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Journal of Virology, July 2004, p. 7175-7185, Vol. 78, No. 13
0022-538X/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JVI.78.13.7175-7185.2004
Copyright © 2004, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Department of Molecular, Microbial, and Structural Biology, University of Connecticut Health Center, Farmington, Connecticut
Received 11 December 2003/ Accepted 19 February 2004
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) bacteriophage connector complex during a viral infection (16, 17). The bacteriophage connector (or portal) is a ring-shaped structure utilized by many large double-stranded DNA bacteriophages as the docking site for DNA packaging (terminase) enzymes, the channel for DNA entry and exit, and the site for tail attachment (reviewed in reference 3). It is now known that herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) encodes an analogous structure, as the portal protein (UL6) has been visualized at a unique vertex of the capsid by immuno-electron microscopy of purified virus particles (29). The HSV-1 portal protein can be isolated in a soluble form from recombinant baculovirus-infected insect cell lysates as a 1-MDa dodecameric ring that is reminiscent of connector proteins of some large DNA bacteriophages (26). Moreover, the specific association of the HSV-1 terminase homologue, UL15, with the immature viral capsid is dependent on the portal vertex protein, UL6 (32, 34, 39). It is unknown whether chaperone assistance is required for portal formation during an HSV-1 infection. Furthermore, the question of how misfolded viral proteins are handled within the HSV-1-infected cell has never been addressed. Given the similarities between bacteriophage connector proteins and the HSV-1 portal protein and the possibility that this complex structure may need assistance during formation, we wanted to determine whether the cellular chaperone and proteasomal machinery were relocated during HSV-1 infection. In this report, we provide evidence supporting the hypothesis that the host chaperone machinery facilitates the formation of the HSV-1 portal complex. Moreover, our observations suggest that terminally misfolded portal proteins may be targeted for degradation in a ubiquitin-dependent fashion and that this occurs within novel nuclear structures established during viral infection.
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Immunofluorescence confocal microscopy. Subconfluent Vero or U2OS cells (105) were grown on sterile glass coverslips prior to infection or transfection. After infection or transfection, the medium was aspirated and the coverslips were washed three times with room temperature 1x phosphate-buffered saline (PBS). The cells were fixed with fresh 4% paraformaldehyde, pH 7.4, in PBS for 10 min at room temperature. The coverslips were washed three times and then permeabilized with 1% NP-40 in PBS for 10 min at the ambient temperature. After three additional washes with PBS, the cells were blocked with 10% normal goat serum (Sigma Chemical, Steinheim, Germany) in PBS for 1 h to overnight. The coverslips were inverted on a drop of diluted primary antibody for 1 h, and then they were returned to culture dishes and subjected to seven washes with PBS. The dilutions of primary antibodies used were as follows: ICP8, 1:700; UL6 4g9, 1:700; ICP0, 1:200; Hsc70, 1:200; Hsp40, 1:200; 20S, 1:200; FK2, 1:700. The coverslips were inverted once again onto a drop of diluted secondary antibody (1:200) for 1 h. They were then returned to culture dishes and subjected to seven washes with PBS. Warm gelatin containing 2.5% diazibicyclooctane (a photobleaching retardant; Sigma Chemical) was used to secure the glass slips onto glass slides, and clear nail enamel was used to seal the edges of the coverslips. Fluorescence microscopy was performed with a Zeiss LSM 410 confocal microscope using a 100x objective. Adobe Photoshop 5.0 was used for image preparation for the figures. Controls included mock-infected cells and infected cells treated with a single primary antibody and a secondary antibody to assess cross-reactivity.
Viral infections. (i) Time course infections for Western blot analysis. Vero cells seeded to confluence in 60-mm2 dishes (106 cells) were infected with HSV-1 (strain KOS) at a multiplicity of infection (MOI) of 3 for 1 h at 37°C. The virus was then removed and fresh medium was added. At each time point, the medium was removed and the cells were washed twice with PBS at room temperature. The infected cell monolayer was collected in 200 µl of 1x sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis loading buffer. This material was sonicated in a bath sonicator (three times for 10 s each at 50% strength) and then boiled for 5 min. For Western blot analysis, 20 µl of this material was used. A heat-shocked HeLa cell lysate used as a control was purchased from StressGen.
