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Journal of Virology, March 2005, p. 3713-3727, Vol. 79, No. 6
0022-538X/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JVI.79.6.3713-3727.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Istituto Pasteur Fondazione Cenci-Bolognetti, Dipartimento di Medicina Sperimentale e Patologia, Università di Roma La Sapienza,1 Azienda Ospedaliera Sant'Andrea,2 Dipartimento di Medicina Sperimentale e Scienze Biochimiche, Università Tor Vergata,4 Istituto Dermatologico Santa Maria e San Gallicano, IRCCS, Rome, Italy,5 Department of Virus Associated Tumours, German Research Cancer Centre, Heidelberg, Germany3
Received 14 June 2004/ Accepted 29 November 2004
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We initially identified and characterized the product of the Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) BFRF1 gene, which is the positional homolog of the UL34 gene (14). Based upon its intracellular localization (15) and the functional analysis of a viral mutant with BFRF1 deleted (16), we showed that BFRF1 is involved in viral envelopment and egress, and we suggested that, in analogy with other herpesviruses, it might interact with the EBV homolog of the conserved herpesviral protein UL31, encoded by the BFLF2 gene. Such an interaction has been recently demonstrated by Lake and Hutt-Fletcher (24), who reported that BFRF1 and BFLF2 colocalize in cotransfected cells and that each protein influences the intracellular localization of the other. However, that study was not performed in the context of viral replication. In the present work we confirm and extend their observations by characterizing the BFLF2 protein and showing, using a newly generated monoclonal antibody (MAb) and both during viral replication and by transient-transfection assays, that BFRF1 and BFLF2 form a stable association and colocalize on the nuclear membrane. In addition, using cells transfected with a viral mutant with BFRF1 deleted, we demonstrate that BFRF1 is necessary for BFLF2 intracellular localization, and we suggest that it might be involved in BFLF2 stabilization. Finally, we show that BFRF1, and more strikingly when coexpressed with BFLF2, causes profound morphological alterations of the nuclear membrane and binds to a nuclear lamina component, lamin B.
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293-BFRF1-KO cells, carrying the BFRF1-KO EBV genome, and 293-2089 cells, carrying the wild-type B95-8 EBV genome, were described elsewhere (12, 16).
All cell lines were grown in RPMI 1640 (Euroclone) supplemented with 10% fetal calf serum (Invitrogen). To induce EBV lytic cycle gene expression, cells were treated with 20 ng of 12-tetradecanoylphorbol 13-acetate (TPA) per ml and 3 mM sodium butyrate for 24, 48, and 72 h. Inhibition of viral DNA replication was obtained by addition of phosphonoacetic acid (PAA) to the cell cultures to a final concentration of 1 mM. The proteasome inhibitor MG132 (Calbiochem) was used at a concentration of 5 µM, and lambda phosphatase (New England Biolabs) was used at 1,000 U/ml.
RNA preparation, Northern blot analysis, and 5' and 3' rapid amplification of cDNA ends (RACE).
Total RNA was extracted with Trizol (Invitrogen) according to the manufacturer's instructions. Twenty micrograms of RNA was loaded for each sample and resolved by 1.2% agarose-6% formaldehyde gel electrophoresis in 20 mM morpholinepropane sulfonic acid (MOPS) (pH 7.0) (Sigma). After migration, RNA was transferred to a Nytran Plus (Schleicher & Schuell) membrane in 20x SSC (1x SSC is 0.15 M NaCl plus 15 mM sodium citrate) and UV cross-linked. The probe for the BFLF2 transcript was the oligonucleotide RG3, whose sequence is 5'-TATGGGGGTGTTCATCTCACGCAG-3' (genomic coordinates in strain B95-8, 56609 to 56632). The probe was labeled by using [
-32P]dATP and T4 polynucleotide kinase (Amersham Bioscience) according to the manufacturer's instructions. Hybridizations were carried out in phosphate buffer (0.5 M NaH2PO4 [pH 6.8], 0.5 M Na2HPO4 [pH 6.8], 0.7% sodium dodecyl sulfate [SDS], 1% bovine serum albumin [BSA], 1 mM EDTA) at 42°C overnight. Filters were subsequently washed at 42°C twice in buffer A (0.5% BSA, 5% SDS, 40 mM NaH2PO4 [pH 6.8], 40 mM Na2HPO4 [pH 6.8], 1 mM EDTA) and twice in buffer B (1% SDS, 40 mM NaH2PO4 [pH 6.8], 40 mM Na2HPO4 [pH 6.8], 1 mM EDTA), and bands were traced by autoradiography. As a control for RNA quality and equal loading, membranes were hybridized with a ß-actin oligonucleotide probe (5'-TGTTGGCGTACAGGTCTTTGCGGATGTCCA-3').
