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Journal of Virology, March 2005, p. 3206-3210, Vol. 79, No. 5
0022-538X/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JVI.79.5.3206-3210.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Department of Molecular Cell Biology, Leiden University Medical Center, Leiden, The Netherlands
Received 25 June 2004/ Accepted 12 October 2004
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100-114 is efficiently incorporated into the viral capsid, and the resulting virions are thermostable. Deletion of the central alanine-rich domain, as in pIX
60-72, does not impair self-association, incorporation into the capsid, or the thermostable phenotype. These data demonstrate, first, that the self-association of pIX is dispensable for its incorporation into the capsid and generation of the thermostability phenotype and, second, that the increased thermostability results from pIX monomers binding to different hexon capsomers rather than capsid stabilization by pIX multimers. |
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FIG. 1. Conserved amino acid regions in pIX. (A) Amino acid sequence alignment of all available primate Ad pIX proteins (CLUSTAL W) (19). Fully conserved residues are shaded black. Residues that occur in more than 50% of the sequences are shaded gray. Lines under the aligned sequences indicate the deletions mentioned in the text. (B) DNA sequence of the human Ad type 5 pIX gene. Deletions of the three conserved domains were introduced by site-directed mutation PCR. The lines depict the DNA sequence deletions. (C) Schematic representation of the pIX variants used for coprecipitation assays in this study. Molecular weights are in thousands.
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18-44, which has a deletion of amino acids (aa) 18 to 44 in the N-terminal region; pIX
60-72, in which aa 60 to 72 of the alanine-rich stretch have been removed; and pIX
100-114, which lacks aa 100 to 114, which comprise the central part of the coiled-coil domain (Fig. 1B and Table 1). The deletions were chosen on the basis of both the sequence conservation among the serotypes and the previously characterized domains (12). For the self-association assay we generated C-terminal Flag epitope-tagged versions of our mutant pIX proteins and a MYC epitope-tagged version of wt pIX. An additional RGD motif was fused to the pIX
18-44 construct, generating a pIX molecule with a molecular weight similar to those of the others (Fig. 1C). To examine whether the deletion mutant proteins were capable of being incorporated into the viral capsid of hAd5dl313, which lacks a functional pIX (3), this virus was propagated on 911 helper cells (5) that transiently expressed the mutant pIX proteins as described previously (21). All pIX proteins were produced in the 911 helper cells (Fig. 2A). After CsCl banding and purification, the viruses were assayed for the presence of pIX by Western blot analysis. Both the pIX
60-72 and pIX
100-114 mutant proteins were incorporated efficiently (Fig. 2B). In contrast, pIX
18-44 was not incorporated into the capsid, implying a role for this domain in capsid incorporation (12). |
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TABLE 1. Primer list
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FIG. 2. Assay to measure pIX incorporation into the capsid. (A) Cultured 911 cells were transfected with the various pIX expression plasmids. Twenty hours posttransfection, the cells were infected with hAd5dl313 viruses. Two days later, protein extracts were prepared and analyzed by Western blotting. The blots were probed with anti-pIX or antiactin sera. The negative control (neg.control) is a lysate from untransfected 911 cells. (B) From parallel cultures of transfected and pIX-expressing cells, the progeny hAd5dl313 viruses were harvested, purified, and assayed for the presence of the pIX variants in the capsids by Western analysis. The negative control is hAd5dl313 virus lysate propagated on normal 911 cells; the positive control is wt hAd5. (C) pIX self-association assay. To test the self-association of pIX molecules, an expression plasmid containing the pIX.MYC gene and a plasmid containing a gene encoding one of the Flag-tagged pIX deletion mutants were cotransfected into 911 cells. The cell lysates of these cells were used for coprecipitation with Flag-beads. As a negative control we used 911 cells that were transfected with the pIX.MYC expression plasmid only. A protein lysate from 9ll cells transfected with the pIX.Flag plasmid was used as a positive control. (D) Western blot analysis of the pIX proteins associating with pIX-Flag. After coprecipitation the samples were analyzed by Western blotting with anti-pIX serum for detection of the pIX variants. (E) Western blot analysis of 911 cells transfected with plasmids coding for pIX.Flag, wt pIX, pIX 100-114, and pIX 100-114-Flag. The blots were probed with anti-pIX or antiactin sera. (F) Western blot analysis of the pIX proteins associating with the Flag-tagged pIX and pIX 100-114. The blots were probed with anti-pIX serum.
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In the positive-control sample both the pIX.Flag and pIX.MYC proteins were detected (Fig. 2D), indicating that pIX.MYC associates with pIX.Flag. Also, the deletion mutant proteins pIX
18-44 and pIX
60-72 associated with pIX.MYC, demonstrating that neither the conserved N-terminal domain nor the alanine stretch is involved in pIX self-association. The latter observation is contrary to an earlier study that had implicated the alanine stretch in pIX self-association (12). The difference may be explained by the presence of a large tag at the N terminus of pIX in the earlier study, rather than at the C terminus in our study. In agreement with previous studies (12), deletion of the conserved domain in the coiled-coil region (pIX
100-114) impaired association with pIX.MYC. To study whether the Flag-tagged pIX
100-114 can associate with other pIX
100-114 molecules, a plasmid encoding a nontagged pIX
100-114 was coexpressed with the Flag-tagged pIX
100-114 in 911 cells (Fig. 2E and F). As a positive control the plasmids coding for pIX and pIX.Flag were used. Whereas the tagged wt pIX could coprecipitate the untagged wt pIX protein, neither the tagged wt pIX nor the tagged pIX
100-114 could precipitate the untagged pIX
100-114. This demonstrates that pIX
100-114 associates neither with wt pIX nor with pIX
100-114.