(ii) Time course infections. Cells seeded on sterile glass coverslips were infected at an MOI of 3 for 1 h at 37°C. After this time, the virus was removed, the cells were washed once with sterile PBS, fresh medium was added, and the cells were incubated at an appropriate temperature. At each time point, the coverslips were removed and fixed immediately as described above. After samples for all time points had been collected, the coverslips were permeabilized and stained as described above. Infections in the presence of the viral polymerase inhibitor phosphonoacetic acid (PAA) were conducted essentially as described by Lukonis and Weller, except that an MOI of 3 was used for our studies (23). Infections in the presence of the protein synthesis inhibitor cycloheximide (CHX) were conducted as follows. Vero cells seeded to 60% confluence (5 x 105 cells) were treated with 100 µg of CHX per ml in Dulbecco's modified Eagle medium (Sigma Chemical) for 1 h prior to and during infection. CHX-treated cells were infected at an MOI of 3 and the virus was allowed to adsorb for 1 h at 37°C. After infection, the virus was removed and fresh medium containing 100 µg of CHX per ml was added.
Immunoprecipitation. Confluent Vero cells grown in 225-mm2 flasks (2 x 107 cells) were infected with HSV-1 KOS at an MOI of 5 for 1 h at 37°C. After virus adsorption, the infection medium was removed and replaced with fresh medium and the cells were allowed to incubate at 37°C. Infections used for the analysis of UL6 ubiquitination were harvested at 18 h postinfection. At harvest, the medium was aspirated and infected cells were washed twice with room temperature 1x PBS. Five milliliters of PBS was added to each flask, and the cells were collected by gentle scraping. Cells were pelleted by low-speed centrifugation, and the PBS was then removed. The cells were lysed on ice in 4 ml of VGLB buffer (10 mM HEPES [pH 7.5], 10 mM NaCl, 10 mM EDTA, and 0.1% Triton X-100, with 1 mM dithiothreitol and complete protease inhibitor [Roche] added just prior to use) for 30 min. The insoluble material was removed by centrifugation at 13,000 x g at 4°C for 15 min. After centrifugation, NaCl was added to a final concentration of 150 mM. For each immunoprecipitation reaction mixture, 0.5 ml (approximately 400 ng of total protein) of infected cell lysate was incubated with 2 µg of primary antibody for 2 h at 4°C. Twenty-five microliters of a protein A/G-agarose slurry (Santa Cruz Biotech, Santa Barbara, Calif.) was added to each sample and allowed to incubate at 4°C for 1 h. Beads were collected by gentle centrifugation (2,000 x g for 2 min) and washed three times with VGLB buffer. After the final wash, 25 µl of 2x SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis buffer was added and samples were boiled for 5 min. Controls included normal mouse immunoglobulin G (IgG) and a lysate incubated with the protein A/G slurry alone.
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FIG. 1. Subcellular localization of the cellular chaperone Hsc70/Hsp70 and cochaperone Hsp40 during HSV-1 infection. (A to C, G to I) Uninfected Vero cells cultured for 6 h at 37°C. (D to F, J to L) Vero cells infected with wild-type HSV-1 (strain KOS) for 6 h at 37°C. The staining profile for Hsc70 (red) is shown in panels A and D, the staining profile for Hsp70 (red) is shown in panels G and J, and the staining profile of Hsp40 (green) is shown in panels B, E, H, and K. Merged Hsc70/Hsp40 images are shown in panels C, F, I, and L. White arrows show Hsp40-enriched foci (E and K) that costain with Hsc70 or Hsp70 in the merged image (F and L, respectively).
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To determine whether viral infection results in an increase in the amount of chaperone proteins, we performed a Western blot analysis with HSV-1-infected cell lysates (Fig. 2). As shown in Fig. 2, the overall levels of Hsc70, Hsp70, and Hsp40 in HSV-1-infected cells did not change relative to those in uninfected Vero cells, suggesting that the redistribution observed upon infection was of existing chaperone molecules.