In order to map the transcription start site, we used the 5'/3' RACE second-generation kit (Roche). Briefly, 5 µg of total RNA, extracted from B95-8cells 48 h after TPA and sodium butyrate treatment, was used for cDNA amplification with primer RG2 (5'-CGTGTAGTTTCTGTGGTG-3'; genomic coordinates in B95-8, 56837 to 56854) according to the manufacturer's instructions. The cDNA was subsequently amplified by PCR with primer RGP2 (5'-ATTCACGGCATCTGGGGTG-3'; genomic coordinates in B95-8, 56906 to 56924) and an oligo(dT) primer (supplied with the kit) at 55°C. The 200-bp amplified product was cloned in pGEMT-Easy vector (Promega) and sequenced.
3'-RACE was carried out to map the end of BFLF2 transcription. An oligo(dT) anchor primer (Roche) was used to amplify cDNA, and PCR was performed with primer RSP8 (5'-TGTGGCCCGATCAATATGTTC-3'; genomic coordinates in B95-8, 56747 to 56727) and the PCR anchor primer supplied with the kit. The 800-bp product obtained was cloned in pGEMT-Easy vector (Promega) and finally sequenced.
Plasmids. The BFLF2 cDNA was first amplified by reverse transcription-PCR performed on total RNA extracted from B95-8 cells at 72 h after induction of virus replication with TPA and sodium butyrate. First-strand cDNA amplification was achieved by using Superscript (Invitrogen) and the primer F2-down (5'-CTGTTTATTTTCCAAAATGAGCTGG-3') (genomic coordinates in B95-8, 55982 to 56006). Subsequently the primers F2-up (5'-ATGGCCCCGGTCACCCCAGA-3') (genomic coordinates in B95-8, 56953 to 56916) and F2-down, together with Taq polymerase (Invitrogen), were used to perform PCR amplification. The 954-bp amplified fragment was first cloned in pCR-Script Amp SK(+) vector (Stratagene), and the BFLF2 gene was excised by digestion with BamHI and SacI and subsequently cloned in pet30b(+) (Novagene) cut with BamHI/SacI, in order to obtain a His6-BFLF2 fusion open reading frame (ORF).
A plasmid containing a glutathione S-transferase (GST)-BFLF2 fusion ORF was also generated by cloning a BamHI/EagI filled-in fragment from vector pCR-Script Amp SK(+) in vector pGEX-3X (Pharmacia) digested with SmaI.
The cytomegalovirus (CMV) immediate-early gene promoter-driven eukaryotic expression vector pHD1013 was used to generate plasmids for cell transfection (11). The BFLF2 ORF was excised from plasmid pGEX-3X-BFLF2 by using BamHI and EcoRI and inserted in the pHD1013 BamHI and EcoRI sites.
