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Journal of Virology, April 2002, p. 3338-3349, Vol. 76, No. 7
0022-538X/02/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JVI.76.7.3338-3349.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Department of Microbiology, The University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, Alabama 35294-2170,1 Department of Hematology-Oncology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104,2 Department of Microbiology and Molecular Genetics, University of Vermont, Burlington, Vermont 954053
Received 10 August 2001/ Accepted 21 December 2001
| ABSTRACT |
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| INTRODUCTION |
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Once a protein is internalized, the clathrin-coated vesicle with its glycoprotein contents fuses with a sorting endosome. From this endosome compartment, glycoproteins are either directed to lysosomes for proteolytic degradation, recycled back to the plasma membrane, or, in polarized cells, retargeted to a different surface. Many of these processes are thought to be directed through the interaction of sequences in the cytoplasmic or membrane-spanning domain of the cargo protein with cellular protein transport and localization components (1, 8, 38, 39, 48, 69-71).
Thus, glycoprotein expression on the cell surface depends upon specific signal sequences contained within the cytoplasmic and membrane-spanning domains. Two cytoplasmic internalization motifs have been particularly well characterized. The first is a tyrosine-based YXX
sequence, where X is any amino acid and
represents an amino acid with a bulky aliphatic side chain (8, 38, 53, 70, 71). The motif is usually located within 20 amino acids of the membrane-spanning domain and has been modeled as a tyrosine residue projecting from a tight turn, although recent crystallization data indicate that the motif is bound by an adaptin molecule in an extended conformation (1, 8, 48, 70). The second motif associated with internalization is a dileucine or Leu-Ile sequence which can be transferred to heterologous proteins but lacks any predicted structural characteristics to distinguish it from dileucine residues which do not participate in internalization (25, 28).
The transmembrane protein (TM) subunits of the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1), HIV-2, and simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) Env glycoproteins, as well as the cytoplasmic domains of a number of other virus fusion proteins, contain cytoplasmic domain sequences that are highly conserved and consistent with proposed tyrosine-based internalization signals (YXX
) (3, 4, 14, 45, 46, 58, 62, 68, 69). Recently, the functionality of these signals in SIV and HIV-1 Env internalization has been demonstrated (14, 58, 62). Egan et al. and Rowell et al. have shown that the HIV-1 glycoprotein is efficiently endocytosed into clathrin-coated pits at a rate consistent with its concentration and that such internalization is attenuated in the presence of the viral Gag protein (14, 58). Thus, it appears that there is competition between the endocytic machinery and Gag for interactions with the HIV TM. The rapid endocytosis of the HIV-1 glycoprotein is dependent upon maintenance of a tyrosine residue at position 712 in Env, and the clathrin adapter protein AP-2 has been shown to bind to the cytoplasmic domain of TM at this Tyr712 motif (2, 3, 45).
The Gag polyprotein is the primary building block in the assembly of retroviral particles. It is both necessary and sufficient for assembly and release of virions (5, 10, 19, 20, 54, 59, 63, 64). The amino-terminal matrix domain (MA) of Gag is closely associated with the viral membrane, with which it can be cross-linked in some viruses (51). MA is thought to target assembling Gag molecules to the plasma membrane through a myristic acid moiety, which modifies the N terminus, and through a high density of basic charges on the putative membrane association face of MA. Our understanding of the precise role of MA in HIV particle assembly is complicated by a recent study by Reil et al., which suggested that the entire MA domain of Gag was dispensable for HIV-1 replication (55). This result could be achieved, however, only when the cytoplasmic domain of Env was truncated.
We previously proposed that glycoprotein incorporation into virions could proceed by two mechanisms. In the first, glycoprotein is actively recruited into virions through protein-protein interactions among Gag, presumably MA, and the cytoplasmic domain of TM. The second possible mechanism for glycoprotein incorporation is that of active exclusion of cellular proteins with passive incorporation of Env. The latter mechanism requires that the accumulation and intermolecular interaction of Gag precursors during assembly and budding exclude cellular proteins that are tethered to the cytoskeleton or are interacting with cytoplasmic partners. As an extension of this hypothesized model, we suggested that interactions between Env and Gag might be required to prevent Env molecules from being sequestered from the assembly pathway by the endocytic system (24).