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FIG. 2. Western blot analysis of cellular chaperone molecules (Hsc70, Hsp70, and Hsp40) in HSV-1-infected cell lysates. Lane 1, molecular weight markers; lane 2, heat-shocked HeLa cell lysate; lane 3, uninfected Vero cells cultured at 37°C; lane 4, uninfected Vero cells heat shocked at 39.5°C; lane 5, uninfected Vero cells cultured at 37°C; lanes 6 to 9, HSV-1-infected cell lysates at 2, 4, 6, and 18 h postinfection, respectively. A Western blot of the viral protein ICP4 is shown as a positive control for infection, and a Western blot of -tubulin was used as a control to ensure that similar amounts of total protein were loaded for all samples.
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FIG. 3. Analysis of chaperone localization in infected or uninfected cells treated with CHX or PAA. Merged images of cells stained with antibodies specific to Hsc70 (red) and Hsp40 (green) are shown. (A and B) Uninfected cells treated with CHX or PAA. (C and D) HSV-1-infected cells treated with CHX or PAA.
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FIG. 4. Merged images of HSV-1-infected cells stained with antibodies detecting Hsc70 (red) and the viral ICP0 protein (green). Times (in hours) postadsorption are indicated above each panel. (A to C) Infected cells cultured at 37°C; (D to F) infected cells cultured at 39.5°C. In panels C and F, the white arrows indicate ICP0-stained foci that did not costain with Hsc70 and likely represent ND10. The red arrows indicate foci that costained with antibodies recognizing either Hsc70 or ICP0. In panel D, note the colocalization (yellow) between ICP0 and Hsc70 within the nucleolus.
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FIG. 5. ICP0 is necessary for chaperone sequestration at early times during infection and sufficient to redistribute the cellular chaperone machinery in transfected cells. Vero cells infected with the 0ß mutant (ICP0 mutant) (A to C) at 39.5°C were stained with ICP4 (green) and Hsc70 (red). This temperature was chosen because of the faster kinetics of Hsc70-enriched foci. Thus, at 6 h postexposure to HSV-1, there would have been ample time for Hsc70 focus formation. Staining for the ICP4 protein (green) (A and D) was used as a control for successful infection. As described in the text, in the absence of the ICP0 protein, no redistribution of Hsc70 was observed at this time (B), indicating that ICP0 is necessary for this action early during infection. (D to F) 0ß-infected U2OS cells (a human osteosarcoma cell line that naturally complements ICP0 HSV-1 mutants) stained for ICP4 (D) and Hsc70 (E). Merged images are shown in panels C and F. Merged images of HSV-1 (strain KOS)-infected (G) and 0ß-infected (H) Vero cells collected at 20 h postinfection are shown as well. (I to K) Subcellular localization of ICP0 (green) and Hsc70 (red) in cells transfected with a plasmid carrying the ICP0 gene. A merged image of the transfected cell is shown in panel K.
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To determine whether Hsc70-enriched foci eventually formed in the ICP0 null viral infection at later times, we infected Vero cells with wild-type HSV-1 or 0ß and analyzed them at 20 h postinfection. Twenty hours after infection with wild-type HSV-1, large replication compartments and Hsc70-enriched foci were detected (Fig. 5G). Figure 5H shows a merged image of 0ß-infected Vero cells at 20 h postinfection. In these cells, Hsc70-enriched foci were detected adjacent to somewhat smaller replication compartments. These results indicate that an unidentified cellular factor can ultimately establish chaperone-enriched foci and suggest that ICP0 can accelerate this process.
We have previously shown that cells transfected with an ICP0-expressing plasmid form large nuclear and cytoplasmic inclusions (24). When cells were cotransfected with the ICP0 plasmid and plasmids encoding individual components of the trimeric viral helicase-primase or carrying the UL6 gene, the proteins were observed to be sequestered inside the ICP0 inclusions. We hypothesized that proteins that were difficult to fold or that lacked binding partners were sequestered within these sites, since other proteins which presumably could fold and function on their own, such as ICP8 and UL9, did not localize to these inclusions (24). In light of the results for infected cells described above, we decided to revisit the formation of these ICP0-stimulated inclusions. We were particularly interested in whether Hsc70, which might be expected to be present at sites of misfolded or aggregated proteins, would localize to the interior of the ICP0 transfection inclusions. Figure 5 (panels I to K) not only confirms the previous report that ICP0 forms large inclusions within transfected cells but also shows that the interiors of the inclusions stain brightly for Hsc70. ICP0 alone appears to be sufficient to reorganize Hsc70. We cannot rule out the possibility that, when overexpressed, ICP0 itself is misfolded and a substrate for the chaperone machinery; however, for reasons described below, we favor the hypothesis that ICP0 plays an active role in the redistribution of viral and cellular proteins. We suggest that the role of these Hsc70-enriched foci is to sequester aberrant or misfolded proteins from the rest of the cell.