The CMV-BZLF1 plasmid, whose transfection in eukaryotic cells leads to the expression of ZEBRA protein, was a generous gift of G. Miller. The CMV-BFRF1 construct was described elsewhere (14). One microgram of either the CMV-BFRF1 or CMV-BFLF2 construct was used to transfect 3 x 104 293 cells by using the Fugene 6 kit (Roche) according to the manufacturer's instructions
Production of a MAb against BFLF2. Escherichia coli BL21 cells were transformed with the His-BFLF2 or GST-BFLF2 plasmid to produce BFLF2 fusion proteins that were successively purified through column chromatography, according to the manufacturer's instructions. Four-week-old BALB/c mice were immunized twice by intraperitoneal injection with 25 µg of purified His-BFLF2 protein emulsified in RIBI adjuvant (RIBI Immunochemical Research). Mice were then given a booster immunization intravenously with 10 µg of the immunogen, and immune splenocytes were removed 3 days later. Somatic cell hybrids were prepared with NS-1 mouse nonsecreting myeloma cells as previously described (29). Hybridoma supernatants were screened for differential immunoreactivity between GST-BFLF2 and GST purified proteins by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. Positive hybridoma cell lines were cloned twice by limiting dilution. One MAb, named C1, was selected. Tissue culture supernatant of MAb R4, recognizing the unrelated carcinoembryonic antigen, was used as a negative control (2).
Immunoprecipitation and immunoblotting. To perform immunoprecipitation assay, cells were harvested by centrifugation, washed once with phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) (140 mM NaCl, 2.7 mM KCl, 10 mM Na2PO4, 1.8 mM KH2PO4, pH 7.4) and lysed in 1x radioimmunoprecipitation assay buffer (50 mM Tris-HCl [pH 7.4], 150 mM NaCl, 5 mM Na2EDTA, 0.5% NP-40, 1% BSA, 1x protease inhibitor cocktail [Roche]) for 30 min on ice (1 x 106 transfected 293 cells were lysed in 300 µl, and 6 x 106 B95-8 cells were lysed in the same volume). After 10 min of centrifugation at 20,000 x g, the supernatants were discarded and the resulting pellets were resuspended in 1x radioimmunoprecipitation assay buffer containing 500 mM NaCl, 0.5% NP-40, 1% BSA, and 1x protease inhibitor cocktail and sonicated for 30 seconds. These cellular extracts were mixed with protein G-Sepharose (Amersham) and the appropriate antibody and incubated overnight at 4°C while rocking gently. Precipitated proteins were collected by centrifugation, washed three times in lysis buffer, and loaded on a polyacrylamide gel for Western blot analysis. Antibody dilutions used for immunoprecipitation analysis were as follows: goat polyclonal anti-lamin B, 1:50; rabbit polyclonal anti-BFRF1, 1:300; and mouse monoclonal anti-BFLF2, 1:50.
To prepare total cell extract, cells were harvested by centrifugation at 1,500 x g for 5 min, washed once with PBS, resuspended in PBS-1% Triton-2 M urea, and lysed by sonication for 1 min. Different amount of cell lysates ranging from 10 to 50 µg were loaded on Nu-Page precast gels (Invitrogen) according to the manufacturer's instructions. Proteins were transferred to nitrocellulose filters (0.45-µm pore size: Schleicher & Schuell) by standard procedures (38). Membranes were incubated for 30 min in blocking solution (5% nonfat dry milk in PBS-0.2% Tween 20) and for 30 min with primary antibody and washed three times with blocking solution. Membranes were successively incubated with horseradish peroxidase-conjugated secondary antibody (Pierce), and after three washings in blocking solution, bands were visualized by enhanced chemiluminescence (ECL system) according to the manufacturer's instructions (Amersham). Antibody dilutions used for Western blot analysis were as follows: goat polyclonal anti-lamin B (Santa Cruz), 1:100; mouse monoclonal anti-BFLF2, 1:50; and mouse monoclonal anti-BFRF1, 1:50.
Virion purification. Biochemical characterization of extracellular virions was performed by precipitating viruses from infectious supernatants with a polyethylene glycol (PEG)-containing solution (0.5% [wt/vol] PEG 6000 in 5 M NaCl). Viruses were further collected by centrifugation at 9,000 x g for 20 min. To purify intracellular virions, lytically induced cells were extensively washed and sequentially frozen in a dry ice bath and thawed at 37°C three times. Cells were spun down at 5,000 x g for 10 min, and supernatants were filtered with a 0.8-µm-pore-size filter. Viruses present in these supernatants were further PEG precipitated as described for extracellular virions. Purified virions were lysed in LDS sample buffer (Invitrogen), loaded onto Nu-Page gels (Invitrogen), and analyzed by Western blotting.
