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Journal of Virology, July 2004, p. 7248-7256, Vol. 78, No. 13
0022-538X/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JVI.78.13.7248-7256.2004
Copyright © 2004, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Mitotic Chromosome-Binding Activity of Latency-Associated Nuclear Antigen 1 Is Required for DNA Replication from Terminal Repeat Sequence of Kaposi's Sarcoma-Associated Herpesvirus
Chunghun Lim, Changtaek Choi, and Joonho Choe*
Department
of Biological Sciences, Korea Advanced Institute of Science and
Technology, Daejeon 305-701, Korea
Received 30 November 2003/
Accepted 1 March 2004
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ABSTRACT
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Latency-associated
nuclear antigen 1 (LANA1) of Kaposi's sarcoma-associated
herpesvirus (KSHV) is implicated in the persistence of the viral genome
during latent infection. It has been suggested that LANA1 tethers the
viral genome to the host chromosome and also participates actively in
DNA replication from the terminal repeat of KSHV. Here we show by
mutational analysis that the mitotic chromosome-binding activity of
LANA1 is tightly coupled to its replication activity. Thus, KSHV
appears to have evolved a unique tactic for its stable
maintenance.
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TEXT
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Kaposi's sarcoma-associated herpesvirus (KSHV) is the etiological
agent of Kaposi's sarcoma and some lymphoproliferative diseases
(9,
11,
47); it is closely
related to Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) and herpesvirus saimiri. The
circularized viral genome is maintained as an extrachromosomal element
in latently infected cells, whereas the linearized form of the viral
genome is packaged into infectious virus particles during lytic
infection (10,
16). Latency-associated
nuclear antigen 1 (LANA1) is a viral protein expressed during latent
infection (22,
33,
51,
55). As a transcriptional
modulator, LANA1 interacts with several cellular transcription factors
and influences the activity of viral and cellular promoters
(3,
20,
23,
25,
30,
35,
36,
40,
41,
50,
54). When tethered to
promoters via a heterologous DNA-binding domain, LANA1 acts as a
transcriptional repressor, possibly by interacting with the mSin3
complex and heterochromatin protein 1
(36,
43,
57). As a replication
factor, LANA1 colocalizes with the viral genome on the host chromosome
and has been shown to be responsible for the stable maintenance of
plasmids containing the KSHV terminal repeat (TR); it may therefore
link the viral genome to a host chromosome, retaining the viral genome
in the nucleus during mitosis and permitting equipartition to the
progeny (5,
14). The
chromosome-binding activity of LANA1 has been mapped to its N-terminal
22 amino acids and has been designated the chromosome-binding sequence
(CBS) (49). Its C
terminus binds to sequences within the TRs located at both ends of the
KSHV genome and represses TR-dependent transcription
(6,
15,
24,
42). As expected from the
chromosome-tethering model, the LANA1 CBS is necessary for long-term
replication of a KSHV TR-containing plasmid
(59). In addition, we and
others have shown that LANA1 is required for the transient replication
of KSHV TR-containing plasmids, indicating that it may play an
essential role not only in plasmid maintenance but also in DNA
replication from the KSHV TR
(26,
28,
42). Using a panel of
LANA1 deletion mutants, we found that the CBS is necessary and
sufficient for the C-terminal DNA-binding domain to support the
replication of a KSHV TR-containing plasmid, suggesting that LANA1 must
bind to the chromosome to fulfill its replication function (C. Lim, T.
Seo, J. Jung, and J. Choe, submitted for publication). To
examine this possibility further, we have generated several LANA1
derivatives with point mutations in their CBS and characterized their
activities.
We reasoned that, because of its functional
importance, the LANA1 CBS may be evolutionarily conserved among
herpesviruses. Multiple sequence alignment of herpesvirus LANA1
homologues disclosed a few conserved residues within the CBS, which is
usually followed by basic nuclear localization signal (NLS) (Fig.
1A). We generated point mutations in these conserved residues by PCR with
primers containing mutated sequence. To exclude errors during the
amplification of the internal repeat sequences of LANA1, we first made
cDNAs which encompassed 1 to 1,020 nucleotides of LANA1 sequence with
intended mutations by PCR. Then, the region corresponding to
nucleotides 1 to 820 of the wild-type LANA1 sequence cloned in
pFLAG-CMV2 was replaced with the same region carrying point mutations,
taking advantage of the internal BamHI site in LANA1 cDNA. Point
mutations in pFLAG-CMV2 LANA1 derivatives were confirmed by sequencing.