Foci are enriched with components of the 26S proteasome and with ubiquitinated proteins. It has been shown that ICP0 stimulates the degradation of specific cellular proteins in a ubiquitin-mediated proteasome-dependent fashion (11, 18, 30). Thus, we wanted to determine whether ubiquitin-conjugated proteins and components of the 26S proteasome were also localized to the Hsc70-enriched foci during infection. Ubiquitinated proteins (but not free ubiquitin) can be detected within cells by using the FK2 monoclonal antibody (15). In uninfected cells, ubiquitinated proteins were detected primarily in a punctate staining pattern on a diffuse nuclear background (Fig. 6B and C). In HSV-1-infected cells, staining of ubiquitinated proteins was observed in the cytoplasm and in punctate foci in the nucleus, while the diffuse nuclear background was not seen (Fig. 6E and F). The absence of the diffuse staining pattern is particularly obvious when the uninfected cell on the right (white arrow) is compared to the infected cell on the left (red arrow) (Fig. 6E). In infected cells, Hsc70 was redistributed from the predominantly nucleolar staining of uninfected cells (Fig. 6A) to a punctate pattern which colocalized with sites of ubiquitinated proteins (Fig. 6D and F). When stained with a polyclonal antibody directed against core catalytic components of the 26S proteasome and FK2, uninfected cells exhibited a diffuse nuclear staining pattern with a few punctate foci (Fig. 6G to I). In HSV-1-infected cells, we observed a remarkable redistribution of both proteasome subunits and ubiquitinated proteins into distinct foci (Fig. 6J to L) that were most likely equivalent to the Hsc70-enriched foci observed above (Fig. 6D and F).
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FIG. 6. Localization of ubiquitinated proteins and components of the proteasomal machinery during HSV-1 infection. Uninfected (A to C) and HSV-1-infected (D to F) cells stained with antibodies specific to Hsc70 (A and D) and ubiquitinated proteins (FK2) (B and E) are shown. Merged images are shown in panels C and F. In panel E, the white arrow indicates the diffuse nuclear staining of ubiquitinated proteins in an uninfected cell and the red arrow indicates the dramatic redistribution of ubiquitinated proteins in an HSV-1-infected cell. The subcellular localization of the 20S core component of the 26S proteasome (G, J, M, and P) and of ubiquitin-conjugated proteins (H, K, N, and Q) is also shown. Merged images are shown in panels I, L, O, and R. (G to I) Mock-infected cells stained with 20S and FK2 antibodies. (J to L) HSV-1-infected cells stained with the same antibodies. Infected cells treated with the proteasomal inhibitor MG132 throughout infection (M to O) or at 2 h postinfection (P to R) are also shown.
