parallels the increase in E11 binding to U-937 cells treated with neuraminidase (Fig. 1B) and is consistent with a role for sialic acid, or oligosaccharides more generally, in masking virus binding sites. As a further control, the amounts of DAF expressed at the surfaces of treated and untreated cells were assessed by immunoblotting and were found to be equivalent (Fig. 6C); this analysis also confirmed that the size of DAF released from benzyl GalNAc-treated cells was consistent with the inhibition of O-linked glycosylation.
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FIG. 6. Disruption of O-linked glycosylation inhibits EV70 binding. (A) HeLa cells were incubated in the presence or absence of 3 mM benzyl GalNAc for 48 h at 37°C prior to 35S-EV70 or 35S-E11 binding. (B) Same as panel A with U-937 cells in place of HeLa cells. For panels A and B, data are presented as means ± standard deviations for three experiments. (C) Immunoblot analysis of DAF released from benzyl GalNAc-treated and untreated HeLa cells by digestion with PI-PLC. The apparent molecular weights (in thousands) of prestained protein markers are shown at the left.
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Recent work in several laboratories has advanced our understanding of the role of sialic acid binding in host cell infection and pathogenesis. Barton et al. (2) recently demonstrated that reovirus binding to sialic acid increases the avidity of cell attachment and enhances productive infection, possibly by providing a locus for the initial virus-cell interaction in a multistep adhesion-strengthening strategy. Sialic acid binding is then followed by higher-affinity binding to a secondary receptor critical for virus entry, the junction adhesion molecule (3). Within such a model, the capacity to bind cell surface sialic acid may be an important determinant of cell and tissue tropism in situations where the secondary entry receptor is expressed at low levels or where infection of cells proceeds in an environment of rapidly moving body fluid, such as blood, lymph, or tears. Virus binding to sialic acid may also activate cellular signaling pathways and thus may have important effects downstream of virus attachment on cellular metabolism and the outcome of infection. For example, reovirus binding to cell surface sialic acid is an important mediator in the activation of nuclear factor
B (NF-
B) and in the induction of apoptosis (8).
For TMEV, the capacity to bind sialic acid appears to have a pronounced effect on viral pathogenesis. Infection with certain strains of TMEV results in viral persistence in the CNS, accompanied by demyelination, whereas other strains follow a rapid, acute course of infection. Differential binding to sialic acid residues on the cell surface appears to account for this striking difference in the in vivo outcomes, with sialic acid binding being a unique property of the demyelinating, persistent group (51). The sialic acid binding activity of TGEV contributes to the pathogenicity of this virus as well; in addition to a possible role for sialic acid binding in enhancing cell attachment and entry, it has been speculated that the binding of sialylated macromolecules to the virus surface may increase the stability of the virus against detergent-like bile salts encountered in the gastrointestinal tract (19).
In each of the above examples, the ability to elucidate the role of the sialic acid binding activity in infection and pathogenesis was made possible by the availability of virus strains differing in their capacities to bind sialic acid. What role, if any, the sialic acid binding activity of EV70 plays in vivo is unknown. In the present study, the prototype J 670/71 strain of EV70 was employed; the sialic acid binding activity of other EV70 strains has not been evaluated.