To check the expression level of the LANA1 point mutants, 293T cells
were transfected with a vector expressing FLAG-tagged LANA1 wild-type
and point mutant derivatives. After 36 h, FLAG-tagged protein
was immunoprecipitated and immunoblotted with anti-FLAG monoclonal
antibody as described previously
(41). As shown in Fig.
1B, the FLAG-tagged LANA1
point mutants were expressed at a level comparable to that of wild-type
LANA1.

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FIG. 1. Construction
of LANA1 point mutants. (A) Multiple sequence alignment of
herpesvirus LANA1 homologues. The N-terminal amino acid sequences are
aligned. The CBS and NLS of KSHV LANA1 are shown. Conserved residues
are indicated by asterisks. RRV, rhesus rhadinovirus; BHV4, bovine
herpesvirus 4; OHV2, ovine herpesvirus 2; HVS, herpesvirus saimiri;
ORF, open reading frame. (B) Expression of FLAG-tagged LANA1
point mutants in transiently transfected 293T
cells.
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We next examined the subcellular localization of the LANA1
point mutants by an immunofluorescence assay
(43). To visualize the
interphase nuclei and mitotic chromosomes, we cotransfected the
FLAG-tagged expression vectors with an expression vector for histone 2B
protein fused to N-terminal green fluorescent protein (GFP). In a
previous report (34),
GFP-fused histone was shown to behave like its natural counterparts and
was used to study chromosome dynamics in living cells. As described
previously (5,
14,
49), wild-type LANA1 is
localized to interphase nuclei, where it forms a heterogeneous pattern
(Fig.
2A), and associates tightly with mitotic chromosomes (Fig.
2B). Similar results were
obtained using H3-GFP and H4-GFP (data not shown). When we examined the
LANA1 point mutants, we found that they were localized exclusively to
the nucleus in interphase cells. An exception was the RG20AA mutant,
which was present in both cytoplasm and the nucleus (Fig.
2C). In mitotic cells,
however, point mutations between the 8th and 13th amino acid of LANA1
completely abolished association with mitotic chromosomes (Fig.
2D). These data indicate
that residues 8 to 13 of the LANA1 CBS are critical for mitotic
chromosome binding. The mutation of RG to AA may impair the NLS
function of LANA1, and the mutant may have access to the nucleus only
after the nuclear membrane breaks down during mitosis.
Due to the
limited resolution of our immunofluorescence assay, it was not clear
whether each LANA1 point mutant associated with the chromosome and/or
occupied different subnuclear locations in interphase cells. To examine
this, we fractionated total proteins from 293T cells transiently
expressing each FLAG-tagged LANA1 point mutant and analyzed their
distributions within cells
(43). The cells were
harvested 36 h after transfection and lysed in cytoskeleton
(CSK) buffer (10 mM
piperazine-N,N'-bis(2-ethanesulfonic acid)
[pH 6.8], 100 mM NaCl, 300 mM sucrose, 3 mM MgCl2,
1 mM EGTA, 1 mM dithiothreitol, 0.1 mM ATP, 0.2 mM phenylmethylsulfonyl
fluoride, 1 mM Na3VO4, and 10 mM NaF) containing
0.5% Triton X-100. The lysate was centrifuged at low speed, and
the supernatant was clarified by high-speed centrifugation (fraction
S). The pellet from the low-speed centrifugation was washed once in CSK
buffer, subjected to extensive digestion with DNase I, and again
centrifuged at low speed. The supernatant and pellet corresponded to
the DNase I-extractable fraction (fraction C) and DNase I-resistant
fraction (fraction M), respectively. As shown in Fig.
3,
the majority of wild-type LANA1 appeared in the DNase I-resistant
fraction (fraction M). In contrast, LANA1 point mutants defective for
mitotic chromosome binding were found exclusively in the Triton
X-100-extractable fraction (fraction S). The PL17AG and RG20AA mutants,
which associate with mitotic chromosomes, were distributed between the
Triton X-100-extractable fraction and the DNase I-resistant fraction.