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The HSV-1 portal protein UL6 is localized to nuclear domains enriched with Hsc70. As mentioned in the introduction, many multimeric proteins require chaperone assistance during folding and assembly. Using newly generated monoclonal antibodies, 1C9 and 4G9, raised against the purified UL6 portal protein (kindly provided by Jay C. Brown, University of Virginia), we determined the intracellular localization of UL6 during infection. A time course study was conducted and cells were stained for the viral single-stranded DNA binding protein ICP8 (red) and with the 1C9 or 4G9 antibody (green). With the 1C9 antibody, the UL6 protein was detected in replication compartments (data not shown); this is consistent with previous reports indicating that cleavage and packaging occur within these large globular domains (22). When infected cells were stained at 2 h postinfection with 4G9, the UL6 protein was observed within the nucleus, and a fraction of the protein was observed colocalized with newly formed replication compartments that colocalized with ICP8 (Fig. 7C). At 3 h postinfection, the UL6 protein exhibited a globular staining pattern within the nucleus (Fig. 7D). Surprisingly, however, a different pattern was observed at later times postinfection (Fig. 7E and F). At 4 and 5 h postinfection, a substantial fraction of the UL6 protein was detected in foci adjacent to replication compartments (green). These foci costained with the Hsc70 antibody (Fig. 7G to I) and are thus likely to be equivalent to the Hsc70 foci observed in Fig. 1 to 6. Hsc70 foci were observed at all temperatures tested (34 to 39.5°C) and in cells infected with mutants of HSV-1 that were defective in assembly or DNA packaging (data not shown). Antisera raised against VP5, VP19c, VP23, and UL26 were used, and we found that no other viral structural proteins or cleavage and packaging proteins localized to the UL6- and Hsc70-enriched foci (data not shown). The Hsc70-enriched nuclear foci were also observed in cells infected with hr74, a previously described UL6 null virus (22), indicating that UL6 is not essential for their formation. The facts that the 1C9 antibody detected UL6 only within replication compartments and the 4G9 antibody detected UL6 primarily within the Hsc70 foci suggest that 4G9 detects a conformational epitope specific for misfolded, aggregated, or otherwise distinct populations of UL6. Interestingly, at 2 and 3 h postinfection, 4G9 detected UL6 in replication compartments (Fig. 7C and D). This may reflect that a fraction of misfolded UL6 proteins are present within replication compartments and that at later times this unfolded material is relocalized to chaperone-enriched foci. It is possible that viral or cellular proteins survey the replication compartments for misfolded proteins and can shuttle them to chaperone-enriched foci for remodeling or degradation. Given the multimeric nature of the portal structure, we propose that UL6 may require assistance during folding and/or oligomerization. The colocalization of a fraction of UL6 with components of the cellular machinery involved in protein folding and degradation may indicate that the sequestration of UL6 in Hsc70-enriched foci is necessary for proper folding and portal formation. Alternatively, it is possible that only misfolded UL6 is recruited to these foci for the purpose of refolding or protein degradation via the proteasomal pathway.
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FIG. 7. Localization of UL6 protein during HSV-1 infection. HSV-1-infected cells were collected at various times postinfection as described in Materials and Methods. The cells were stained with an antibody specific to the ICP8 protein (the single-stranded-DNA binding protein which is used as a marker for replication compartments) and the UL6 protein. (A to F) Merged images of ICP8 (red)- and UL6 (green)-stained cells. The times (in hours) postinfection are indicated in each panel. (A) Mock-infected cells stained with ICP8 and UL6 antibodies. (G to I) Infected cells stained with UL6 (G) and Hsc70 (H) antibodies. A merged image is shown in panel I.
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FIG. 8. The portal protein UL6 is a substrate for ubiquitination. (A) Posttranslational state of UL6 protein throughout HSV-1 infection at 39.5 and 34°C. Infected cell lysates were prepared as described in Materials and Methods. Uninfected cell lysates are shown in lanes 1 and 6. In lane 4 (6 h postadsorption; 39.5°C), note the presence of multiple slow-migrating UL6-reactive bands. At this time, fast-migrating UL6-reactive species were also apparent. In lanes 5 and 10, a smear of slow-migrating UL6-reactive products is detected. (B) UL6 Western blot analysis of immunoprecipitates recovered by using an UL6 (lane 3) or FK2 (lane 4; ubiquitin-conjugated proteins) antibody, normal mouse IgG (lane 5), or beads alone (lane 6). An infected cell lysate is shown in lane 2. (C) FK2 Western blot analysis of immunoprecipitates recovered by using an UL6 (lane 3) or FK2 (lane 4; ubiquitin-conjugated proteins) antibody, normal mouse IgG (lane 5), or beads alone (lane 6). Dots are used to indicate putative ubiquitin-conjugated species of UL6 recovered in the precipitation.