Immunofluorescence and confocal microscopy. Chemically induced B95-8 cells, 293-BFRF1-KO cells, and 293-2089 cells were harvested, washed once in PBS, seeded onto multispot microscope slides (ICN), air dried, and fixed for 5 min in acetone-methanol (1:1). 293 cells grown on coverslips covered with 2% gelatin (Sigma) were transfected with CMV-BFRF1, CMV-BFLF2, or vector alone with Fugene 6 (Roche). At 24 h after transfection, the medium was aspirated and the cells were washed once with PBS and fixed in methanol at 20°C for 4 min or in 4% paraformaldehyde in PBS for 30 min at 25°C, followed by treatment with 0.1 M glycine for 20 min at 25°C and with 0.1% Triton X-100 for an additional 5 min at 25°C to allow permeabilization. For double-staining experiments, cells were incubated for 30 min at room temperature with the following primary antibodies: goat polyclonal anti-lamin B, 1:50 in PBS (Santa Cruz); rabbit polyclonal anti-BFRF1, 1:1,000 in PBS; mouse monoclonal anti-BFLF2 C1, 1:20 in PBS; mouse monoclonal anti-BFRF1 E7, 1:20 in PBS; and mouse monoclonal anti-nuclear pore complex, 1:50 in PBS (MAb 414 [Berkeley Antibody Co.], binding to p62, nup155, nup214, and nup358) (10) The cells were then washed in PBS. The primary antibodies were visualized by using fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC)-conjugated rabbit anti-goat immunoglobulin G (IgG) (Cappel) (1:50), Texas Red-conjugated goat anti-mouse IgG (Jackson) (1:50), Texas Red-conjugated goat anti-rabbit IgG (Jackson) (1:100), FITC-conjugated goat anti-mouse IgG (Cappel) (1:50 in PBS), and FITC-conjugated goat anti-rabbit IgG (Jackson) (1:200 in PBS). After several washes in PBS, coverslips were mounted face down in Mowiol (Calbiochem) with or without 1 µg of DAPI (4',6'-diamidino-2-phenylindole) per ml for observation on an Axiophot epifluorescence microscope (Zeiss, Oberkochen, Germany). The fluorescence signals were analyzed by recording and merging single-stained images, using a cooled charge-coupled device SPOT-2 color digital camera (Diagnostic Instruments Inc., Sterling Heights, Mich.) and FISH 2000/H1 software (Delta Sistemi, Rome, Italy). Colocalization of fluorescence signals was evaluated with a Zeiss confocal laser scan microscope. To prevent cross talk between the two signals, the multitrack function was used.
Electron microscopy. 293 cells were washed three times in PBS and fixed with 2% glutaraldehyde in the same buffer at 4°C. Samples were postfixed in 1% osmium tetroxide in veronal acetate buffer (pH 7.4) for 1 h at 25°C, stained with 0.1% tannic acid in the same buffer for 30 min at 25°C and with uranyl acetate (5 mg/ml) for 1 h at 25°C, dehydrated in acetone, and embedded in Epon 812. Thin sections were examined either unstained or poststained with uranyl acetate and lead hydroxide, using a Philips Morgagni electron microscope.
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FIG. 1. Schematic drawing of the BFLF2 ORF within the EBV genome. (A) BamHI cleavage map of B95-8 EBV. (B) Enlargement of the BamHI region. (C) Positions and transcriptional orientations of the ORFs (indicated by arrows).