Interestingly, transiently expressed FLAG-tagged EBNA-1, a functional
analog of KSHV LANA1 in the latent replication of EBV, was exclusively
found in the Triton X-100-extractable fraction. We also used antibodies
to examine the partitioning of endogenous proteins during fractionation
to confirm that other cellular proteins showed a specific distribution
and that each of the FLAG-tagged LANA1 point mutants was fractionated
in an equivalent manner. Under our experimental conditions, p53 and
histone proteins were exclusively found in fraction M, while
ß-actin was equivalently distributed to all fractions (data not
shown). These data indicate that LANA1 point mutants defective for
mitotic chromosome binding also fail to cofractionate with histone
proteins in transfected cells. Since cells from unsynchronized
populations are largely engaged in interphase, this suggests that they
have different subnuclear compartments during not only mitosis but also
interphase, at the time when DNA synthesis occurs.

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FIG. 3. Biochemical
fractionation of LANA1 point mutants. 293T cells in 60-mm dishes were
transfected with 4 µg of expression vectors encoding
FLAG-tagged wild-type LANA1 or point mutant derivatives and harvested
36 h after transfection. Total proteins were fractionated as
described in the text. LANA1 was detected by immunoblotting with rabbit
polyclonal anti-LANA1 serum. Distribution of transiently expressed
FLAG-tagged EBNA-1 was similarly revealed by immunoblotting with
anti-FLAG monoclonal antibody. WT, wild type; fraction S, Triton
X-100-extractable fraction; fraction C, DNase I-extractable fraction;
fraction M, DNase I-resistant
fraction.
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LANA1
represses transcription from the KSHV TR by binding to sequences within
the TR via its C-terminal DNA-binding domain
(6,
15,
24,
42). From the
organization of the functional domains of LANA1, it appeared likely
that point mutations within the LANA1 CBS would not alter the
DNA-binding and transcriptional repression activities of the C terminus
of LANA1. To test this expectation, we performed a transient-reporter
assay using p4TR-luc to examine the transcriptional repression activity
of the LANA1 point mutants. As shown in Fig.
4A,
all the point mutants, like wild-type LANA1, inhibited TR-dependent
transcription, although the efficiency of repression varied. The
mutants defective in chromosome binding inhibited the transcriptional
activity of TR more strongly than wild type. In contrast, the RG20AA
mutant, possibly because of its different subcellular localization
during interphase, repressed TR-dependent transcription less
efficiently. In a parallel experiment, we also examined the effect of
LANA1 point mutants on the transcription from pGL2-basic, a backbone
reporter of p4TR-luc (data not shown). Consistent with previous reports
(23,
42,
54), LANA1 activated
TR-independent transcription up to twofold. However, point mutants
defective for mitotic chromosome binding failed to activate the
transcription from pGL2-basic, partly explaining their enhanced
transcriptional repression activities on TR-dependent
transcription.

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FIG. 4. Transcription
and replication activities of LANA1 point mutants. (A) 293T
cells in 60-mm dishes were cotransfected with 1 µg of p4TR-luc
and 4 µg of blank or FLAG-tagged LANA1 expression vector
encoding wild type or point mutants. After 36 h, cells were
harvested and luciferase assays were performed
(42). The relative
activation was calculated by normalizing to the luciferase activity
obtained with the blank vector. The results are averages of three
independent experiments, with standard deviations depicted by the error
bars. (B) 293T cells in 100-mm dishes were transiently
transfected with 2 µg of p4TR-luc containing four copies of
KSHV TR, 2 µg of pGL2-basic as a nonreplicating internal
control, and 8 µg of expression vector for FLAG-tagged LANA1 or
its point mutants. Low-molecular-weight DNA was purified 96 h
after transfection and subjected to digestion with Alw44I alone (left)
or Alw44I/DpnI (right). Digested DNA was separated on an 0.8%
agarose gel, transferred to a nylon membrane, and detected by Southern
blotting with a luciferase-specific probe. Input, 10% of the DNA
used in the Alw44I/DpnI
digestion.
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In order to examine the ability of the LANA1 point
mutants to promote the replication of a KSHV TR-containing plasmid in a
transient-replication assay, we cotransfected 293T cells with p4TR-luc
containing four TR sequences of the KSHV genome and pGL2-basic,
together with expression vectors for the wild-type or point mutants of
LANA1. The cells were split 36 h after transfection to remove
free DNA and harvested 96 h after transfection.