Incorporation of the full-length virus-encoded glycoprotein into HIV virions does appear to be dependent on a specific interaction between MA and the cytoplasmic domain of Env (15, 16). Mutagenesis and biochemical data have strongly suggested that such an interaction is likely, but direct evidence has proven difficult to obtain. It is clear, however, that single point mutations in HIV-1 MA (positions 12, 30, and 34) can block virus infectivity and do so by blocking glycoprotein incorporation (15, 16). Truncation of the HIV TM overcomes the block to incorporation and complements the loss of infectivity (17, 36, 72). Moreover, pseudotyping MA mutant HIV with heterologous glycoproteins that possess short cytoplasmic tails (those from amphotropic murine leukemia virus [MuLV] or human T-cell leukemia virus) or with some truncated HIV-1 glycoproteins results in viruses that retain infectivity (17, 36). These data imply that a specific interaction between MA and Env is required to incorporate HIV-1 glycoproteins with long cytoplasmic domains. Indeed, a recent report suggested that this MA-Env interaction requires the carboxy-terminal 60 amino acids of the HIV-1 TM (9). The significance of this interaction and its role in incorporating Env have yet to be fully investigated in viral constructs, but it is clear that some truncations in this region of the HIV-1 glycoprotein can attenuate infectivity by blocking incorporation (12, 17). Finally, while Env appears to play no direct role in Gag assembly and virus release, it can direct assembly of Gag to the basolateral surface for assembly in polarized epithelial cells. This directionality of virus assembly supports the concept of Env-Gag interactions and is dependent upon a tyrosine-containing targeting signal that overlaps the endocytosis signal described above (34, 35, 49).
Evidence supportive of the passive mechanism for incorporation of at least some forms of Env is equally compelling. Envelope proteins lacking cytoplasmic domains, heterologous viral and cellular glycoproteins, and even glycolipid-anchored derivatives of HIV Env are efficiently incorporated into virions; moreover, the entire cytoplasmic domain of SIV is dispensable for virus replication in vitro (27, 32, 52, 60, 65, 76). Additionally, we have shown that expression of an Env which is retained in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) is insufficient to redirect HIV-1 budding to that compartment, suggesting that if an interaction between Gag and Env occurs, it must occur in a temporally and spatially specific manner (61).
To explore further the two possible mechanisms for incorporation of Env, we have examined the abilities of glycoprotein endocytosis mutants to complement MA mutations that block virus infectivity and glycoprotein incorporation. We found that mutation of Tyr712 in the dominant cytoplasmic endocytosis signal restored infectivity of the MA mutants in a cell-dependent manner. Surprisingly, however, this complementation of infectivity did not correlate with increases in glycoprotein incorporation, and viruses containing mutations in both MA and the TM endocytosis signals were incapable of multiple rounds of replication in T cells. Freeing the HIV glycoprotein from the endocytosis machinery and enhancing glycoprotein surface expression was thus insufficient to overcome defects in glycoprotein incorporation imposed by MA mutations. These findings not only support the concept that incorporation of HIV-1 glycoproteins with full-length cytoplasmic domains requires a specific interaction between MA and Env but also suggest an additional role for sequences around tyrosine 712 in modulating Env biological activity.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Glycoprotein and proviral expression constructs. HIV-1 Env endocytosis mutants were generated using a three-oligonucleotide PCR protocol employing thermostable Ampligase (Epicenter, Madison, Wis.) and Taq polymerase (Promega, Madison, Wis.). The 5' oligonucleotide overlapped a BsmI site at position 7228. The Tyr712 mutagenic oligonucleotide was 5' phosphorylated and overlapped the Tyr712 (TAT) codon at nucleotide positions 8348 to 8350. (All nucleotide numbers refer to the NL4.3 proviral sequence [GenBank accession no. M19921].) The Tyr-to-Cys mutation converted TAT to TGT, and the Tyr-to-Phe mutation converted TAT to TTT. The 3' reverse-complement oligonucleotide overlapped the unique BamHI site at position 8475. Simultaneous DNA amplification and ligation were carried out using the above-mentioned primers and enzymes on a gel-purified, XhoI-linearized HIV-1 Env-containing expression vector, pSRH. The mutagenesis reaction mixture was as follows: 1 ng of pSRH template DNA, 100 pM (each) BsmI and BamHI primers, 1 nM phosphorylated mutagenic primer, 250 nM deoxynucleoside triphosphates, 1.0 mM NAD, 1.0 mM dithiothreitol, 1x Taq polymerase buffer (Promega), 5 U of Ampligase, 2 U of Taq polymerase, and H2O to 100 µl. The reaction mixtures were overlaid with mineral oil, and the following cycles were carried out on an MJ Research thermal controller: an initial denaturation at 94°C for 4 min, denaturation at 94°C for 1 min, annealing at 50°C for 1 min, and extension at 65°C for 6 min for 30 cycles. The products were digested with BsmI and BamHI and separated by agarose gel electrophoresis. A fragment corresponding to the mutant BsmI-BamHI 1,237 bp of Env was subcloned into the vector pSPEX, a pSP (Promega)-derived vector, containing the EcoRI-XhoI sequences of HIV-1 NL4-3. Mutations were verified in pSPEX by sequencing the entire region encompassed by the outer PCR primers. Subsequent to verification of the mutants, the NheI (nucleotide 7250)-XhoI (nucleotide 8887) (both unique sites) fragment was subcloned from the pSPEX derivatives into the mammalian expression vector pSRH, a simian virus 40 promoter-Mason-Pfizer monkey virus constitutive transport element-based expression system. The resulting clones are referred to as pSRH Y/C and pSRH Y/F. The Env sequence encoded by this vector also contains the reading frames for Tat and Rev, and the vector expresses all three proteins.