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FIG. 2. (A) Western immunoblot showing the specificity of MAb C1. Samples representing His-BFLF2 and GST-BFLF2 fusion proteins together with GST were run, and the immunoblot was probed with the anti-BFLF2 MAb C1. (B) BFLF2 protein expression in different cell lines, either uninduced or following activation with TPA and sodium butyrate (T/B). (C) Phosphorylation of BFLF2 in induced B95-8 cells. Twenty micrograms of cell lysate was treated with -phosphatase (+) or left untreated () and analyzed by immunoblotting. (D) BFLF2 is present in intracellular virions. Equal amounts of intracellular and extracellular virion lysates were run together with uninduced and induced B95-8 (T/B) cell extracts. The immunoblot probed with the anti-BFLF2 MAb C1 shows positivity only in intracellular virions and in B95-8+T/B cells. As a control for virion preparation, an antibody specific for a viral capsid antigen (BLRF2) was used.
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BFLF2 is not detected in extracellular virions. We next analyzed by Western blotting whether BFLF2 was present in extracellular virions. To this end, cell-free B95-8 viruses from infectious supernatants or intracellular B95-8 viruses obtained from the producing cell line were purified and protein extracts were analyzed by Western blotting. Figure 2D shows that no reactivity for BFLF2 was detectable in extracellular virions with MAb C1, whereas a strong positive signal was visible after immunoblotting with a MAb directed against a known virion component, BLRF2, confirming the presence of virions in the concentrated supernatant.
BFLF2 is expressed as an early transcript. Regulation of BFLF2 transcription was analyzed by Northern blot analysis of RNA extracted from chemically induced B95-8 cells. The DNA oligonucleotide RG3 was used as a probe, and the results are shown in Fig. 3A. Two major transcripts were detected, at 3 and 1.2 kb. The presence of multiple signals is not surprising, since several transcripts encompassing the BamHI F region are known (22). In particular, the 1.2-kb band is consistent with a monocistronic transcript of BFLF2, and the 3-kb signal is consistent with a bicistronic transcript including the BFLF1 and BFLF2 ORFs. As shown in Fig. 1, the BFLF1 ORF is 2 kb long and is located immediately upstream of the BFLF2 ORF. We next investigated the effect of the viral DNA inhibitor PAA on BFLF2 transcription. As shown in Fig. 3A, BFLF2 expression was not affected by PAA. In addition, since BFLF2 is expressed in Raji cells, which harbor a defective viral strain which does not allow the expression of late EBV genes, we conclude that BFLF2, similarly to BFRF1 (14), is expressed as an early gene.
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FIG. 3. Analysis of BFLF2 RNA expression. (A) Northern blot analysis of RNA extracted from B95-8 cells at different times after treatment with TPA and sodium butyrate (T/B), with and without treatment with phosphonoacetic acid (T/B+PAA). Twenty micrograms of total RNA was separated on a 1.2% agarose-6% formaldehyde gel, and the blot was subsequently probed with the oligonucleotide RG3 as described in Materials and Methods. Equal RNA loading was assessed by ß-actin hybridization. (B) 5' and 3' RACE analysis of BFLF2 transcripts. The transcription start and stop sites of the BFLF2 ORF as they were mapped by 5'-3' RACE assay are shown. Genomic coordinates are given with respect the B95-8 viral strain.
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BFLF2 interaction with BFRF1. To assess physical interaction between BFRF1 and BFLF2, coimmunoprecipitation experiments were performed with cell lysates from both chemically induced B95-8 cells and 293 cells transiently transfected with a plasmid expressing either BFRF1 or BFLF2 or cotransfected with both genes. Coprecipitation (Fig. 4) demonstrated a direct interaction of the two proteins. Having shown a direct physical interaction between BFRF1 and BFLF2, we next analyzed the expression of BFLF2 in 293 cells infected with an EBV mutant carrying a deletion of the BFRF1 gene, which was obtained through bacterial artificial chromosomal technology and described in the accompanying paper (16). Control 293 cells carrying wild-type virus (p2089) were described previously (12). Figure 5 shows an immunoblot with the anti-BFLF2 MAb in 293 cells carrying wild-type virus (p2089), either uninduced or transfected with CMV-BFRF1 (p2089+Z), and in uninduced 293 cells carrying the mutant virus (KO), induced by CMV-BZLF1 transfection (KO+Z) or induced by CMV-BZLF1 transfection and recomplemented by CMV-BFRF1 transfection (KO+Z+F1). As shown in Fig. 5, BFLF2 was undetectable in both uninduced 293-2089 and 293-BFRF1-KO cells. Following lytic cycle activation, BFLF2 was visible as a doublet, with the higher band more intense than the lower one, in the cells infected with wild-type virus and transfected with CMV-BFRF1 (p2089+Z), whereas in the induced 293-BFRF1-KO cells only a weak band was detectable, corresponding to the lower band of the BFLF2 doublet. These data indicate that in absence of BFRF1, the expression of BFLF2 is strongly limited. In addition, since as shown above (Fig. 2C), the higher band of the doublet represents the phosphorylated product of the protein, the absence of the higher band of the doublet in KO+Z cells indicates that the protein is not phosphorylated. Finally, BFLF2 expression and phosphorylation were both restored to the higher levels in induced KO cells recomplemented with BFRF1.