Low-molecular-weight DNA was purified from the transfected cells as
described previously
(42). Using the
methylation-sensitive restriction enzyme DpnI, which does
not cut the plasmid DNA replicated in mammalian cells, we estimated the
extent of replication of the TR-containing plasmid in the presence of
the wild-type or point mutant LANA1. We included nonreplicating
pGL2-basic as an internal control to monitor the efficiency of
transfection and of plasmid recovery, as well as the completeness of
the digestion of unreplicated DNA by DpnI. As shown in Fig.
4B, mutants of LANA1
defective in binding to mitotic chromosomes did not support the
replication of the TR-containing plasmid. Longer exposure could hardly
reveal any DpnI-resistant plasmid in the presence of
chromosome-binding-defective mutants, making it difficult to
quantitatively analyze the decrease in the relative level of
replication (data not shown).
In order to survive in latently
infected cells, DNA viruses with extrachromosomal genomes must
replicate their DNA and ensure segregation of the daughter molecules to
the two progeny cells. In the case of papillomavirus a viral helicase,
E1 (67), in concert with
a viral auxiliary protein, E2, unwinds the viral origin of replication
and initiates DNA synthesis
(13,
17,
18,
62). However, long-term
maintenance of a viral oriP-containing plasmid requires an additional
viral cis-acting element designated a minichromosome
maintenance element (MME)
(48). The MME is located
within the long control region, which is distinct from the replication
origin and contains multiple high-affinity E2-binding sites.
Accumulating data suggest that chromatin-bound E2 tethers the viral
genome to the host chromosome via the MME, thereby ensuring
equipartition of the replicated viral genomes at mitosis
(8,
31,
39,
61,
63). In the case of EBV,
two cis elements constitute the origin of replication during
latent replication (44,
46,
53,
68). These are members of
a family of repeat (FR) and dyad symmetry sequences separated by
1 kb within the EBV genome. Both sequences contain binding
sites for EBNA-1 (2,
4,
52), the viral
trans-acting element required for the latent replication of
EBV (69). In contrast to
papillomavirus E1, EBNA-1 does not have any enzymatic activity for DNA
replication, but instead it recruits a prereplicative complex to the
viral oriP (12,
19,
56). DNA synthesis
initiates at or near low-affinity EBNA-1-binding sites within dyad
symmetry sequences (21),
and these latter are necessary and sufficient for transient DNA
replication mediated by EBNA-1
(27,
38,
44,
53). However, the stable
maintenance of a plasmid containing the EBV oriP requires, in addition,
multiple high-affinity EBNA-1-binding sites within FR sequences
(1,
38,
46,
64). As in the case of
papillomavirus E2, EBNA-1 associates with host chromosomes
(45), and it has been
suggested that the action of the FR in retaining the plasmid involves
the viral genome hitchhiking on the host chromosome via
EBNA-1.