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FK2,
4G9, or
IgG antibody as described in Materials and Methods. Since the ubiquitin moiety is 7 kDa, the addition of one, two, or three moieties to the 75-kDa UL6 polypeptide chain would be predicted to result in proteins with molecular masses of approximately 83, 92, and 100 kDa, respectively. Immunoblots of immunoprecipitates probed with the
FK2 or
4G9 antibody indicated that UL6 can be detected in the total lysate as a 75-kDa band (Fig. 8B, lane 2). When the lysate was precipitated with an anti-UL6 antibody, the 75-kDa band and multiple slow-migrating UL6-reactive bands were detected (Fig. 8B, lane 3), with approximate molecular masses ranging from 78 to 100 kDa. The bands migrating at approximately 83, 92, and 100 kDa are marked with dots and may represent UL6 with one, two, and three ubiquitin conjugates, respectively (lane 3). It is possible that the 78- and 80-kDa species of UL6 found in lanes 3 and 4 are degradation products recovered from the lysate. Additional experiments will be required to confirm these assignments. The slow-migrating bands were not seen in the total lysate, perhaps because less UL6 is present in this sample or because slow-migrating species are enriched in the precipitate by using the 4G9 antibody. The hypothesis that these slow-migrating bands represent ubiquitinated forms of UL6 is supported by the observation that these species were also precipitated with an antibody specific for ubiquitinated proteins (Fig. 8B, lane 4). A Western blot analysis of these immunoprecipitates was also performed with an antibody specific to ubiquitinated proteins (FK2) (Fig. 8C). Figure 8C, lane 3, shows many slow-migrating UL6-reactive species that were recognized by the FK2 antibody. For lane 4, the lysates were immunoprecipitated and reacted with the FK2 antibody which, as expected, resulted in many reactive bands. When the
IgG antibody and beads alone were used to precipitate the lysates, none of the UL6-reactive bands were detected. Taken together, these results are consistent with the proposal that the slow-migrating species are ubiquitin-conjugated forms of UL6. |
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Our results suggest that ICP0 or a cellular factor with ICP0-like functions can orchestrate the rearrangement of Hsc70 and Hsp70 during infection and that this relocalization occurs more efficiently at 39.5°C than at 37°C. Hsc70 is known to concentrate within the nucleolus during high-temperature stress (26). Interestingly, at early times after infection at 39.5°C, ICP0 itself colocalized with Hsc70 in the nucleolus (Fig. 4D). After the initial localization of ICP0 in the nucleolus, both Hsc70 and ICP0 were observed in discrete nuclear foci. The more efficient formation of these foci at higher temperatures may be due to the stress-induced concentration of the chaperone in the nucleolus or to the faster kinetics of viral infection. The significance of the nucleolar localization of host chaperones and ICP0 is not known. It was previously shown that HSV-1 infection induces a structural modification of the nucleolus (2). It will be interesting to determine the role played by ICP0 in the rearrangement of host chaperones and whether chaperone distribution is linked to the modification of the nucleolus during infection.
The principal mechanism of protein degradation in eukaryotic cells is the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway. This system requires that a protein targeted for degradation be covalently conjugated to ubiquitin by an E3-ubiquitin ligase. Client proteins conjugated to multiple ubiquitin moieties are recognized by the 26S proteasome and subsequently degraded (19, 36). It has previously been reported that ICP0 has ubiquitin ligase activity (6). During infection, ICP0 is known to target the degradation of PML, p53, and SP100 in a ubiquitin-dependent fashion (4, 5, 18). Although an ICP0-induced degradation of viral proteins has not been reported, the results presented in this paper suggest that ICP0 is necessary and sufficient for the redistribution of Hsc70 and the 26S proteasome to novel foci at early times during infection. These foci also contain a subfraction of the portal protein UL6; furthermore, we have shown that UL6 is ubiquitinated during infection. Thus, it is possible that ICP0 is either directly or indirectly involved in the remodeling and/or degradation of the viral portal protein.
It is likely that global protein quality control in cells involves cooperation between protein remodeling and degradation. A precedent exists for a connection between these two processes. For instance, protein cofactors such as CHIP (carboxyl terminus of Hsc70 interacting protein) interact directly with the chaperone machinery and exhibit ubiquitin ligase activity (10). It is possible that ICP0 performs a CHIP-like function to interact with Hsc70 and orchestrate the formation of Hsc70 and proteasome-enriched foci. The directed redistribution of the cellular chaperone and proteolytic machinery during infection may represent a novel mechanism to ensure viral protein quality control. Although Hsc70 can eventually be recruited to foci within the nucleus even in the absence of ICP0, the presence of ICP0 enhances the rate and efficiency of this process. The results presented in this paper thus extend the numerous functions already ascribed to ICP0 by suggesting that it may also link the cellular protein folding machinery to the 26S proteasome during infection.