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FIG. 4. (A) BFLF2 and BFRF1 coprecipitate in B95-8 cells. Cellular extracts from B95-8 cells and B95-8 cells activated with TPA and sodium butyrate (T/B) for 48 h were immunoprecipitated with rabbit anti-BFRF1 polyclonal antibody and with MAb C1 against BFLF2. Immunoprecipitated proteins were subjected to electrophoresis and transferred to nitrocellulose filters. The resulting immunoblots were probed with anti-BFRF1 MAb E7 and anti-BFLF2 MAb C1. Lanes 1 and 4: extracts from uninduced and induced B95-8 cells immunoprecipitated with protein G-conjugated beads without antibody. Lanes 2 and 5: extracts immunoprecipitated with anti-BFRF1 polyclonal antibody. Lanes 3 and 6: extracts immunoprecipitated with anti-BFLF2 MAb C1. (B) BFLF2 and BFRF1 coprecipitate in 293 transfected cells. Cellular extracts from 293 cells transiently transfected with CMV-BFRF1 (F1) or CMV-BFLF2 (F2) or cotransfected with CMV-BFRF1 and CMV-BFLF2 (F1+F2) were immunoprecipitated with anti-BFRF1 polyclonal antibody (IP anti F1) and with the anti-BFLF2 MAb C1 (IP anti F2). After electrophoresis, the resulting immunoblots were probed with anti-BFRF1 MAb E7 and with anti-BFLF2 MAb C1.
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FIG. 5. (A) BFLF2 expression in the presence or absence of BFRF1. Equal amounts of cellular extracts from 293 cells carrying the wild-type virus (p2089) or a virus with BFRF1 deleted (KO) were loaded on a polyacrylamide gel, and the resulting immunoblot was probed with the anti-BFLF2 MAb C1. The BFRF1-KO virus is characterized in the accompanying paper (16), and 293-2089 cells were described previously (12). Lane 1, 293 cells carrying the wild-type genome; lane 2, p2089 cells transiently transfected with CMV-BZLF1; lane 3, 293-BFRF1-KO cells; lane 4, 293-BFRF1-KO cells transiently transfected with CMV-BZLF1; lane 5, 293-BFRF1-KO cells transiently transfected with CMV-BZLF1 and CMV-BFRF1. The same blot was stripped and reprobed with anti-ß-actin and anti-BFRF1 antibodies to assess equal loading and presence of BFRF1. (B) Indirect immunofluorescence of BFLF2 expression in 293-BFRF1-KO cells transiently transfected with CMV-BZLF1, in 293-BFRF1-KO cells transiently cotransfected with CMV-BZLF1 and CMV-BFRF1, and in 293-BFRF1-KO cells transiently transfected with CMV-BZLF1 and treated with the proteasome inhibitor MG132.