It seems likely that KSHV has evolved a similar
chromosome-tethering mechanism for its persistence in host cells
(5,
14,
49,
59) and that LANA1 is
responsible not only for the stable maintenance but also for the
replication of KSHV TR-containing plasmids
(26,
28,
42). In a
transient-replication assay using a panel of LANA1 deletion mutants,
the minimal domain of LANA1 able to support the replication of a
TR-containing plasmid was identified as LANA1
23-950, which
contains the N-terminal CBS in addition to the C-terminal DNA-binding
and dimerization domain (Lim et al., submitted). The requirement for
the N-terminal CBS for replication activity was unexpected, since (i)
the N-terminal CBS was thought to function mainly in the equal
segregation and nuclear retention of the viral genome and (ii) the C
terminus of LANA1, which can dimerize, bind TR sequences, and interact
with the components of prereplicative complex
(42), seemed likely to be
sufficient for the replication activity of LANA1. In the present work
we have generated several point mutations in the N-terminal CBS and
characterized their activity in order to confirm that the replication
activity of LANA1 requires its ability to bind to the chromosome. We
found that point mutants, which were unable to associate with mitotic
chromosomes, also failed to exclusively cofractionate with histone
proteins in an unsynchronized population and facilitate the transient
replication of a KSHV TR-containing plasmid, supporting the idea that
chromosome binding of LANA1 is a prerequisite for its replication
activity. It is noteworthy that all LANA1 point mutations used in this
study did not abolish the nuclear localization in interphase cells
(with some variation in the RG20AA mutant), the transcriptional
repression activity of TR-dependent transcription, and the association
with SAP30, which was previously shown to interact with the N terminus
of LANA1 (36) (data not
shown). Therefore, it seems unlikely that point mutations in the LANA1
CBS globally affect its structure or stability. The following evidence
also argues against the possibility that the failure of the mutants
defective in chromosome binding to support the replication of a KSHV
TR-containing plasmid results from their inability to retain the KSHV
TR-containing plasmid in the nucleus when nuclear membranes are
reassembled at the end of mitosis. First, the LANA1 point mutations
have an all-or-nothing effect on plasmid replication, whereas if the
replication activity were intact but only the chromosome tethering and
nuclear retention activities were abolished, the replication activities
of those mutants should have been reduced rather than completely
abolished. Second, trans-acting elements of papillomavirus and
EBV lacking chromosome-binding and/or plasmid maintenance activity
retain replication activity comparable to wild type in
transient-replication assays
(29,
39,
60,
65,
66), although there are
some reports that mitotic chromosome binding of EBV EBNA-1 is also
important for its replication activity
(32,
58). Furthermore, viral
cis-acting elements responsible for plasmid retention that
probably act by tethering themselves to chromosomes are not required
for replication activity in those systems
(27,
38,
44,
48,
53). These data imply
that defects in segregation and nuclear retention should not affect the
replication of viral oriP-containing plasmids in transient-replication
assays.
Instead we favor the idea that the N-terminal CBS of
LANA1 targets TR-containing plasmids to the host chromosomes by
interacting with chromatin-bound cellular factors. These could be
replication factors specifically required for initiating replication
from the KSHV TR or auxiliary factors facilitating the stable assembly
of a prereplicative complex on the viral origin of DNA replication.
MeCP-2 and H1 could be proteins targeted by the LANA1 CBS
(14,
37,
59), although their
functional relevance in the latent DNA replication of KSHV remains to
be further investigated. While it cannot be excluded that the
possibility that different cellular proteins are individually involved
in DNA replication and the chromosome association activity of LANA1,
our data suggest that the replication activity of LANA1 is tightly
coupled to its chromosome association, and the replication of the
latent KSHV genome may be intimately tied up with its equal segregation
and nuclear retention. Such a mechanism for ensuring the persistence of
the KSHV genome in latently infected cells would be unique among DNA
viruses. In papillomavirus and EBV, replication of the viral genome and
its partitioning are independent events mediated by different viral
cis elements, and multiple high-affinity binding sites for the
viral trans-acting element are required for stable maintenance
of viral oriP-containing plasmids. In contrast, the fact that a single
unit of KSHV TR is sufficient for plasmid persistence
(6), but does not have
multiple high-affinity binding sites for LANA1, may explain the
peculiar mechanism of replication of latent KSHV.
While this
report was under review, Barbera et al.
(7) reported their point
mutational analysis in chromosome association, DNA replication, and
plasmid maintenance activity of LANA1. They sequentially replaced
residues within the LANA1 CBS with alanine and obtained
data consistent with our study.
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
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We
thank P. R. Cook and H. Kimura for providing us
with histone-GFP vectors.
This work was supported in part by
grants from the National Research Laboratory Program of the Korea
Institute of Science and Technology Evaluation and Planning and from
the Molecular and Cellular BioDiscovery Research Program of the
Ministry of Science and Technology,
Korea.
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FOOTNOTES
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* Correpsonding
author. Mailing address: Department of Biological Sciences, Korea
Advanced Institute of Science and Technology, 373-1 Guseong-Dong,
Yuseong-Gu, Daejeon 305-701, South Korea. Phone: 82-42-869-2630. Fax:
82-42-869-5630. E-mail:
jchoe{at}kaist.ac.kr. 
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Journal of Virology, July 2004, p. 7248-7256, Vol. 78, No. 13
0022-538X/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JVI.78.13.7248-7256.2004
Copyright © 2004, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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