Proviruses were generated by subcloning the NheI-XhoI fragment from pSRH clones that had been sequenced and shown to express glycoprotein into pNL4.3wt or pNL4.3 MA12LE, MA30LE, or MA34VE, provided by Eric Freed at NIH. The presence of the mutations in the proviral constructs was verified by DNA sequencing. All plasmids were propagated in Escherichia coli DH5
cells and purified by alkaline lysis followed by cesium chloride gradient centrifugation.
Metabolic labeling and immunoprecipitation. Endocytosis motif mutant pSRH constructs were transfected into COS-1 cells by standard calcium phosphate protocols as previously described. To verify protein expression, processing, and stability, the transfected cells were metabolically labeled. Glycoprotein-expressing cells were starved for 30 min with leucine-deficient DMEM (Sigma, St. Louis, Mo.). The cells were labeled with [3H]leucine (250 µCi/ml) (Perkin-Elmer NEN, Boston, Mass.) for 1 h at 37°C. The [3H]leucine was removed, and the radioactive protein was chased through the secretory pathway by incubating the cells for 4 h in complete medium. At the completion of the chase, the supernatants were removed and filtered through 0.45-µm-pore-size syringe filters. Lysis buffer was added to a final concentration of 1% Nonidet P-40-0.1% sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) and 0.5% deoxycholate, and the lysate was immunoprecipitated with AIDS patient sera at a dilution of 1:1,000. To prepare cell lysates, cells were washed once in ice-cold phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) and then lysed in the buffer described above. The nuclei were pelleted at 20,000 x g for 1 min in a microcentrifuge, and the cleared cell lysates were transferred to new tubes and immunoprecipitated with patient sera as described above for the supernatants. Immunoprecipitated proteins from the supernatants and the cell lysates were precipitated with formalin-fixed Staphylococcus aureus (protein A), and the complexes were washed three times with lysis buffer lacking deoxycholate. A final wash in 20 mM Tris (pH 6.8) was used to remove residual detergent, and the complex was denatured by heating it for 5 min at 95°C in protein-loading buffer (50 mM Tris [pH 6.8], 100 mM dithiothreitol, 2% SDS, 0.1% bromophenol blue, and 10% glycerol). Viral glycoproteins were separated by SDS-8% polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE). The gels were fixed and impregnated with the fluorographic compound En3Hance (Dupont, NEN). The dried gels were fluorographed at -70°C.
Quantification of surface expression using biotinylation. The initial steps for surface labeling of viral Env proteins on transiently transfected COS-1 cells were the same as those described above for metabolic labeling except that [35S]Cys-[35S]Met protein labeling mix (500 µCi/ml; Perkin-Elmer NEN) was used instead of [3H]leucine. The label was changed in order to facilitate quantitation. The cells were pulse-labeled for 30 min and chased for 4 h. The supernatants were removed, and the cells were washed twice with ice-cold PBS containing Mg2+ and Ca2+. Surface proteins were labeled for 30 min on ice with 2 ml of sulfo-NHS-SS-biotin (Pierce, Rockford, Ill.) (100 mg/ml in ice-cold PBS containing Mg2+ and Ca2+) according to modifications of the methods of Lisanti et al. and Salzwedel et al. (33, 61). The biotin solution was removed, and any excess biotin was quenched in three ice-cold washes with serum-free medium supplemented with 10 mM glycine. The biotinylated cells were then lysed on ice with the lysis buffer described above supplemented with 20 mM glycine. Immunoprecipitations were carried out as described above except that 20 mM glycine was present in all washes. Prior to the final Tris (pH 6.8) wash, 25% of the lysate was removed for total glycoprotein analysis and processed for gel analysis as described above. The remainder (75%) was subjected to surface protein analysis as follows: the immunoprecipitate was boiled for 4 min in 10% SDS to dissociate the antigen-antibody complex, and then the detergent-protein solution was diluted to 0.1% SDS in PBS with 20 mM glycine (to quench any released biotin) and precipitated with monomeric avidin-agarose beads (Pierce). The biotinylated protein-avidin complex was washed two times with lysis buffer lacking deoxycholate and then processed for electrophoresis. Proteins were separated by SDS-8% PAGE. The gels were fixed, dried, and exposed to phosphor screens for quantitation of the steady-state surface-to-total glycoprotein ratio using a PhosphorImager (Molecular Dynamics, Sunnyvale, Calif.) and ImageQuant software. Relative surface protein levels were calculated as {[(Msur - B)/(Mtot - B)]/[(WTsur - B)/(WTtot - B)] x 100%}, where Msur represents counts for the surface expression of the mutant glycoprotein, Mtot represents counts for the total glycoprotein fraction, WTsur represents counts for the surface expression of the wild-type glycoprotein, WTtot represents counts for the total wild-type glycoprotein fraction, and B is the lane background for each of the individual measures.