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BFLF2 colocalizes with BFRF1 in both infected and transfected cells. Having shown that there is a physical interaction between BFRF1 and BFLF2 during viral infection as well as in transfected cells, we next analyzed the intracellular localization of the two proteins by immunofluorescence and confocal microscopy. In chemically induced B95-8 cells (Fig. 6), both proteins were detectable on the nuclear rim. Confocal analysis showed colocalization of the two proteins, as shown by the yellow color in merged images. Following transient transfection on 293 epithelial cells, BFRF1 appeared to be localized on the nuclear membrane, sometimes concentrated on thickened portions of the membrane. Occasional cytoplasmic staining in proximity to the nuclear membrane was also observed. In contrast, BFLF2 appeared to be diffusely localized inside the nucleus. In some experiments, equal amounts of cells singly transfected with BFRF1 and BFLF2 were mixed and spotted onto a glass slide and analyzed by immunofluorescence with antibodies directed against BFRF1 and BFLF2. As expected, approximately half of the cells reacted with the MAb against BFRF1 and half reacted with the second antibody, ruling out potential cross-reactions between primary or secondary antibodies in double-fluorescence experiments. In cotransfected cells, both proteins localized at the nuclear rim, occasionally concentrated over irregular fragmentations of the membrane, and confocal analysis showed a full colocalization of BFRF1 with BFLF2.
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FIG. 6. Indirect immunofluorescence of B95-8 and 293 cells expressing BFLF2 and BFRF1. (A) Double immunofluorescence of chemically induced B95-8 cells and of 293 cells transfected with CMV-BFRF1 (293+ F1) or CMV-BFLF2 (293+F2) or cotransfected with CMV-BFRF1 and CMV-BFLF2 (293+F1+F2). Bars, 10 µm. PhC, phase contrast. (B) Confocal immunofluorescence of induced B95-8 cells and cotransfected 293 cells, as described for panel A. Yellow staining in the merged images shows colocalization of the two signals. Bars, 10 µm.
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FIG. 7. Indirect immunofluorescence of 293 cells carrying the wild-type virus and transfected with CMV-BZLF1 (WT+Z) and of 293 cells carrying the BFRF1-KO virus and transfected with CMV-BZLF1 (F1-KO+Z), cotransfected with CMV-BZLF1 and CMV-BFRF1 (F1-KO+Z+F1), or transfected with CMV-BFLF2 (F1-KO+F2). In the absence of BFRF1, BFLF2 is localized inside the nucleus, while in the presence of BFRF1, it is localized on the nuclear rim. Bars, 10 µm.
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In conclusion, the results with 293-BFRF1-KO cells confirmed the previous results with EBV producer lymphoid cells or transfected 293 cells, indicating that in the absence of BFRF1, BFLF2 is localized inside the nucleus, whereas it colocalizes with BFRF1 on the nuclear membrane when BFRF1 is expressed.
The nuclear membrane structure of 293 cells is altered by BFRF1 and BFLF2 expression. Since by immunofluorescence, and previously by immunoelectron microscopy for BFRF1 (15), we have demonstrated the localization of BFRF1 on the nuclear membrane and since we show here that BFLF2, when coexpressed with BFRF1, acquires a similar nuclear membrane localization, we analyzed whether the single or double expression of the two proteins might induce structural alterations of the nuclear membrane. To this end, we used untransfected 293 cells and 293 cells transfected with either BFRF1, BFLF2, BFRF1 and BFLF2, or a vector control. At 24 h following transfection, approximately 20% of the cells were positive for the transfected proteins, and in the BFRF1- and BFLF2-cotransfected cells, the vast majority (over 90%) of the cells reacted with both anti-BFRF1 and anti-BFLF2 antibodies as revealed by immunofluorescence analysis (not shown). First, we performed double-immunofluorescence experiments with a MAb directed against the nuclear pore complex (10), as a marker for the nuclear membrane, and the anti-BFRF1 rabbit polyclonal antibody, and we observed that staining of BFRF1 in both singly and doubly transfected 293 cells fully corresponded to the nuclear membrane labeling and that both signals were not uniform but were concentrated in portions of the nuclear rim (Fig. 8). Parallel ultrastructural analysis, performed by conventional transmission electron microscopy, revealed that in 293 cells transfected with BFRF1 alone, well demarcated areas of the nuclear membranes appeared multilayered and characterized by narrow packaging of multiple cisternal layers strictly adhering to each other and giving rise to dense osmiophylic membrane domains at the linear contacts between the stacked cisternae (Fig. 8). Occasionally, perinuclear aggregates of endoplasmic reticulum cisternae, frequently in continuity with the outer nuclear membrane, were detected (Fig. 8), which may correspond to the cytoplasmic structures positively stained for BFRF1 by immunofluorescence (Fig. 6A). Interestingly, in 293 cells coexpressing both BFRF1 and BFLF2, these multilayered portions of the nuclear membranes were more irregularly organized; in fact, the packaged cisternae appeared dilated, not linear, and occasionally were in concentric whorls. Neither in untransfected 293 cells nor in cells transfected with BFLF2 or with vector alone were similar nuclear membrane alterations observed. These results indicate that BFRF1 alone is responsible for the membrane duplications frequently observed during EBV replication (13, 43) and that BFLF2 influences this effect, possibly rendering these areas more suitable for viral envelopment.
