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Journal of Virology, October 2003, p. 11060-11071, Vol. 77, No. 20
0022-538X/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JVI.77.20.11060-11071.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Unité de Virologie Moléculaire, UMR5087, INRA-CNRS-UMII, Station de Recherches de Pathologie Comparée, 30380 Saint-Christol-les-Alès, and Laboratoire de Pathologie Comparée, Université Montpellier II,1 Unité Nationale Séricicole, INRA, 69350 La Mulatière,2 Centre de Génétique Moléculaire & Cellulaire, CNRS UMR 5534, 69622 Villeurbanne Cedex, France3
Received 8 April 2003/ Accepted 23 July 2003
| ABSTRACT |
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| INTRODUCTION |
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Based on their genome size, organization of coding sequences, and structure of extremities, densoviruses are distributed into three genera, Densovirus, Iteravirus, and Brevidensovirus within the subfamily Densovirinae (6, 7). Members of the genus Densovirus along with Junonia coenia densovirus (JcDNV) as the prototype (12) possess a 6-kb genome with an ambisense organization, i.e., the major open reading frame (ORF1) encoding four capsid proteins is located in the 5' half on one strand, whereas the three nonstructural proteins are encoded by three ORFs (ORF2, ORF3, and ORF4) located in the 5' half on the complementary strand. These strands have large inverted terminal repeats (ITRs) that exceed 500 nucleotides and include the P9 and P93 viral promoters.
The wide distribution of densoviruses among insect species has triggered interest for their potential use as biocontrol agents against agricultural insect pests and vectors of human diseases such as mosquitoes (5). The potential of recombinant densoviruses for gene transfer in insects has also been investigated, because densoviruses share many characteristics with vertebrate parvoviruses, which are utilized as perennial gene vectors. The cloning of the entire JcDNV genome into pBR322 led to a recombinant construct (pBRJ) that retained the capacity to produce infectious particles when injected into larvae of the sensitive host Spodoptera littoralis or transfected into lepidopteran cell lines (20, 24, 25). The availability of plasmids carrying an infectious sequence of either the JcDNV or the Aedes aegypti densovirus genome has prompted the study of densoviruses as expression vectors (1, 2, 5, 10, 16, 31). The A. aegypti densovirus, a prototype of the Brevidensovirus genus, has been developed as a gene transfer vehicle that is able to transduce genes into mosquito larvae by typical routes of infection, opening the potential for gene introduction into natural populations (1, 2).
To explore the potential of the JcDNV genome as an expression vector for foreign genes, a series of noninfectious JcDNV-derived vectors were constructed expressing either a nonselectable (lacZ) (16) or a dominant selectable marker (neo) (30). These markers were inserted in frame into the VP gene or with their own ATG initiation codon. In these constructs, the foreign gene was under the control of the viral P9 promoter, which regulates expression of the structural polypeptides VP1, VP2, VP3, and VP4 in the wild-type virus. When transfected into S. littoralis and Spodoptera frugiperda cell lines, both marked constructs expressed the respective marker gene.
Following transfection with pJneo, several G418-resistant colonies were obtained which successfully underwent 50 subcultures in the presence or absence of the antibiotic, indicating stable expression of the neomycin phosphotransferase (30). Recently, we reported persistent high expression of ß-galactosidase in somatic tissues throughout ontogenesis, from larvae to adult flies, following microinjection of plasmid pJlacZ
NS3 into preblastoderm eggs of Drosophila melanogaster (31). The pattern of ß-galactosidase expression in adult tissues strongly suggested that integration of pJlacZ
NS3 into the genome of somatic cells occurred early during the preblastoderm stage of embryogenesis.
The present study examines the genomic status of JcDNV-derived vectors following transfection and selection of Spodoptera frugiperda Sf9 lepidopteran cell clones with the GFP reporter gene. To assess the influence of NS polypeptides on the integration of JcDNV vectors, a series of constructs containing the green fluorescent protein (GFP) gfp gene that included either fully functional (pJGFP, pJGFPH) or partially (pJGFP
NS3) or entirely (pJGFP
NSH) deleted NS genes were made.
The data provide the first demonstration that transfected JcDNV-based vectors integrate into the Sf9 genome, which represents a convenient means of integrating foreign DNA sequences into an insect cell genome.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Plasmid construction.