Next we tested the pIX mutant proteins for their capacity to function as capsid cement in a thermostability assay. To this end, we introduced the
60-72 and
100-114 deletions into the viral backbone by site-directed mutation PCR of the pTrackCMV-Luc shuttle plasmid (21). In addition, a mutant protein, called hAd5
pIX. LUC, from which all codons for pIX were deleted, was generated. The
18-44 mutant protein was omitted from this study since this mutant pIX is not incorporated into the viral capsid and therefore capsid stability would be expected to be the same as that for an Ad lacking the pIX gene (21). Replication-incompetent hAd5CMV-Luc viruses carrying mutant pIX and
pIX were generated as described previously (8). The CsCl-banded and purified viruses were tested for the presence of the deletion in the pIX gene based on product sizes by PCR (Fig. 3A) with the primers listed in Table 1. The PCR products have been verified by sequencing to further confirm the integrity of the deletions in the viral backbone (data not shown). PCR of the fiber gene in the viral backbone was used as an internal control. The viruses carrying the
60-72,
100-114, and
pIX mutations could be propagated with kinetics and titers similar to those for the hAd5.Luc virus that carries the wt pIX gene (data not shown). Western analysis of the purified viruses showed incorporation of pIX
60-72 and pIX
100-114 equal to that of wt pIX (Fig. 3B). The deletion of the central alanine stretch (
60-72) as well as the deletion of a large part of the coiled-coil region (
100-114) did not have a negative effect on the incorporation of pIX into the virus capsid. To test for capsid stability, 150-µl aliquots of each of the viruses were incubated at 45°C for 0, 4, 6, 8, and 10 min and subsequently rapidly cooled on ice for 5 min. Next U2OS cells were infected with 100 µl of virus suspension from each aliquot. After 24 h viral titers were determined by measuring the luciferase activity, as described previously (11). The virus lacking pIX, hAd5
pIX.LUC, rapidly decreased in titer in response to incubation at 45°C, whereas vectors encoding wt pIX were thermostable (Fig. 3C) (3). The viruses with the central alanine stretch deleted (
60-72) and the coiled-coil (
100-114) region were as thermostable as wt virus. These results show that the coiled-coil region is essential for self-association but does not mediate pIX-dependent thermostabilization of the viral particle. Similarly, we found that, contrary to previously reported evidence (12), the alanine stretch is dispensable for self-association and induction of the thermostable phenotype.
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FIG. 3. Virus stability assay. For the thermostability assay deletions were made in the conserved alanine stretch ( 60-72) and in the conserved coiled-coil domain ( 100-114) of the viral backbone. Viruses were propagated on 911 cells and purified by CsCl gradient centrifugation. (A) The presence of the deletions was tested by PCR with primers that flanked the pIX gene in the virus backbone. PCR on hAd5.LUC, which contains wt pIX, should reveal a band of 569 bp, PCR on hAd5. pIX.LUC viruses should reveal a band of 171 bp, PCR on hAd5.pIX 60-72.LUC should reveal a band of 528 bp, and PCR on hAd5.pIX 100-114.LUC should reveal a band of 525 bp. As internal control, a PCR on the fiber gene was performed with the same samples. Water was used in both PCRs as a negative control. (B) The incorporation levels of the mutant pIX were assayed by Western blotting. As positive and negative controls, wt Ad5 and Ad5 pIX, respectively, were included. (C) Thermostability of wt and mutant viruses. Aliquots of the vectors were incubated in a water bath at 45°C for 4, 6, 8, or 10 min. Residual infectious virus titers were estimated by determining the capacity of the virus to induce luciferase activity in U2OS cell 24 h after infection. The results are presented as percentages of residual luciferase activity. , , +, and *, wt hAd5.LUC, hAd5. pIX.LUC, hAd5.pIX 60-72.LUC, and hAd5.pIX 100-114.LUC, respectively. Each bar represents the cumulative mean ± standard deviation of triplicate analyses.
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FIG. 4. Models for pIX-hexon interaction. (A) Three hexon capsomers are kept together via a pIX trimer. In this model a pIX molecule binds to a single hexon capsomer and two other pIX molecules. (B) Three hexon capsomers are kept together via hexon capsomer-pIX-hexon capsomer interactions; there is no multimerization of pIX molecules required. (C) Three hexon capsomers bind more strongly to each other as result of a conformational change induced by pIX.
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This work was supported in part by the Technology Foundation STW (program LGN 66.3977).
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