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Journal of Virology, January 2005, p. 615-618, Vol. 79, No. 1
0022-538X/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JVI.79.1.615-618.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Ganglioside GD1a Restores Infectibility to Mouse Cells Lacking Functional Receptors for Polyomavirus
Joanna Gilbert,1
Jean Dahl,1
Cathy Riney,1
John You,1
Cunqi Cui,1,
Randall Holmes,2
Wayne Lencer,3 and
Thomas Benjamin1*
Department of Pathology,1
G.I. Cell Biology, Children's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts,3
Department of Microbiology, University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, Denver, Colorado2
Received 17 June 2004/
Accepted 6 August 2004

ABSTRACT
Recent investigations on the pathway of cell entry by polyomavirus
(Py) and simian virus 40 (SV40) have defined specific gangliosides
as functional receptors mediating virus binding and transport
from the plasma membrane to the endoplasmic reticulum (B. Tsai
et al., EMBO J.
22:4346-4355, 2003; Gilbert and Benjamin, in
press). These studies were carried out with C6 rat glioma cells,
a heterologous host chosen for its known deficiency in ganglioside
biosynthesis. Here, a cell genetic approach was undertaken to
identify components required for the early steps of infection
using mouse cells as the natural host for Py. Receptor-negative
(R) mouse cells, screened based on resistance to Py infection,
were shown to bind Py but failed to allow entry of the virus.
R cells were also found to be resistant to SV40. Infectibility
was restored or enhanced by the addition of the same specific
gangliosides found in earlier studies with C6 cells. In one
R line, overexpression of caveolin-1 also increased infectibility.
These results support and extend findings on gangliosides in
lipid rafts as functional receptors and mediators of internalization
for Py and SV40.
Screening for R cells.
Mouse cell lines were screened for resistance to polyomavirus (Py) at early stages of infection according to the following criteria: (i) failure to develop cytopathic effects following a high-multiplicity infection and failure to produce progeny virus and (ii) ability to produce a high yield of infectious virus following transfection with viral DNA. A dozen lines, chosen randomly from the American Type Culture Collection catalogue or derived in our laboratory, were screened. Three were found to meet these criteria. These have been denoted as R cell lines for being functionally "receptor negative." RAG-1 is a spontaneous renal adenocarcinoma cell line (purchased from the ATCC); A1-1 and A2855 were derived from Py-induced mammary tumors and are virus free. Besides failing to develop cytopathic effects following infection by small- and large-plaque Py strains, these R cell lines were a hundred-fold less infectible than NIH 3T3 cells as judged by the lower single-cycle yields following infection at a low multiplicity of infection (MOI). Their resistance is not due to an intracellular block in replication since they produced levels of virus comparable to those in NIH 3T3 cells following transfection with viral DNA (Table 1).
Ganglioside addition restores infectibility without increasing overall levels of virus binding.
Recent studies of the C6 rat glioma cell line defective in glycolipid
biosynthesis (
8) showed that preincubation with ganglioside
GD1a substantially enhanced infectibility by Py while addition
of the related ganglioside GM1 enhanced susceptibility to simian
virus 40 (SV40) (
3a,
11). Screened for resistance only to Py,
R cells also proved to be resistant to SV40. Though not
selected based on any known defect in ganglioside biosynthesis,
R cells showed greatly enhanced susceptibility to viral
infection following addition of the same specific gangliosides
(Table
2). Addition of GD1a to R cells had little or
no effect on overall levels of binding of biotinylated Py (data
not shown). These results indicate that GD1a provides specific
functional binding sites amidst an abundance of nonspecific
sites that either fail to mediate internalization and infection
or do so inefficiently.
Cholesterol and cytoskeletal requirements for Py infection of GD1a-supplemented R cells.
Previous studies have given different results concerning the
role of caveolae and dependence on cholesterol for infection
by Py in different cells (
2,
3,
4,
5,
10). Results in a recent
study using C6 cells suggested the existence of two entry pathways
that were at least partially distinct, a GD1a-mediated pathway
exhibiting colocalization with caveolin-1 (Cav-1) and that was
inhibitable by cholesterol-sequestering drugs and by microfilament-altering
agents, and a less efficient pathway of basal infection in nonsupplemented
cells that was not blocked by the same cholesterol-disrupting
agents or agents affecting actin microfilaments (
3,
3a). Py
infection of GD1a-supplemented R cells also required
cholesterol and was dependent on intact microtubules (Colcemid
sensitive and taxol resistant) as well as on a dynamic state
of the microfilament system (Table
2). These results are essentially
the same as found for GD1a-supplemented C6 cells (
3a).
Bacterial toxins as a probe for cell surface gangliosides in R cells.