All JcDNV-based constructs (Fig. 1) were derived from pBRJ (20) and contained the GFP marker. The pEGFP-N1 SmaI-SspI fragment (BD Biosciences Clontech, Palo Alto, Calif.) encompassing the GFP coding sequence and simian virus 40 polyadenylation signal was inserted into the PvuII site of ORF1 (nucleotide 1864) of pBRJ, so as to place the enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP) in frame, 25 codons downstream of the ATG initiation codon for VP4 polypeptide, under the transcriptional control of the P9 viral promoter. pJGFPH was generated by substitution of the ClaI-BclI fragment of pBRJH (F. Rolling, personal communication) with that of pJGFP, restoring the full-length right ITR sequence deleted of 89 5'-terminal bases in pBRJ (12). pJGFP
NS3 was derived from pJGFP by an NsiI frameshift deletion that disrupts ORF4 (NS-3). pJGFP
NSH was constructed from pJGFPH by a BclI-NsiI deletion in the NS genes.
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PCR and inverse PCR.
PCRs were carried out with cell DNA as the template and the primers described below (see also Table 1 and primer positions in Fig. 1 and 5). The JcDNV VP-GFP fusion was detected with forward 547F and reverse 2600R primers. pBR322-JcDNV 5' ITR junctions were examined with forward -647F and reverse 592R primers. For the JcDNV 3' ITR junctions with the plasmid backbone, we used the forward 6437F and reverse primer 7188R for plasmids lacking the end of the 3' ITR (pJGFP and pJGFP
NS3) or reverse primer 7232R for plasmids in which the end was restored (pJGFPH and pJGFP
NSH). Primers 4008F and 6359R were used to assess the status of the NS regions in the stable fluorescent cell clones.
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NS3-C1 was performed with primers US1F and 535R for amplification of the junction and primers US1F and US1R for amplification of the flanking genomic sequence. Primed in situ synthesis. Cultured cells were prepared as described in Gerbal et al. (15), and primed in situ synthesis was conducted following a protocol adapted from Gosden et al. (19; P. Barry and P. Fournier, unpublished data) with primers defined on sequences of the vector pJGFPH. Microscopic examination of labeled chromosomes was achieved on a 2x Leica DM RA epifluorescence microscope, and images were treated by deconvolution on an Octan Silicon Graphics computer with Metamorph software (Universal Imaging Corporation, Downingtown, Pa.).
| RESULTS |
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NS3) or of all NS proteins (pJGFP
NSH) was abolished. Sf9 cells were transfected with pJGFPH, and the number of GFP-expressing cells was scored by fluorescence microscopy for 23 generations (approximately 50 to 55 days). Shortly after transfection, GFP expression regulated by the P9 viral promoter was detected. Maximum number of transfected cells was observed 48 h later with approximately 31% of the cells showing GFP fluorescence as estimated by manually counting the number of GFP-fluorescent cells per microscope field. The number of GFP-fluorescent cells declined rapidly over the next 15 days to finally stabilize to 7 to 8% of the population (Fig. 2A).
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To further investigate this phenomenon, fluorescent cells were cloned. Sf9 cells transfected with plasmid pJGFP, pJGFPH, pJGFP
NS3, or pJGFP
NSH were diluted 5 days posttransfection, a stage at which integration events have already occurred and the status of individualized cells is stabilized. Therefore, the separated fluorescent colonies that were picked up 2 to 3 weeks later corresponded to homogeneous populations with regard to integration events. Isolated clones were propagated by subculturing every 5 days. Several stable fluorescent cell lines were recovered for the pJGFPH plasmid (clones B1, B4, B5, B6, B7, and B8), which contained intact NS genes and a restored 3' hairpin, as well as for each of the JcDNV constructs that contained deletions for these sequences: pJGFP (clone A1), pJGFP
NS3 (clones C1, C2, and C7), and pJGFP
NSH (clones E1, E2, and E3) (see also Table 2 and Fig. 2A). The population of cells showing GFP fluorescence within an isolated colony almost reached 100% and remained constant in subsequent passages for over 165 generations (approximately 12 months; see Fig. 2A), indicating that the GFP sequence was stably maintained and expressed within these cell lines. This percentage was lower in cells transfected with the pJGFP
NSH construct, but this phenotype was reproducible even after subculturing of these clones. This observation will be analyzed in a forthcoming paper.