RT assays. Reverse transcriptase (RT) activity from virus-containing supernatants was assayed as previously described. Briefly, 25 µl of filtered (0.45-µm pore size) culture supernatant was incubated with 75 µl of reaction cocktail (67 mM Tris [pH 8.0], 6.7 mM dithiothreitol, 6.7 mM MgCl2, 200 mM KCl, 0.133% Triton X-100, 0.67 mM EGTA, 5 µCi of 35S-TTP [10 mCi/ml; NEN]) and 1.25 µg of poly(A)·(dT)10 (Boehringer/Roche, Indianapolis, Ind.) in a 96-well plate at 37°C for 90 min, at which time the reaction was stopped by the addition of 50 µl of 200 mM sodium pyrophosphate. Reaction mixtures were dot blotted onto NA45 membranes (Schleicher & Schuell, Keene, N.H.), washed two times in 0.5 M sodium phosphate, and quantitated using a radioanalytic scanning system (AMBIS Systems-Scanalytics, Fairfax, Va.).
trans-complementation virus entry analysis.
To assess the abilities of endocytosis mutant glycoproteins to facilitate virus entry in a single round of infection, we created an HIV NL4-3 chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) reporter vector with Env deleted analogous to that developed by Helseth et al. (21). This vector, pNL4
Env CAT, was cotransfected with pSRH plasmids expressing wild-type or mutant Env at a ratio of 2:1. Virus-containing supernatants from transiently transfected COS-1 cells were normalized for RT activity and adjusted for volume with complete medium. Supernatants were added to 107 CEMx174 cells and adsorbed for 4 h at 37°C. The cells were washed with complete medium to remove unbound virus and incubated for an additional 48 h. Cytoplasmic extracts of the infected cells were obtained by repeated freeze-thaw lysis. A portion of the cytoplasmic extract was evaluated for the presence of CAT as described previously (21). The products of the CAT assay were separated by thin-layer chromatography and quantitated using an AMBIS Systems-Scanalytics radioanalytic scanner. The percent conversion of [14C]chloramphenicol (Perkin-Elmer NEN) to its acetylated or diacetylated form was determined from radioanalytic scanning of the thin-layer plate and is presented as CAT activity.
Infectivity in HeLa-MAGI or T-cell lines. Proviral constructs were transfected into 293T cells for virus production. The supernatants were filtered and assayed for RT activity 48 h posttransfection. Equal RT activity in volume-adjusted supernatants was added to the target cells and allowed to adsorb for 4 h. The cells were washed to remove unbound particles and then cultured at 37°C. X4 MAGI cells were stained as described below 48 to 60 h postinfection. To obtain replication kinetics data, T-cell lines were allowed to develop a multiple-round infection. Supernatants were harvested from the cultures on days 4, 8, 12, and 16. After removal of the supernatant, the H9 cells were split 1:4 at each time point. At the various time points, RT activity in the T-cell culture supernatant was evaluated by RT analysis as described above.
Sucrose density gradient analysis.