To determine whether R cells are deficient in the cell surface expression of gangliosides, cells were exposed to fluorescent derivatives of the Escherichia coli heat-labile toxin LT-IIb that utilizes GD1a as its receptor (12) and of cholera toxin that utilizes GM1 (1, 13). Unsupplemented A1-1 and RAG-1 showed no detectible staining with LT-IIb, indicating absence of GD1a. In contrast, A2855 clearly stained. Addition of GD1a but not GM1 gave clear staining by LT-IIb in all three cells, as expected (Fig. 1A). Using labeled cholera toxin B subunit, A2855 cells were again positive while the other two lines were negative. Supplementation with GM1 but not GD1a led to positive staining by cholera toxin in all cells (Fig. 1B). These results support the conclusion that the absence or insufficiency of cell surface gangliosides accounts for virus resistance in at least two of the R cells.
Caveolin is limiting in one R cell line.
A2855 cells are of particular interest because they constitutively
express gangliosides on the cell surface yet become highly infectible
only after preincubation with exogenous gangliosides (Fig.
2 and Table
2). In intestinal epithelial cells, gangliosides must
associate with lipid rafts to carry toxins from the plasma membrane
to the endoplasmic reticulum where they unfold, rearrange, and
translocate to the cytosol (
1,
13). Gangliosides that do not
associate with lipid rafts bind toxin, which is then conveyed
to an endosomal compartment and fails to induce toxicity (
1,
13). To investigate the failure of endogenous gangliosides in
A2855 cells to mediate infection, we tested whether the gangliosides
were dependent on caveolae for their function as virus receptors.
Immunoblots of cell extracts with anti-Cav-1 showed that A2855
expressed very small amounts of Cav-1 compared to RAG-1 or NIH
3T3. Clones of A2855 and RAG-1 expressing exogenous myc-tagged
Cav-1 (
7) were isolated and tested to see if raising the levels
of Cav-1 expression could rescue Py infectibility without addition
of GD1a (Fig.
3). Increased expression of Cav-1 in A2855 cells
was correlated with a roughly 15-fold increase in susceptibility
to Py in the absence of added GD1a. A lesser enhancement (two-
to threefold) was seen in RAG-1 cells that expressed a much
higher level of endogenous Cav-1 along with the exogenous protein.
Thus, in A2855 cells, the low level of Cav-1 appears to be a
limiting factor along with GD1a for virus uptake. Overall, the
results strongly suggest that the binding of virus to its ganglioside
receptor in lipid rafts associated with caveolae leads to efficient
virus uptake and infection.
Defects in R cells.
In principle, R cells could be defective at any stage
of infection, from virus attachment, entry, intracellular transport
to sites of uncoating, possible cofactors in disassembly per
se, to nuclear entry and the initiation of viral gene expression.
In the three R lines examined thus far, however, the
only defects observed were in expression of appropriate levels
of gangliosides in association with caveolae. R cells
have an abundance of nonfunctional binding sites corresponding
most likely to sialoglycoproteins. The low efficiency of basal
infection in some R cells as well as C6 cells (
3a) may
occur via glycoprotein receptors in a non-caveola-dependent
pathway (
2). Alternatively, uptake in the basal pathway may
be mediated by gangliosides not present in cholesterol-rich
membrane domains associated with caveolae.
The R cells as well as C6 cells were all derived from tumors and may share common defects in the synthesis or distribution of gangliosides on the cell surface. For the Py tumor lines, loss of functional receptors could be a consequence of selection in vivo for virus resistance (10). The underlying basis of the defect(s) is unknown. Heterogeneity in the ceramide portion of the gangliosides may conceivably play a role in sorting virus-containing vesicles along the retrograde pathway to the endoplasmic reticulum. Thus, A2855 cells may express gangliosides lacking the proper ceramide structure to function efficiently as virus receptors. Loss of the enzyme GM2/GD2 synthase may also underlie the phenotype in some R cells. This enzyme functions as an N-acetylgalactosaminyltransferase in an early step in ganglioside biosynthesis (4, 9) and is required to form the precursors of both GD1a and GM1.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We thank M. Lisanti for the caveolin expression vector. We also
gratefully acknowledge the work of Aron Lukacher and John Carroll
in the isolation of the mammary tumor cell lines and Roxanne
Peterman in the characterization of Cav-1 expression.
This work has been supported by NIH grants to T.B. (RO1CA-082395 and PO1 CA50661; D. Livingston) and to R.H. (AI-31940) and by grants from the Harvard Digestive Disease Center to W.L. (DK48106 and DK34854). T.B. is a Virginia and D. K. Ludwig Professor of Cancer Research and Teaching.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of Pathology, Harvard Medical School, 77 Ave. Louis Pasteur, Boston, MA 02115. Phone: (617) 432-1960. Fax: (617) 432-2689. E-mail:
thomas_benjamin{at}hms.harvard.edu.

Present address: Department of Genetics, Rutgers University, Piscataway, NJ 08854. 

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Journal of Virology, January 2005, p. 615-618, Vol. 79, No. 1
0022-538X/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JVI.79.1.615-618.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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