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NS3) or 795-bp (pJGFPH, pJGFP
NSH) amplicons.
PCR amplification of the pBR322-JcDNV 5' ITR junctions resulted in two different situations depending upon the vector used. Attempts to amplify the 5' ITR region with genomic DNA from Sf9 clones transformed with pJGFP or pJGFPH, two constructs expressing all NS proteins, failed repeatedly. These results strongly suggested that in the presence of NS polypeptides, specially NS-1, the pBR322-5' ITR junction is resolved, preventing amplification of the region spanning from -647 (pBR322 sequence) to +592 (viral sequence). In contrast, Sf9 clones transformed with pJGFP
NS3 (no NS-3 expression) or with pJGFP
NSH (no NS genes expression) contained an intact pBR322-JcDNV 5' ITR region as the expected 1.2-kb amplicons were produced by PCR, indicating that no resolution of the vector-viral DNA junction or rearrangements had occurred in this region.
The structure of the viral NS region in clones transfected with each of the constructs was examined. Amplification of genomic DNA from pJGFP
NSH-transfected clones with primers encompassing the entire NS mutated region resulted in PCR products of the expected 1.6 kb. However, significantly smaller amplicons were frequently observed in the Sf9 clones transfected with pJGFP, pJGFPH, or pJGFP
NS3 (see Table 2). This showed that while being maintained, JcDNV vectors supporting NS expression presented in some cell lines recurrent deletions in the NS genes.
Plasmids pJGFP and pJGFPH integrate at low copy numbers into the host cell genome. Genomic DNA of GFP-fluorescent clones was digested with either EcoRV, which has no recognition site in the JcDNV constructs, or AflII, an enzyme that has a single recognition site within the transgene sequence (Fig. 1). Restricted DNA was then subjected to Southern blot analysis with either the entire JcDNV DNA or the pBR322 or pJGFPH random-primed plasmid as the probe.
Figure 3A shows the analysis of B7, a fluorescent cell clone isolated after pJGFPH transfection. Following EcoRV digestion, hybridization with the JcDNV probe revealed a single band at approximately 14 kb, which was larger than the entire 9.8-kb pJGFPH sequence, and after AflII digestion, two smaller bands were detected. These observations strongly suggest that the JcDNV sequences were integrated into the genome of the host cell and most likely at a single locus. Hybridization of the Southern blot with the pBR322 probe after AflII digestion revealed a band of the same size as the one detected by the JcDNV probe, demonstrating that the pBR322 sequence of the vector was integrated along with the JcDNV sequence into the genome of the host cell.
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As stated above, the failure to amplify the pBR322-JcDNV 5' ITR region by PCR in all the pJGFP and pJGFPH fluorescent clones indicated systematic rearrangements of these vectors in this region. Based on this observation, we hypothesized that the JcDNV 5' ITR may be involved in the integration of both constructs. To explore putative virus-cell DNA junctions, inverse PCR was performed with primers 1370F and 535R (Table 1) in opposite orientation and located 3' of the 5' ITR within the JcDNV AseI or XmnI restriction fragment (Fig. 4A). PCR products were successfully amplified from the genomic DNA of clones A1, B1, B5, and B7 after digestion with XmnI. The PCR product generated by inverse PCR from clone A1 showed a junction site between a 327-nucleotide-long non-pJGFP sequence and the first nucleotide of the JcDNV 5' ITR (Fig. 4A). We were unable to obtain the sequence of the junction beyond nucleotides 21 of the viral sequence because the secondary hairpin structure formed by the terminal palindrome of the 5' ITR is known to be resistant to sequencing by the Sanger method (33).
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Integration of plasmid pJGFP
NS3 occurs at low copy numbers in several sites into the host cell genome.
The genomic DNA isolated from the stable fluorescent clone C7 was subjected to Southern blot analysis. Following digestion with AflII, which has a single recognition site in the plasmid, hybridization to the entire pJGFPH probe revealed a strong signal corresponding to high molecular weight DNA (Fig. 3C, lane 2). After digestion with BamHI, which has four recognition sites, hybridization with the pJGFPH probe resulted in a complex hybridization pattern (Fig. 3C, lane 3). In addition to the four expected pJGFP
NS3 fragments of 4.7, 3.3, and 1.6 kb (the 0.3-kb fragment migrated out of the gel), four additional fragments of 3.7, 2.4, 1.8, and 0.9 kb were also detected. The presence of large intact regions of the plasmid within the genomic DNA was confirmed by the resolution of the 4.7-kb BamHI fragment containing both pBR322 and JcDNV sequences into two expected 3.8-kb and 1-kb bands following AflII and BamHI digestion (Fig. 3C, lane 1). The bands that were not of predicted sizes following BamHI or AflII-BamHI digestion could correspond to fragments containing genomic-vector DNA junctions or to rearrangements of plasmid sequences. Taken together, these data suggested that several copies of viral and plasmid sequences had integrated into the cell genome.