Subsequent to the removal of the culture supernatant for RT analysis and infectivity determinations, the proviral-DNA-transfected 293T cells were metabolically labeled with [35S]Cys-[35S]Met protein-labeling mix for 16 h to generate labeled virus particles for gradient analysis and to determine the level of glycoprotein incorporation. Briefly, the labeled, virus-containing supernatant was pelleted in a type 70.1ti rotor (Beckman, Palo Alto, Calif.) at 100,000 x g through a 23% (wt/wt) sucrose cushion for 60 min. The virus pellet was expanded in 400 µl of serum-free DMEM for 2 h at 4°C. The labeled virus was loaded onto continuous 24 to 48% (wt/wt) sucrose gradients and centrifuged in a Beckman SW41ti swinging-bucket rotor at 100,000 x g for 16 h (to equilibrium) at 4°C. The gradients were drip fractionated into 1-ml fractions, each fraction was evaluated for RT activity (see above), and the density of each fraction was determined using a refractometer (Bausch and Lomb, Rochester, N.Y.). Peak RT fractions, which coincided with those at approximately 1.16-g/ml density, were combined, diluted 1:2 in PBS, and immunoprecipitated with AIDS patient sera (see above). The precipitated protein was separated on SDS-10% PAGE, and the gels were autoradiographed and also exposed to phosphor screens for quantitation. The ratio of glycoprotein on gradient-banded particles was determined as follows: (counts gp120 - counts background)/(counts p24 - counts background). The background was determined for each sample from an equivalent area of each lane of the protein gel containing no distinct bands. Relative incorporation is expressed as a percentage of the wild-type Env:Gag ratio. As a control for nonspecific pelleting of Env, either through aggregation or because of microvesicle contamination of gradient fractions, 293T cells were transfected independently with an LTR-driven Env construct, pIII-Env (21), and pNL4
Env CAT. The supernatants were pooled prior to the sucrose gradient separations and gel analyses described above.
Cell-cell fusion assays. COS-1 cells were transiently transfected with pSRH glycoprotein expression constructs. Twenty-four hours subsequent to the medium change required by Ca2PO4 transfection, the cells were trypsinized and counted using a hemocytometer. Equivalent numbers of cells (105) for each mutant were added in triplicate to 50% confluent HeLa-CD4-LTR-ß-galactosidase (X4 MAGI) cell monolayers in 12-well plates. The cells were incubated in DMEM for 24 h or less, as specified, to allow glycoprotein-mediated fusion to occur. Subsequent to the prescribed incubation, the cells were fixed in 1.0% formaldehyde-0.2% glutaraldehyde in PBS, washed two times in PBS, and stained for ß-galactosidase. Syncytia were counted by visual microscopy at x40 magnification. Two measures were utilized. The total number of syncytia in a random field was determined for up to 10 fields and reported as syncytia per field. Alternatively, a number of syncytia were randomly selected, and the total nuclei in each were counted to determine the number of nuclei per syncytium. The former assessment is useful at early time points due to the uniformity in size of the syncytia.
Two-color fusion assay for fusion kinetics. A dual-expression plasmid was constructed for analysis of fusion by a two-color fluorescence-activated cell sorter (FACS) analysis assay. The enhanced blue fluorescent protein (EBFP) expression cassette was purified from pEBFP-N1 (Promega) by double digestion of the plasmid with the restriction enzymes AflII and AseI. The purified DNA fragment was inserted into the pSRH plasmid at the SacII site by blunt-end ligation. This new pSRH-EB construct supports high-level expression of the HIV-1 wild-type Env proteins from the simian virus 40 late promoter as well as EBFP expression from the human cytomegalovirus immediate-early promoter. The pSRH derivative plasmids expressing endocytosis mutants were also engineered in the same way to include the EBFP expression cassette. The pHTC-EB vector, which expresses a cleavage-defective, glycosylphosphatidylinositol-linked form of the HIV-1 Env, was used as a control for cell aggregation. COS-1 cells were transfected in triplicate with the dual-expression vectors (1 µg/35-mm-diameter well) using the Fugene 6 reagent (Roche, Indianapolis, Ind.) and were used as effector cells in fusion assays.
X4 MAGI cells were incubated with a 0.4 µM calcein-AM (excitation, 496 nm; emission, 517 nm) solution for 30 to 45 min at 37°C. The cells were then removed from the plate in cell dissociation buffer (PBS containing 25 mM EDTA) and resuspended in complete DMEM. A total of 106 target cells were added to COS-1 cells at room temperature for 30 min prior to incubation at 37°C for various times. The coculture was washed with PBS and dissociated with 1 ml of cell dissociation buffer/well, and the cells were resuspended in sorting tubes (BD Biosciences, San Jose, Calif.) for FACS analysis in a Vantage FACS workstation (BD Biosciences). A UV laser was used for EBFP, and a 488-nm laser was used for calcein-AM. In general 10,000 blue cells were gated and analyzed for blue-and-green double-positive cells. Additional details of this assay will be published elsewhere (X. Lin, C. A. Derdeyn, R. Blumenthal, and E. Hunter, submitted for publication).
| RESULTS |
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Endocytosis-defective glycoproteins mediate virus entry into T-cell lines more efficiently than wild type. The modest enhancement of surface expression of the endocytosis mutants over that of the wild-type glycoprotein prompted us to examine the abilities of the Cys and Phe mutant glycoproteins to complement virus entry using an HIV-1 trans-complementation system (21).
