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Journal of Virology, July 2005, p. 8669-8674, Vol. 79, No. 13
0022-538X/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JVI.79.13.8669-8674.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
In Vitro Assembly of PB2 with a PB1-PA Dimer Supports a New Model of Assembly of Influenza A Virus Polymerase Subunits into a Functional Trimeric Complex
Tao Deng,
Jane Sharps,
Ervin Fodor, and
George G. Brownlee*
Sir William Dunn School of Pathology, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom
Received 17 January 2005/
Accepted 7 March 2005

ABSTRACT
Influenza virus RNA-dependent RNA polymerase is a heterotrimeric
complex of PB1, PB2, and PA. We show that the individually expressed
PB2 subunit can be assembled with the coexpressed PB1-PA dimer
in vitro into a transcriptionally active complex. Furthermore,
we demonstrate that a model viral RNA promoter can bind to the
PB1-PA dimer prior to assembly with PB2. Our results are consistent
with a recently proposed model for the sequential assembly of
viral RNA polymerase complex in which the PB1-PA dimeric complex
and the PB2 monomer are transported into the nucleus separately
and then assembled in the nucleus.

TEXT
Transcription (viral RNA [vRNA]

mRNA) and replication (vRNA

cRNA)
of the eight segments of the negative-sense single-stranded
influenza A virus genomic vRNA are catalyzed by the viral RNA-dependent
RNA polymerase, which is a trimeric complex encoded by the three
largest segments of the influenza virus genomePB1, PB2,
and PA (reviewed in references
9,
22, and
27). The PB1 subunit
contains the conserved motifs characteristic of RNA-dependent
RNA polymerases (
2,
3) and binds to the vRNA and cRNA promoters
(
5,
14,
24). It also has endonuclease activity required to snatch
capped primers from host pre-mRNAs for viral RNA transcription
(
25). PB2 is responsible for recognition and binding the cap
structure of host mRNAs (
8,
9,
22,
27). The exact role of PA
is less well understood, but it has a central role in both transcription
and replication (
10,
11,
18,
20).
No crystal structure is available for the influenza virus polymerase complex, but a low-resolution three-dimensional structure, determined by electron microscopy, showed that it is very compact, with no obvious boundaries between subunits (1). Protein-protein interactions between the individual polymerase subunits have been identified, suggesting that PB1 is the core of the polymerase complex. The N-terminal region of PB1 interacts with the C-terminal region of PA, while the C-terminal region of PB1 interacts with the N-terminal of PB2 subunit. No direct protein-protein interactions have been demonstrated between PB2 and PA (15, 28, 30, 34, 35). All three polymerase subunits are required for transcription and replication activity both in vivo and in vitro (4, 10, 29), although, controversially, Honda et al. reported that recombinant dimeric complexes of PB1-PB2 and PB1-PA have distinct transcriptase and replicase activities, respectively, in vitro (17).
