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Journal of Virology, February 2005, p. 1970-1974, Vol. 79, No. 3
0022-538X/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JVI.79.3.1970-1974.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Department of Molecular Biology and Biochemistry, University of California, Irvine, Irvine, California
Received 14 July 2004/ Accepted 15 September 2004
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The production of Moloney MuLV in NIH 3T3 cells (strain 43-D) has been previously described (2, 6, 7). Virions were purified from the media by centrifugation as for human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), fixed with 0.5% glutaraldehyde, and dehydrated in stages (8). Virions were also recorded in physiological buffer to evaluate the degree of shrinkage due to dehydration. AFM was carried out using a Nanoscope IIIa atomic force microscope (Digital Instruments, Santa Barbara, Calif.) operated under 70% propanol in tapping mode (5) with oscillation frequencies of about 9.2 kHz and a scanning frequency of 1 Hz. All other procedures were essentially the same as we previously reported for MuLV emerging from host cells (6, 7) and for HIV (8). All diameters of particles were based strictly on their measured height above background.
A low-resolution image of wild-type particles is seen in Fig. 1a, and a higher-magnification image is seen in Fig. 1b. The particles shown in Fig. 1 closely resemble those observed on host cell surfaces, as previously presented (6, 7). The virions are roughly spherical, and their surfaces are heavily studded with protein "tufts."
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FIG. 1. (a) AFM image of MuLV virions isolated from culture media and spread on poly-L-lysine-coated glass substrates. (b) A single virion at higher magnification. The appearance of the particles is essentially the same as that of particles associated with host cell surfaces (6). The tufted protein arrangement seen on the virion surfaces is characteristic of both MuLV and HIV. (c) Histogram of particle sizes (corrected for shrinkage due to dehydration) for wild-type MuLV isolated from the culture media of virus-infected NIH 3T3 cells (strain 43-D) and spread on glass substrates for analysis by AFM. The mode of the distribution is 145 nm.
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A similar statistical analysis of sizes was also carried out for MuLV observed on cell surfaces. The mode of that distribution was again 145 nm, the same as for free particles, and the shape of the distribution was almost the same. We also examined MuLV-based vector particles produced by two NIH 3T3-based packaging cell lines,
2/BAG and PA317/BAG (10, 12). The
2 and PA317 packaging cells produce all of the structural proteins of MuLV from mRNAs lacking an MuLV packaging signal. The vector particles exhibit the same external appearance and distribution on the host cell surfaces as wild-type virus and appear indistinguishable from wild-type virions. The size distribution for the vector particles was the same as that for normal virions.
Common to virtually all of the isolated virions was a distinctive protrusion, or knob. Images illustrating these structures are presented in Fig. 2. Similar appendages have also been noted on MuLV particles by cryoelectron microscopy (16) and were referred to as "blebs." Particles on the surfaces of cells only rarely exhibit such protrusions, leading us earlier to describe the virions as spherical (6); the virions are in fact not exactly so, but rather are anisotropic as a consequence of the protrusions. We believe that the blebs are likely a consequence of the budding process and may be "bud scars" resulting from the pinching off of the membrane. If so, that would explain their absence in earlier studies where they were associated with cell surfaces. The point of attachment lies between the virion and cell surface; therefore, it would not have been accessible to the AFM tip, being in the AFM shadow of the particle.
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FIG. 2. Images of MuLV isolated from media and spread on glass substrates showing the appearance of the protruding blebs (arrows), never more than one per virion, which mark their surfaces. These are likely to be scars resulting from the budding process.
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FIG. 3. (a and b) MuLV particles on glass substrates which exhibit deep pits on their surfaces. These are likely due to loss of surface proteins or sectors of proteins incurred in the preparation process. Similar defects have, however, also been seen on particles still associated with host cell surfaces (6). (c) The shell remaining after loss of the nucleocapsid from an MuLV virion was produced by centrifugation during sample preparation. The shell retains its structural integrity in spite of the loss of a large sector of its surface.
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FIG. 4. Gallery of AFM images of MuLV particles which have been isolated from culture media and spread on glass substrates and which have been damaged in the process. Large portions of the shell-like envelope have been displaced, and the nucleic acid-containing cores of the particles can be seen enclosed inside or emerging from the envelopes. The cores are roughly spherical, are marked by an irregular arrangement of proteins on their surfaces, and have a diameter of about 65 nm. There is a distinctive demarcation, or gap, between the cores and the inside surfaces of the shells. Accessory proteins appear to inhabit this space between the cores and shells.
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The shell surrounding the core presents itself as a single unit with a thickness of about 35 to 40 nm, approximately the same as we found for the envelope of HIV using similar methods (8). To account for the observed thickness, the shell must be composed of the exterior and transmembrane portions of the envelope protein, the virus lipid membrane, and the interior matrix (MA) protein. These components seem to be contiguous with one another and to form a discreet and distinctive shell around the core. Evidence for a tight association of MA protein with the interior of the lipid membrane has also come from cryoelectron microscopy for both MuLV (16) and HIV (1). There is a clear demarcation between the shells and the cores. This is quite evident in Fig. 4 and is also consistent with what is seen by cryoelectron microscopy (1). The matrix protein is closely integrated into the viral shell and is separated by a gap or space from the surface of the core.
In the region between the core and the MA protein on the interior of the shell, there are also other proteins which appear as discrete globular units in the AFM images. These proteins are smaller, in general, than those on the exterior of virions, principally the SU protein, and are probably in the range of 20 to 50 kDa. These proteins do not appear to be closely associated with either the shell or core.
The images presented here represent the first direct observations by AFM of isolated MuLV particles independent of their host cells. In addition, these are the first recordings of the interiors of MuLV particles revealing the nucleic acid-containing cores of the particles, the virion shells, and the interface between them.
This work was supported by NIH grant CA32455 to H.F., NIH grant GM58868 to A.M., contract number NAS800017 from NASA, and assistance from the UCI Cancer Center.
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