Although the complete pJGFP
NS3 hybridization pattern was recovered following BamHI digestion, the lack of a 10-kb band corresponding to the size of pJGFP
NS3 after AflII digestion suggests that no concatemeric copies of the pJGFP
NS3 vector have integrated in the genome of clone C7. Similar results were observed with clone C1 (data not shown).
As shown above by PCR and Southern blot analysis, these data confirmed that the majority of the vector sequences, both viral and plasmidic, are conserved in the clones and that nonconcatemeric copies of the vector are integrated into the host cell genome. To further investigate the possibility of multiple integration events of the pJGFP
NS3 vector into the clone C7 genome, metaphase chromosome spreads were labeled by primed in situ synthesis with GFP primers. The C7 chromosome spreads repeatedly showed four to six labeled spots (Fig. 3D). Because DNA hybridization suggested that the entire plasmid, including the bacterial origin of replication and ß-lactamase selectable marker, was integrated into the clone C7, a plasmid rescue experiment was conducted to recover integrated vectors.
Digestion of C7 genomic DNA with NdeI, was followed by dilution, ligation and transformation of Escherichia coli. NdeI has two recognition sites in the vector, one positioned 5' of the bacterial origin of replication and ampicillin resistance gene sequences and the second located within the NS-1 sequence of JcDNV in pJGFP
NS3 (Fig. 4B). This allows the isolation of a selectable circular fragment containing the 3' end junctions of integrated plasmids. This method allowed scoring of the recombinational events that had occurred in a region of pJGFP
NS3 comprised of sequences between position -2065 (pBR322 sequence) and position +4620 (viral sequence) from the extremity of the 5' ITR, a region representing 68% of the total plasmid sequence.
Nine out of 292 plasmids rescued following NdeI digestion were analyzed in detail by restriction enzyme digestion and sequencing of critical regions (Fig. 4B). One plasmid retained BamHI, BsteII, HindIII, and NdeI restriction maps identical to those of the circularized 6.8-kb NdeI fragment of pJGFP
NS3 (Fig. 4B), confirming that in this case a large portion of the vector had integrated into the genomic DNA. Plasmid RP05 contained a recombination breakpoint within the pBR322 sequence whereas the digestion patterns for the seven other plasmids showed that the recombination occurred within the viral sequence. For RP06 and RP18 the recombination occurred more than 1 kb, 3' from the extremity of the 5' ITR. In the five other plasmids, breakpoints were mapped within the 5' ITR. Plasmids RP04 and RP10 contained a rearrangement beyond the distal 96 nucleotides of the 5' ITR and only the first 20 nucleotides of the ITR from these two plasmids was successfully sequenced. For plasmids RP14, RP17, and RP22, where recombination occurred within the hairpin structure, none of the flanking sequences corresponded to cell DNA but rather to rearrangements of the ITR with either viral or pBR322 DNA sequences. These results strongly support the possibility that the JcDNV 5' ITR is the primary site for recombination.
To further examine the integration sites of pJGFP
NS3 in transformed cells, putative viral-cellular junctions were identified by inverse PCR. The same set of primers was used that permitted characterization of the integration junctions in pJGFP and pJGFPH transformed clones. The results for clone C1 are presented as representative for pJGFP
NS3-transformed clones. Although the presence of intact 5' ITR sequences in this clone resulted in preferential amplification of the expected 1.5-kb PCR product following AseI digestion and ligation, an additional 0.6-kb amplicon was also recovered. The sequence revealed a junction breakpoint at nucleotides 146 of the JcDNV 5' ITR followed by a 195-nucleotide sequence that had no homology with the pJGFP
NS3 sequence (Fig. 4A).