Viral polymerase performs both transcription and replication of vRNA in the nuclei of the infected cells (19). How viral polymerase subunits are transported from the cytoplasm to the nucleus and the detailed mechanism of assembly of the polymerase complex remain unclear. Recently, Fodor and Smith proposed a model in which PB1 and PA are transported into the nucleus as a dimeric complex. They suggested that PB2 enters the nucleus as a monomer and subsequently binds to the PB1-PA dimer in the nucleus (13). In order to further understand the process of viral polymerase assembly, we attempted the in vitro reconstitution of a functionally active viral RNA polymerase complex from recombinant subunits expressed in human embryonic kidney cells (293T). Single subunits, dimers, or a trimeric PB1-PB2-PA complex were purified from cells transfected with protein expression plasmids expressing the subunits of the influenza A/WSN/33 virus polymerase. To facilitate the purification, one of the expressed subunits was tagged at the C terminus with TAPa tag containing a calmodulin binding site, a TEV cleavage site, and two protein A domains (31). We selected the C-terminal TAP tag construct because a previous report showed that an N-terminal green fluorescent protein tag of PB1 or PA interfered with RNA polymerase activity (13). In addition, by reconstituting recombinant RNPs in vivo and studying their activity (13), we have confirmed that the C-terminal TAP tag attached to any of the three subunits is compatible with both transcription and replication activity of the RNA polymerase (Fodor and Smith, unpublished data). TAP-tagged subunits, together with associated proteins, were purified from lysates of transfected cells using immunoglobulin G (IgG) Sepharose, which binds the protein A component of the TAP tag. Bound proteins were then released by cleavage with tobacco etch virus (TEV) protease. We have confirmed that there is no detectable nonspecific pull-down of any of the individual subunits (i.e., PB1, PB2, and PA) by IgG Sepharose in the absence of the TAP tag (data not shown). The samples were analyzed by silver staining of 8% sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) gels. Figure 1A shows that PB1 can be copurified with both PAtap (lane 4) and PB2tap (lane 6), but no PB2 can be copurified with PAtap (lane 5). Purified PB1-PAtap and PB1-PB2tap dimers were then mixed with individually expressed PB2 and PA monomers, respectively, in an attempt to assemble a functionally active heterotrimeric complex. The assembly experiment was performed either in solution by mixing purified dimers and monomers or by using a solid-phase assembly. In the latter approach, the dimers were first immobilized onto IgG Sepharose through the TAP tag, which then acted as a bait to pull down the third untagged subunit from a crude cell lysate of 293T cells containing the expressed monomers. Finally, the putative assembled complex was released from its solid phase (IgG Sepharose) with TEV protease, and its functionality was tested in transcription assays.
To assay for polymerase activity of the putative assembled complex,
both cap-independent and cap-dependent transcription activities
were examined using ApG and globin mRNA as primers, respectively.
Short synthetic RNA oligonucleotides corresponding to the 5'
end (15 nucleotides [nt]) and 3' end (14 nt) of the wild-type
influenza A virus vRNA promoter were used as described previously
(
10). Figure
1B shows that in both ApG-primed and globin mRNA-primed
transcription assays, significant transcription was observed
when monomeric PB2 was assembled with coexpressed PB1-PAtap
dimer (lanes 6 and 13). The transcription efficiency of the
assembled complex varied in the different experiments in the
range of 5 to 50% for in-solution assembly (six experiments)
and 5 to 20% for solid-phase assembly (four experiments) compared
with the activity of coexpressed 3P. The results were independent
of which subunit was tagged, since similar results were obtained
if PB1tap-PA was used instead of PB1-PAtap in the in-solution
assembly experiments (results not shown). However, no activity
was observed when monomeric PA was assembled with PB1-PB2 dimer
(see lanes 7 and 14). Furthermore, no transcription activity
was obtained with any monomers or the two dimeric complexes
(lanes 1 to 5, 9 to 12), which confirms that all three subunits
are required for transcriptase activity, contradicting the results
of Honda et al. (
17). A Western blot of the assembled complexes
that were used in lanes 1, 6, and 8 of Fig.
1B confirmed that
PB2 had assembled with the PB1-PAtap dimer in the solid-phase
assembly (Fig.
1C, compare lane 2 with lane 1, negative control).
However, the level of PB2 in the in vitro-assembled complex
was significantly lower than in the in vivo-coexpressed 3P,
in contrast to the level of PB1, which was similar in both samples
(compare lane 2 with lane 3). This result is consistent with
the lower transcriptional efficiency (5 to 20%) of the polymerase
complex assembled in vitro. It suggests that the in vitro-assembled
trimeric complex is fully active in transcription and the low
activity observed (5 to 20%) is primarily due to the limiting
amount of PB2 in the complex. The reason for the limited efficiency
of in vitro assembly is unknown but could be explained by host
factors interacting with either the PB1-PA dimer or PB2 monomer
that may interfere with the assembly in vitro. Overall, our
successful in vitro assembly implies that the trimeric polymerase
complex may be assembled sequentially in vivo by first forming
a PB1-PA dimer and then interacting with PB2 (see below).