The vector with env deleted, pNL4
Env CAT, was cotransfected with pSRH plasmids expressing wild-type or mutant Env; then virus-containing supernatants normalized for RT activity were used to infect CEMx174 cells as described in Materials and Methods. Cytoplasmic extracts of the infected cells were obtained by repeated freeze-thaw lysis and evaluated for the presence of CAT. As shown in Fig. 3, mutant glycoproteins enhanced NL4
Env CAT entry by as much as 2.1-fold for the Tyr-to-Cys mutant and 1.9-fold for Tyr to Phe over the level mediated by the wild-type glycoprotein. An expressed but ER-retained HIV-1 Env construct (ERRS [61]) was unable to mediate entry of the env-defective provirus (Fig. 3). Similar results were obtained in Jurkat cells (not shown). Thus, the endocytosis mutant glycoproteins mediated enhanced virus entry at levels consistent with their relative levels of surface expression.
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The infectivity of virus encoding wild-type MA was enhanced more than fourfold with the Y712C Env mutation and approximately threefold with the Y712F Env mutation (Fig. 4A). These findings are consistent with those for surface Env expression presented in Fig. 2. Virus encoding the MA30LE mutation and wild-type Env was 40-fold less infectious than constructs encoding wild-type MA (Fig. 4B). The Y712C and Y712F mutations increased infectivity of the MA30LE virions by 7.7- and 11.1-fold, respectively, corresponding to 18 and 25% of the level of fully wild-type NL4-3. A similar complementation of infectivity was observed with the MA34VE provirus, where the cysteine and phenylalanine substitutions resulted in 6.4- and 13.5-fold increases in infectivity, respectively (Fig. 4C), corresponding to 18.7% (Cys) and 39.5% (Phe) of the infectivity of the NL4-3 wild type. The levels of complementation with MA12LE proviruses encoding the Y712 mutations were similar (data not shown). Clearly, mutation of the HIV-1 envelope glycoprotein endocytosis signal can significantly complement (reaching up to 40% of the wild-type level) the loss of infectivity due to MA mutations.
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Env CAT provirus or pIII-Env (Fig. 5B, lane
Env + Env mix) were mixed, showed that low levels of gp160 copurified with the Env- virions. In contrast, no gp120 was observed in this control virus preparation, suggesting that intracellular vesicles containing uncleaved precursor gp160 from the Env-expressing cells cosedimented to the density of HIV particles. This is supported by the relative sharpness of the band, which is consistent with core-glycosylated gp160. Quantitative evaluation of the ratio of Env (gp41 plus gp120) to Gag in each of the lanes verified that there was no significant difference among the amounts of glycoprotein incorporated into MA12LE, MA30LE, and MA34VE virions with either the wild-type or Tyr712 mutant glycoprotein (Fig. 5C). Therefore, the complementation of infectivity described above must be the result of some mechanism other than enhancement of glycoprotein incorporation into virions. This conclusion is validated by the fact that, although the endocytosis mutants increased infectivity of the wild-type MA virions by 3.0- to 4.5-fold over that of wild-type Env, there was no evidence from the Gag/Env ratios of enhanced incorporation of Env, even in the context of a wild-type MA protein. The observation that a single point mutation in the cytoplasmic domain of TM alters infectivity independent of the level of glycoprotein incorporated into virions is a novel and unexpected finding.
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Despite demonstrable virus entry in MAGI cells, the HIV MA12LE-Y712F/C double mutants were incapable of sustaining multiple rounds of virus replication in H9 cells (Fig. 6). Indeed, the level of RT activity remained at the level of the MA12LE single mutant throughout the experiment.
As a control for these experiments, we employed a truncation mutant of HIV-1 (Ct Del144) previously reported to complement infectivity of the MA12LE mutant in MAGI cells (17, 72). Expression of the MA12LE-Ct Del144 double mutant viral construct in 293T cells yielded virus that contained normal levels of Env and was as infectious as wild-type pNL4 virus in MAGI cells (data not shown). However, in H9 cells, despite an initial peak of RT activity 4 days postinfection, this Env-truncated double mutant was unable to undergo multiple rounds of infection. This is consistent with the recent findings of Murakami and Freed (41) showing that the requirements for Env incorporation are more stringent in T cells than in 293T cells and that in H9 cells the Ct Del144 mutant is not efficiently incorporated into virions. Interestingly, however, the MA-Env double mutants showed similar defects in virus propagation in MT4 cells, which are somewhat permissive for pNL4 encoding the Ct Del144 mutation (data not shown).