A Blast search for the sequence flanking the JcDNV ITR in GenBank revealed no significant homologies with referenced sequences. Nested PCR of clone C1 DNA with a primer distal to the crossover point and a primer internal to the viral sequence resulted in successful amplification of a 547-bp product, confirming the presence of a cellular-viral DNA junction in this clone. The successful amplification of a 157-bp product with primers designed at both ends of the flanking sequence and nontransfected Sf9 genomic DNA as a template confirmed the cellular nature of the flanking sequence (data not shown). This result also revealed that no rearrangements had occurred within the flanking genomic region in clone C1 following integration of the vector at this particular site.
Deletion of NS genes results in integration of head-to-tail concatemers of the JcDNV vector.
Genomic DNA from clones E1 and E2 resulting from pJGFP
NSH transfection was subjected to Southern blot analysis following digestion either with EcoRV that has no recognition site within the JcDNV construct or with AflII that has a single recognition site in pJGFP
NSH. The Southern blot analysis with the entire JcDNV DNA as probe showed two large intense bands in the EcoRV-restricted DNA of each clone (Fig. 5A, lanes 1 and 3). Following AflII digestion, the same probe revealed a single intense band (Fig. 5A, lanes 2 and 4) identical in size to that of pJGFP
NSH (Fig. 5A, lane 5). Hybridization of the Southern blot with a pBR322 probe revealed similar patterns (Fig. 5A, lanes 6 through 10).
These results demonstrate the presence of several intact copies of the pJGFP
NSH plasmid in both clones. While the hybridization profiles following EcoRV digestion suggested that copies of pJGFP
NSH could be distributed in several large clusters integrated within the genome, the AflII patterns were consistent with the maintenance of pJGFP
NSH as episomal molecules within the fluorescent clones. To further examine the status of pJGFP
NSH DNA, the presence of episomal circular concatemeric structure of the plasmid was investigated by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis. DNA from clone E2 was digested with EcoRV (no recognition sites within pJGFP
NSH) and subjected to two-dimensional gel electrophoresis according to the procedure of Cohen and Lavi (9). After gel transfer and hybridization with the pJGFP
NSH probe, no spots other than genomic linear ones were ever evidenced (data not shown).
As this technique has only been shown to be efficient for a relatively small circular molecule (10 to 50 kb), a larger concatemer might have escaped detection. We therefore embedded transfected cells within agarose blocks and prepared samples suitable for pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE). Chromosomal DNA was digested with either BglII or SfiI, which do not have recognition sites within pJGFP
NSH, and then resolved on PFGE. Southern blot analysis was performed with the entire pJGFP
NSH plasmid as a probe. Following digestion with BglII, 9 to 10 bands were observed, while 3 to 4 bands were present in the SfiI digest (Fig. 5B). A different band pattern was obtained with DNA digested by EcoRV (data not shown). The differences in hybridization patterns unambiguously demonstrate that the plasmid DNA was integrated into host cell genomic DNA, since episomal concatemeric molecules should have generated similar patterns with enzymes that do not cut within the monomer.
In order to confirm these observations, we performed primed in situ DNA labeling on the E2 cell clone. Multiple labeled spots were clearly observed for the different karyotypes examined (Fig. 5C). In some cases, bivalent labeling could be detected on the paired chromosomes (Fig. 5C, magnified observations), a situation difficult to observe when examining spreads of holocentric chromosomes. These observations further confirm that the pJGFP
NSH vector was integrated into the host cell genomic DNA and suggest that multiple plasmid clusters are distributed throughout the genome. Furthermore, we noticed strong variations of the label intensity from one chromosome to another, which reflect differences in the number of integrated copies of pJGFP
NSH at each locus. This is consistent with the variability in labeling intensities of the banding patterns of genomic DNA observed in Southern blots (Fig. 5B).
pJGFP
NSH-transfected cell line contains about 60 copies of the vector.