It has been reported that the PB1-PA dimeric complex can bind to the 5' terminus of vRNA in a gel shift experiment (23). To confirm this, we tested the promoter-binding capacity of the PB1-PA dimer, purified on IgG Sepharose, in a UV cross-linking assay with the 32P-labeled 5' end of the vRNA promoter (15 nt) in the presence of unlabeled 3' end (14 nt) as described previously (6, 10) (Fig. 2). As expected, the PB1-PA dimer (lane 4) showed very efficient promoter-binding activity compared with coexpressed 3P complex (lane 7), whereas none of the monomers or the dimers binds the promoter (lanes 1 to 3, 5, and 6). These results confirmed that the PB1-PA dimeric complex can bind the viral RNA promoter, and both PB1 and PA are cross-linked to it (lane 8), as expected (12). It follows that PB2 is not required for initial recognition and binding of the vRNA promoter.
Because the PB1-PA dimer binds to the vRNA promoter (Fig.
2),
it was of interest to examine whether the addition of the vRNA
promoter to the PB1-PA dimer prior to assembly with PB2 could
enhance the functional assembly of a heterotrimeric complex.
To test this, we first immobilized the PB1-PAtap dimer on IgG
Sepharose through the C-terminal TAP tag of PA and then assembled
it with the vRNA promoter (a mixture of the 5' and 3' strands
of the vRNA promoter) and monomeric PB2 in different orders,
as shown in Fig.
3A (i and ii). Each step of the assembly was
carried out by mixing washed PB1-PAtap-bound IgG Sepharose with
either crude cell lysate containing monomeric PB2 or promoter
RNAs in an RNA binding buffer (containing 5 mM MgCl
2 and 1 U/µl
RNase inhibitors [Promega]) followed by incubation at 20°C
for 15 min. The beads were thoroughly washed between each assembly
step. Finally, the assembled complexes were released with TEV
protease. The resulting complexes were tested for activity by
the ApG-primed and globin-primed transcription assays in vitro,
without the addition of further promoter RNAs (Fig.
3B). No
activity was obtained with the PB1-PA dimer assembled with promoter
vRNA (lanes 1 and 5), whereas the PB1-PA dimers assembled with
vRNA promoter either before (lanes 2 and 6) or after (lanes
3 and 7) PB2 binding were all capable of transcribing the vRNA
promoter both in cap-independent and cap-dependent manners.
However, the transcriptional activity of the assembled complexes
was in the range of 1 to 5% compared to the activity of coexpressed
3P complex (four experiments). The reasons for the low efficiency
observed here (1 to 5%) compared to that observed before (5
to 20%) are most likely related to (i) the small amounts of
promoter RNA assembled in vitro and (ii) potential RNA degradation
during extensive washing steps prior to the functional assay.
Interestingly, the activity of the complex assembled in the
order of PB1-PA dimer, vRNA promoter, and PB2 monomer (Fig.
3A, i) was reproducibly twofold higher than that of the complex
assembled in the order of PB1-PA dimer, PB2 monomer, and vRNA
promoter (Fig.
3A, ii). The twofold difference in activity is
likely to reflect a twofold difference in the efficiency of
assembly, since identical components, although in differing
orders, were used for each step in the assembly. These results
showed that the PB1-PA dimeric complex can bind viral RNA promoter
either prior to or subsequent to the assembly with PB2 to form
an active polymerase complex.
We attempted to assemble a functional PB1-PA dimeric complex
in vitro using individually expressed TAP-tagged PB1 and PA
in 293T cells. Although we found that PB1 could pull down PA
from cell lysates efficiently or vice versa (data not shown),
the resulting dimeric complexes failed, under our conditions,
to bind the RNA promoter in a UV cross-linking assay, and they
also failed to assemble with PB2 (data not shown). Perhaps our
failure to assemble a functional PB1-PA dimeric complex in vitro
is due to the presence of host factors (e.g., Hsp90 [
26]) which
bind to individual subunits and might interfere with the assembly.