Alteration of the endocytosis motif enhances cell-cell fusion. Clearly, introduction of the Y712 mutations into pNL4 resulted in a more infectious virus. Moreover, these same Env mutations restored the infectivity of the MA mutants (12LE, 30LE, and 34VE) to nearly 50% that of wild-type virus. The observation that complementation for infectivity did not correlate with surface expression levels of the mutant Env proteins or with increased Env incorporation suggested that the effect of the Tyr712 alteration was a result of changes in the intrinsic function of the Env proteins themselves. We therefore examined the potential roles that mutations in Tyr712 might play in altering the fusogenicity of the HIV-1 glycoprotein. Initial endpoint fusion assays indicated no significant difference in the fusion capacities of the different constructs, although there was a trend towards enhanced fusion with the Tyr712 mutants (data not shown).
To investigate whether the mutant Env proteins might mediate fusion at a higher rate, fusion kinetics were analyzed in a two-color fusion assay in which COS cells were transfected with a vector (pSRH-EB) expressing both EBFP and wild-type or mutant Env. The transfected cells were mixed with X4 MAGI target cells labeled with the fluorescent dye calcein-AM. Fused cells, fluorescing at both blue and green wavelengths, were detected by flow cytometry 30 or 60 min after the mixed cell populations were incubated at 37°C. Figure 7 shows that as early as 30 min post-cell mixing, both Tyr712 mutant glycoproteins mediated significantly higher numbers of fusion events (approximately 4.0 and 3.5 times higher) than that observed with the wild type. At 60 min post-cell mixing, the mutants still demonstrated higher levels of fusion than the wild type, although the difference was less striking. This result is consistent with data from steady-state fusion assays.
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| DISCUSSION |
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If a specific interaction between MA and Env was not essential for glycoprotein incorporation in the absence of endocytosis, then increasing the availability of glycoprotein on the surface of cells expressing MA mutations should restore infectivity and Env incorporation. We show here that alteration of the endocytosis signal within the cytoplasmic domain of TM by mutation of Tyr712 to either Cys or Phe yields glycoproteins exhibiting synthesis and processing equivalent to that of the wild-type protein but which are expressed at higher levels (2.5- and 1.33-fold, respectively) than the wild-type glycoprotein on the surfaces of transiently transfected cells. Increases in surface expression of the mutations led to a similarly small increase in the level of glycoprotein shed into the medium (data not shown), suggesting that the mutations have not altered the stabilities of glycoprotein complexes in the membrane. The levels of surface glycoprotein we report are in general agreement with those described by Rowell et al. (58) for an Ala substitution at position 712. The increase in surface accumulation observed is also similar to that described for a mutation in the cytoplasmic Tyr motif in a full-length SIVmac 239 Env (31). However, the reported levels for mutants in the analogous Tyr residue at position 721 of SIV CP-MAC, a cytopathic variant of SIVmac encoding a truncated form of the SIV Env, were estimated to be as much as 25-fold that of the wild type (30). The discrepancy in the SIV and HIV data, therefore, may be due to other sequences within the long cytoplasmic domains of both TMs that also function (inefficiently) as internalization or targeting signals. The HIV and SIV cytoplasmic domains contain a number of potential YXX
and dileucine motifs that can contribute to internalization (73). A recent examination of other Tyr-containing sequences in the HIV-1 TM suggested that Tyr712 represents the only functional Tyr-based endocytosis motif (2, 3). Nevertheless, it is clear that sequences in the cytoplasmic domain do confer a low level of endocytosis that reduces the steady-state level of Env on the cell surface, perhaps similar to that observed with Rous sarcoma virus Env (47).
Initial experiments in which mutant proviruses encoding both a mutant MA domain and a mutation of Tyr712 in TM were compared to those encoding single MA mutations indicated that the loss of a dominant endocytosis signal could substantially restore the infectivity of the MA mutants (6- to 14-fold). We initially expected that this enhanced infectivity resulted from a higher level of Env incorporation into the virions. However, comparison of the glycoprotein contents of the individual MA mutants (with wild-type Env) and the MA-Y712 double mutants revealed no detectable increase in incorporation. Even in the context of a wild-type Gag protein, where the Y712 mutation resulted in higher (three- to fourfold) levels of infectivity, this was not accompanied by higher levels of Env incorporation. It seems likely, therefore, that the increased infectivity of viruses containing either mutant or wild-type MA results from an enhancement in glycoprotein fusogenicity that is triggered by the introduced change in the cytoplasmic domain of the virus. This conclusion is supported by the results of multiple experiments in which the Y712F mutation, which enhanced surface expression by only 25%, resulted in the same increase in infectivity as the cysteine substitution with a higher surface expression level. Moreover, functional augmentation of the glycoprotein is consistent with the increase in the rate of fusion exhibited by the Y712 mutant glycoproteins in kinetic cell-cell fusion assays.