In order to estimate the number of pJGFP
NSH plasmid copies integrated in the genomic DNA of the E2 cell line, we quantified the hybridization signal from the pJGFP
NSH inserts by comparison with the signal from the endogenous hsp90 gene. To normalize the signals, a probe that anneals to both templates over equivalent lengths of sequence was used, i.e., the 2.5-kb pBR322 portion of a pUC-hsp90 probe hybridized to the 7.9-kb HindIII fragment of pJGFP
NSH, while the 2.2-kb hsp90 portion of the same probe annealed to the 2.5-kb HindIII fragment of the hsp90 gene. Quantitative analysis of the hybridization signal from these two bands showed that the pJGFP
NSH inserts of clone E2 retained 6.9-fold more label than the heat shock protein gene sequence (compare signal intensities for the 7.9-kb and 2.5-kb bands in Fig. 5D, lane 3). Previously reported quantitative analysis established that there are 8 copies of the hsp90 gene present in the genome of the Sf9 cell line (23). Based on this copy number, we estimated that 55 copies of the pJGFP
NSH vector were present per E2 cell. This result is in accordance with an independent estimate based on quantitative PCR (Françoise-Xavière Jousset, personal communication).
In light of these quantitative measurements, the PFGE results described above were reexamined to estimate the relative intensities of the bands observed in Fig. 5B. Assuming that the less intense band (relative intensity = 1.0) corresponds to one copy of the vector, results show that the number of copies of the pJGFP
NSH plasmid varied from 1 to 11 copies per BglII band and from 5 to 48 copies per SfiI band. For each digestion pattern, the total number of pJGFP
NSH copies adds up to an estimated 50 to 60, which lends additional support to the previous estimate.
| DISCUSSION |
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NS3), or with a deletion abolishing expression of the three NS genes (pJGFP
NSH). Transfection of each of the four JcDNV constructs into Sf9 cells conferred a persistent GFP+ phenotype to a high proportion of cells, exceeding at least 10 times the frequency of random insertion events of plasmids that did not contain densovirus DNA. This allowed direct isolation of GFP-fluorescent clones in the absence of selective pressure. GFP expression remained remarkably stable in these clones for over a year (Fig. 2A). As for persistent ß-galactosidase activity in SPC-SL 52 cells (16) and throughout development in somatically transformed Drosophila cells with JcDNV-derived constructs (31), the stability of the GFP phenotype in all Sf9 cell clones appears to reflect a property, specific of the JcDNV genomic sequences, to persist in insect cells.
The localization of fluorescence in the nuclear compartment (Fig. 2B) indicated that, similar to the situation observed in cells transfected with JcDNV-lacZ constructs (16, 31), the insertion of the GFP gene did not disturb the nuclear targeting of the chimeric proteins.
To determine the status of the JcDNV constructs in transformed cells, DNA from the GFP-fluorescent clones was analyzed after a 30-generation passage (approximately 10 weeks) (Fig. 2A). PCR analyses (see Table 2) revealed that the persistence of the GFP fluorescence in all transformed clones resulted from the maintained VP-GFP chimeric proteins expression under the control of the P9 promoter. In addition, pBR322 plasmid sequences are maintained along with the JcDNV sequence in all the clones. The 3' ITR-pBR322 junction was apparently intact in all clones whereas the 5' ITR-pBR322 junction was subject to frequent rearrangements in cell clones pJGFP-A and pJGFPH-B transformed with constructs expressing the NS proteins. The presence in Southern blots obtained from cell DNA restricted with EcoRV, which has no recognition site in the JcDNV constructs, of at least one band larger than the plasmid is a good argument in favor of the integration of all the constructs into the cell genome. Furthermore, the variable intensity of bands suggested that cell DNA of clones A and B potentially carry a small number of copies of plasmid pJGFP or pJGFPH, clones C several nonconcatemeric copies of pJGFP
NS3, and clone E concatemeric copies of pJGFP
NSH.
Consistent with these data, primed in situ synthesis analysis of metaphase chromosome spreads (Fig. 3B, 3D, and 5C) clearly showed a single integration event in clone B7 and several integrations in clones C7 and E2. Further evidence for integration of the constructs was obtained by sequencing the products of inverse PCR assumed to contain integration junctions. In addition to extensive rearrangements including deletions, inversions or translocations of both viral and plasmid sequences, we identified in two clones (A1 and C1, Fig. 4) cellular DNA sequences flanking the 5' JcDNV ITR region. This is to our knowledge the first documented evidence of integration of a densovirus sequence into an insect cell genome. This result provides a clear explanation to the in vivo persistence through all developmental stages of Drosophila melanogaster of lacZ gene expression following microinjection of the pJlacZ
NS3 plasmid into syncytial embryos (31).