Alternatively, host factors, required for assembly of the PB1-PA
dimeric complex, may be depleted in our partially purified polymerase
preparations.
Efforts have been made before to reconstitute the viral RNA polymerase complex from monomeric subunits in vitro. Assembly was carried out either by a thioredoxin renaturation protocol of SDS-polyacrylamide gel-purified polymerase subunits from virion RNP complex (33) or by mixing the three individual subunits expressed in a baculovirus expression system in a urea solution and then dialyzing against a reconstitution buffer (21). However, the authenticity of the former report (33) remains in doubt, since their results were not confirmed in our laboratory (G. Brownlee, unpublished data). Moreover, the authors of the latter report could not themselves exclude "an imperfect reconstitution under the conditions employed," since no cap-dependent transcription was observed (21).
In summary, we have developed an in vitro reconstitution system of influenza A virus polymerase complex from coexpressed PB1-PA dimer and individually expressed PB2 monomer. We have also demonstrated that the PB1-PA dimer can bind to the influenza vRNA promoter prior to its assembly with PB2 to form a functional polymerase. This raises the possibility that the PB1-PA dimeric complex could be present in the nucleus where it binds vRNA, since this is the site where the vRNA promoter is synthesized. Indeed, these in vitro results are consistent with recent in vivo evidence that the PB1 subunit requires the coexpression of PA for efficient transport from the cytosol to the nucleus, while the PB2 monomer can accumulate in the nucleus on its own (13). Taking this in vivo evidence of nuclear localization together with the in vitro evidence obtained in this paper, we favor the model (Fig. 4) that influenza virus RNA polymerase assembles sequentially in vivo by first forming the PB1-PA dimeric complex in the cytoplasm, which is then transported to the nucleus. Final assembly of the functional complex occurs in the nucleus by interaction with both virus RNA promoter and individually transported PB2. However, we cannot exclude the possibility that PB2 is assembled with a PB1-PA dimer in the cytoplasm to form a trimer and this complex is then transported into the nucleus. In addition, given the fact that we failed to assemble PB1 and PA in vitro and the observation that a PB1-PB2 complex can form in vivo (see Fig. 1A), we cannot exclude that other assembly pathways may exist in vivo which were not observed here due to the limitations of the techniques used. However, it is likely that the proposed model represents a major assembly pathway.
Reconstitution of the influenza polymerase in vitro will enable
future studies to dissect the requirements for assembly in more
detail. In particular, mutations of PB2 can be produced in putative
regions required for binding to PB1 to assess their effect on
assembly in vitro. PB2 is also known to be involved in host
restriction and in pathogenicity of the influenza virus (
16,
32). It is conceivable that polymorphic regions of PB2, e.g.,
PB2 residue 627 (either E or K), may affect assembly of polymerase,
which could be crucial for transcriptional efficiency. In addition,
we have reconstituted a functional polymerase in vitro from
subunits derived from different influenza A virus strains, i.e.,
PB1-PA of A/WSN/33 and PB2 of A/PR/8/34 (results not shown).
Thus, this in vitro reconstitution system could be used to test
the efficiency of assembly of the virus polymerase from more
distantly related influenza virus strains.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We thank Inglis and T. Jung for antibody, B. Thomas and A. Akoulitchev
for liquid chromatography/tandem mass spectrometry data, A.
Willis for matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization-time
of flight data, and F. Vreede for helpful discussions.
This study was supported by MRC grants (G9523972 and G9901312 to G.G.B. and a senior nonclinical fellowship, G117/457, to E.F.) and an ORS award to T.D.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Sir William Dunn School of Pathology, University of Oxford, South Parks Road, Oxford OX1 3RE, United Kingdom. Phone: 44 (01865) 275559. Fax: 44 (01865) 275556. E-mail:
george.brownlee{at}path.ox.ac.uk.


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Journal of Virology, July 2005, p. 8669-8674, Vol. 79, No. 13
0022-538X/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JVI.79.13.8669-8674.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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