We propose that viral proteins that are difficult to fold or that lack binding partners can be sequestered in specialized remodeling and degradation foci away from replication compartments in order to promote the appropriate maturation or degradation of terminally misfolded protein aggregates. As suggested for the mutant Huntingtin protein (33), nuclear aggregation into discrete foci may protect the cell against premature death. It is possible that the virus may take advantage of this state to prevent apoptosis and increase the virus yield. We previously showed that cells transfected with ICP0 and either UL6 or components of the helicase-primase displayed unusual inclusions observed by immunofluorescence microscopy in which ICP0 appeared to surround the potentially misfolded protein, whereas proteins which presumably could fold and function on their own, such as ICP8 and UL9, did not localize to these inclusions (24). Consistent with the notion that ICP0 may provide a link between misfolded proteins and the remodeling machinery, we have shown in this paper that transfection inclusions also contain Hsc70. We believe that similar structures are formed in the nuclei of infected cells. As seen in transfection studies, ICP8, UL9, and capsid proteins such as VP5, VP19C, and scaffold protein were not observed in the Hsc70 foci. Interestingly, foci outside of replication compartments containing the HSV-1 viral tegument protein VP22 have been observed in live and fixed herpesvirus-infected cells (8, 20, 27). In one study, these foci were juxtaposed with replication compartments colocalized with ICP0 in punctate dots (20). It is unclear whether these sites are analogous to the foci reported in this paper; however, we are intrigued by the possibility that a subset of viral proteins that require special attention during protein folding or, perhaps, oligomerization may be treated by the host folding machinery in either identical or very similar domains lying adjacent to the replication compartments.
It is clear that HSV-1 causes a dramatic nuclear redistribution of the chaperone and proteasomal machinery during infection, but whether this is essential for portal assembly and efficient viral production remains unknown. Attempts to express UL6 in heterologous systems to monitor its in vitro folding and oligomerization status have been hampered by the insolubility of the UL6 protein. When UL6 was expressed in insect cells infected with a recombinant baculovirus, the protein was insoluble unless 1 M arginine was added. Under those conditions, dodecameric rings of the UL6 protein were observed (29). It will be of considerable interest to determine if the overexpression of the chaperone machinery during UL6 production alleviates the need for the addition of arginine and thus allows for the purification of a protein that is suitable for folding and oligomerization studies. These experiments may indicate if and at what stage portal formation is facilitated by the cellular chaperone. In order to address dependence on the chaperone machinery vis-à-vis viral production, we will need to knock out the expression of Hsc70 and its cofactors and determine the effect on viral yield. We speculate that the partitioning of misfolded proteins in the nucleus will provide an antiapoptotic condition that will subsequently increase the virus yield.
Since HSV-1 assembly and maturation are restricted to the nucleus, it is not surprising that the virus has evolved a mechanism to manage proteins in this compartment. Although it is known that protein degradation can occur within both the nucleus and the cytoplasm, the dynamics of proteasomal distribution between compartments are poorly understood (31). Our findings suggest that during HSV-1 infection, the cellular chaperone and proteolytic machinery is sequestered, perhaps to facilitate viral protein folding, oligomerization, or disaggregation. Additional viral or cellular factors may play a role in shuttling misfolded proteins from replication compartments to the Hsp70/Hsp40 chaperone-enriched foci. Since the Hsp70/Hsp40 chaperone system is known to coordinate with the Hsp90 multichaperone system during the maturation of specialized proteins (reviewed in reference 13), it is possible that an even more complex operation is employed by the virus during infection. We propose that the sequestration of these processes represents a rudimentary compartmentalization of the nucleus and demonstrates that HSV may have evolved an elegant mechanism to facilitate protein quality control during infection.
This work was supported by NIH NRSA grant F32 AI50336 to A.D.B. and NIH AI37549 grant to S.K.W.
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