Previous work with SIV and HIV showed that truncations of the cytoplasmic domain could enhance the fusogenicity of the Env (TM) protein (27, 30, 31, 40, 57, 66, 67, 76), but in general, this was attributed to the higher levels of Env observed on the surfaces of the expressing cells (27). In the cases of MuLV and Mason-Pfizer monkey virus, a viral proteinase-mediated cleavage of the cytoplasmic domain results in enhancement of Env-mediated fusion that, in the case of MuLV, is important for virus infectivity (56). The C-terminal peptide (R peptide) released by proteolysis modulates fusogenicity by an undefined mechanism. Nevertheless, substitution of the MuLV R peptide sequence onto a truncated SIV cytoplasmic domain inhibited fusion by this protein (74). Mutation of a leucine residue (L627) in the R peptide region of MuLV Env resulted in increased fusogenicity, similar to that observed on removal of the R peptide, confirming that sequences in the cytoplasmic domain can modulate fusion in both a positive and a negative fashion (75). Although we have not observed an equally large increase in the fusogenicity of the HIV glycoprotein upon mutation of the Y712 residue, the mutant HIV glycoproteins do mediate cell fusion with faster kinetics. In addition, HIV virions containing these mutant glycoproteins also demonstrate a significantly higher specific infectivity with no increase in Env content.
The restoration of infectivity that we observed with the MA mutants when coexpressed with Y712-mutated Env suggests that there is a threshold level of glycoprotein function necessary to mediate fusion of the viral membrane with that of the cell. The data also suggest that this threshold is the product of the density of Env molecules on the virus surface and the fusogenic potential of the Env molecules themselves. In the case of influenza virus hemagglutinin, a minimum level of glycoprotein expression on the cell surface was shown to be required for cell-cell fusion (22). We postulate that in the case of the MA mutants, the level of wild-type Env is below the threshold required for virus entry and that the enhanced fusogenicity of the Y712 mutant glycoproteins raises a majority of these Env-deficient virions above the fusion threshold. While this effective complementation of the MA mutations is observed for virus produced from 293T cells and assayed on MAGI cells, it is clearly not sufficient to allow sustained replication of the virus in H9 cells. This finding is analogous to the results observed with the Ct Del144 mutant of HIV-1. Env is incorporated into both wild-type and MA mutant virions at levels equivalent to that in the wild-type protein and mediates wild-type levels of infectivity in MAGI cells, but the virus cannot sustain multiple rounds of infection in H9 cells. Recent evidence suggests that this defect is due to a defect in Ct Del144 Env incorporation in T cells and peripheral blood mononuclear cells (41). An additional cell-dependent decrease in the level of the Y712C/F Env in the MA mutant virions produced from H9 cells might be predicted to reduce glycoprotein function below the threshold necessary to initiate entry and infection.
It is clear from the studies described here that enhancement of the surface expression of HIV-1 Env through alteration of the cytoplasmic endocytosis signal in TM is insufficient to compensate for defects in Env incorporation imposed by point mutations in MA. The fact that freeing Env from the endocytic machinery failed to drive incorporation supports previous findings that a specific interaction between MA and TM is required to incorporate a glycoprotein with a full-length cytoplasmic tail. These results refute our previous hypothesis (24) that the absence of Env endocytic competence obviates the need for a specific interaction with Gag.
The conservation of an internalization signal in all HIV and SIV isolates described to date suggests a critical function for internalization in the virus life cycle. The maintenance of such a signal is seemingly at odds with the process of virus assembly and incorporation of Env. Moreover, given the fact that mutation of Tyr712 in the NL4-3 provirus results in more rapid virus replication kinetics, conservation of the tyrosine motif must yield an advantage in vivo that compensates for the slower replication phenotype. It is important to consider that the motif may not be retained only for glycoprotein internalization. Expression of the envelope glycoprotein in polarized cells has been shown to direct viral budding in a polarized manner in both epithelial and lymphocytic cells (11, 49). Studies have demonstrated that a polarized-transport signal overlaps the endocytosis signal (11, 34, 35). Since polarized assembly may have implications for virus transmission, such a signal might be essential for virus pathogenicity.
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This work was supported by U.S. Public Health Service grant R37AI33319 to E.H. J.T.W. was supported by NIH training grant T32AI07493. Experiments performed in the Central Virus Culture Core and Molecular Biology Core of the UAB Center for AIDS Research and acquisition of AIDS patient sera from the Clinical Core of the UAB Center for AIDS Research were supported by grant P30-AI27767.
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