Taken together, our results show great similarities with those recently reported on the integration process of AAV vectors following their transfection into human cells. Analyses of cell DNA-AAV junctions have clearly established that the 5' ITR as well as the P5 promoter AAV regions are hot-spots for integration (17, 21, 29, 32, 34, 35, 37). Similarly, PCR analyses and plasmid rescue experiments revealed referential rearrangements of the JcDNV sequences in the 5' ITR and therefore suggested that this region is also the primary site of recombination events (Fig. 4A and B). In contrast, the absence of detectable rearrangements at the 3' end of the viral sequence suggested that prior excision of the JcDNV genome from the plasmid vector is not required for integration. While the precise excision of the wild-type JcDNV sequence from pBRJ leads to the production of infectious virions in pBRJ-transfected insect cells or S. littoralis larvae (20, 24), no clear explanation can be given for the apparent lack of excision of the recombinant JcDNV sequences prior to their integration into the insect cell DNA. Interestingly, the integration of the plasmid backbone sequence together with recombinant AAV sequence into the genome of human cells transfected with AAV plasmids is a phenomenon also frequently observed (34, 35).
Transfection of the pJGFP and pJGFPH constructs lead to their integration at a low, probably single copy number into the host chromosomes (no evidence of head-to-tail tandem repeats was found). Southern blot analysis of clone B7 revealed integration at a single site (Fig. 3A), a result also supported by the observation of a single spot after primed in situ synthesis labeling of metaphase chromosomes spreads (Fig. 3B). This observation raises the question as to whether or not JcDNV vectors expressing NS proteins exhibit site-specific integration properties in insect cells similar to those reported in Rep-expressing AAV plasmids in vertebrate cell lines (17, 18, 21, 22, 32). A recent in vitro study clearly demonstrated that JcDNV NS-1 protein shares the same biochemical properties as AAV Rep78 protein (11). Based on these functional similarities, we looked for homologies between the two cell DNA sequences identified at the integration junction with the viral DNA. No significant homologies were found that could provide the basis for homologous recombination.
All integrated pJGFP, pJGFPH, and pJGFP
NS3 sequences displayed extensive internal rearrangements such as deletions or inversions. This is reminiscent of observations from integration studies of wt AAV with an episomal model system (13, 17) or of AAV plasmids (29, 34). As reported for AAV Rep and MVMp NS-1 expression in mammalian cells (4, 28, 35, 37), expression of JcDNV NS proteins may interfere with the Sf9 cell cycle. In this respect, it is likely that in the present study, fast-growing colonies resulting from spontaneous deletions in the NS genes, which could impair or stop NS expression, were preferentially selected.
Transfection with pJGFP
NS3 construct resulted in multiple integration events but no head-to-tail tandem arrays were detected by Southern blot analysis. Because of the polyploidy of the Sf9 genome and the fragmentation of the chromosomes, a precise assessment of the total number of integration loci per given chromosome was not possible. Our results clearly indicate that NS-3 is not essential for the integration of the plasmid vector but may directly or indirectly play a role that affects recognition of integration sites within the host cell genome.
In the absence of NS-1 expression (pJGFP
NSH), i.e., of terminal hairpin resolution, clusters containing a high number of copies of the plasmid (50 to 60 per cell) were shown to integrate as head-to-tail concatemers into various loci of the genome (Fig. 5B and 5C). The complex mechanisms leading to the synthesis of head-to-tail concatemeric molecules of plasmid DNA and to their integration at different loci in the cell chromosomes are totally unknown.
Because information on the status of JcDNV vector in Sf9 cell DNA were obtained from stably transformed cell clones, they do not provide a clear understanding of the dynamics of the JcDNV vector stabilization, which occurs well before characterization. While this study demonstrates that JcDNV sequences can mediate plasmid vector integration into a lepidopteran genome, our results only revealed partial aspects of the underlying mechanisms, and many questions about this system remain unanswered. Further experiments will more specifically address the nature of the sites in the cell genome in which JcDNV vectors integrate. NS trans-complementation of pJGFP
NS3 and pJGFP
NSH will also be necessary to better understand the regulatory role played by the nonstructural proteins of JcDNV vectors in chromosomal integration. With the present demonstration of their integrative properties, JcDNV-derived vectors appear to be promising tools for the production of transgenic insects.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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Herve Bossin was a recipient of a doctoral fellowship from the French Ministere de l'Education Nationale, de la Recherche et de la Technologie.
| FOOTNOTES |
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