EV70 is the only human enterovirus to date observed to require cell surface sialic acid for attachment; sialic acid binding was also found to be important for infection of susceptible cells, as was shown previously for bovine enterovirus 261 (41). The data presented here also indicate that the absence of the sialic acid residues contained in the single, complex-type N-linked oligosaccharide or in the heavily sialylated O-linked oligosaccharides of DAF did not significantly reduce virus binding to transfected cells expressing the receptor variants. Taken together, these results suggest that at least one additional sialylated receptor molecule, apart from DAF, is involved in EV70 attachment and infection. The requirement for an additional receptor is consistent with previously reported findings for other DAF-binding human enteroviruses, which include certain variants or isolates of coxsackie B virus serotypes 1, 3, and 5 (6, 33, 35), coxsackievirus A21 (CAV21) (36), and various echovirus serotypes (5, 48). Several of these viruses have been shown to require additional factors for cell entry and infection; coxsackievirus B3 and CAV21 require the expression of coxsackievirus-adenovirus receptor (37) and intercellular adhesion molecule 1 (36), respectively. Several of the DAF-binding echoviruses may also require accessory molecules in addition to DAF for cell attachment and infection (29, 30). In these cases, it has been proposed that DAF serves as an initial, reversible, low-affinity virus attachment site that facilitates or enhances binding to a higher-affinity entry factor, which may also support virus infection in the absence of DAF. A version of this model may be applicable to the binding of EV70 to susceptible cells, in which the interaction of the virus with DAF may be required for initial cell adhesion, followed by binding to the putative secondary factor in a sialic acid-dependent manner. For example, for both HeLa cells and NIH 3T3 cells expressing human DAF, EV70 binding is dependent on the presence of both DAF and sialic acid (17) (Fig. 1 and 3), although, as shown here, the sialic acid residues of DAF itself are not required. The identity of an accessory factor and whether it may contain sialic acid residues required for EV70 binding and infection are the subjects of ongoing work in our laboratory.
More broadly, the data presented here also rule out a direct or an indirect role in EV70 attachment for the oligosaccharides underlying the sialic acid residues of DAF. The interaction of DAF with other human enteroviruses has also generally been found to be independent of N-linked and O-linked glycosylations (7, 30, 31). Only for CAV21 has a role for a nonpeptide modification of DAF been suggested; here, hemagglutination inhibition by soluble DAF variants lacking the N-linked glycan was ineffective and hemagglutination inhibition by a partially N-glycosylated construct containing all four CCPs of DAF was significantly less effective for CAV21 than for all other viruses tested (31). Interestingly, CAV21 is the only DAF-binding enterovirus apart from EV70 that has been found to interact with the N-terminal CCP1 of DAF (36); however, the interactions of the two viruses with DAF appear to differ with respect to the requirement for the N-linked oligosaccharide. It has been suggested that the ability to bind DAF evolved independently in different clusters of human enteroviruses (31), and, since EV70 and CAV21 are representatives of separate clusters, it may not be surprising that the two viruses interact with DAF in distinct ways.
The results obtained with metabolic inhibitors of protein glycosylation, tunicamycin and benzyl GalNAc, may provide preliminary information about the nature of the sialylated molecular species involved in EV70 binding. The absence of an effect of tunicamycin treatment suggests that the N-linked oligosaccharides of glycoproteins, along with any associated sialic acid residues, are dispensable for EV70 attachment. In contrast, disruption of O-linked glycosylation inhibited EV70 binding. O-linked glycans of cell surface glycoproteins are often found clustered together in mucin-like domains (as is the case with DAF), where they confer an extended, rod-like structure to the polypeptide chain (14). Thus, the inhibition of virus binding by benzyl GalNAc treatment may be due to a direct effect on virus binding to sialic acid associated with O-linked oligosaccharides on the cell surface, although it is also possible that interfering with O-glycosylation perturbed the conformation of a virus-binding factor in such a way as to prevent EV70 interaction. Whereas it is clear that benzyl GalNAc inhibits O-linked glycosylation of proteins (20), its effects on glycolipid glycosylation have not been reported; experiments assessing the role of sialylated glycolipids in EV70 binding are under way.
For many viruses that bind sialic acid, further details of the specificity of the interaction, regarding the type of linkage between the sialic acid and the underlying oligosaccharide or the size and location of the acyl chain, have been elucidated. Such data can be obtained through the use of specific neuraminidases and sialyltransferases, of lectins with specificity for particular neuraminic acids or linkages, or of mutant cell lines. The V. cholerae neuraminidase used in the present work has a broad substrate specificity and as such was suitable for an initial evaluation of the role of sialic acid in EV70 binding; future work will characterize more precisely the specificity of the sialic acid species and linkage recognized by EV70.
This work was supported by the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada.
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