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FIG. 8. Immunofluorescence and electron microscopic analyses of the nuclear membrane structure in transfected 293 cells. Upper panels: CMV-BFRF1-transfected cells (293 F1). Lower panels: CMV-BFRF1- and CMV-BFLF2-cotransfected cells (293 F1+F2). Double-immunofluorescence staining with anti-nuclear pore complex and anti-BFRF1 antibodies reveals an irregular concentration of the two signals in both transfected and cotransfected cells (bar, 10 µm). Electron microscopic analysis of 293 F1 cells reveals focal multilayering of the nuclear membrane (NM) (arrows in the left panel and detail in the right panel), which is not observed in untransfected cells (293 control). Asterisks indicate cytoplasmic membrane structures possibly corresponding to aggregates of endoplasmic reticulum cisternae (asterisks in the left panel). Nu, nucleus; PM, plasma membrane. (Bars, in sequential order: 1, 5, and 1 µm.) Parallel electron microscopic analysis of 293 F1+F2 cells shows a highly irregular structure of the nuclear membrane, with more pronounced multilayering (enlargements of the areas indicated by arrows are shown in the lower panels). (Bars, in sequential order: 5, 2, 1, 1, and 0.5 µm.)
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FIG. 9. (A) Lamin B (LB) coprecipitates with BFRF1 and BFLF2 in B95-8 cells. Cellular extracts from untreated B95-8 cells () and B95-8 cells induced with TPA plus butyrate (+) were immunoprecipitated (IP) with anti-lamin B polyclonal antibody. Immunoprecipitated proteins were run on polyacrylamide gels, and the resulting immunoblots were probed with the anti-lamin B antibody and with MAbs directed against BFRF1 and BFLF2. (B) Lamin B coprecipitates with BFRF1 and BFLF2 in 293 cells. 293 cells were transfected with CMV-BFRF1 (293+F1) and CMV-BFLF2 (293+F2) and cotransfected with CMV-BFRF1 and CMV-BFLF2 (293+F1+F2). At 24 h following transfection, cells were lysed and the resulting extracts were immunoprecipitated with anti-lamin B antibody. After electrophoresis, proteins were transferred to nitrocellulose membranes and analyzed by Western blotting as described for panel A. (C) Indirect immunofluorescence of BFRF1, BFLF2, and lamin B expression in induced B95-8 cells and in 293 cells transfected with CMV-BFRF1 (293+F1) or with CMV-BFLF2 (293+F2). (D) Confocal microscopy showing that BFRF1 colocalizes with lamin B, whereas BFLF2, in the absence of BFRF1, does not colocalize with lamin B. Bars, 10 µm.
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The interest in BFLF2 stems from the fact that it belongs to a conserved family of herpesvirus proteins which has been widely studied in HSV-1, HSV-2, and PrV and appears to play an important role in virus envelopment. Its homolog in HSV-1, designated UL31, is a nuclear matrix phosphoprotein of 37 kDa (6). UL31 homologs in other herpesviruses, with molecular masses varying from 42 kDa (UL53 in human CMV) to 34 kDa (in HSV-2), to 29 kDa (in PrV), have also been described (9, 17, 28, 33, 51). While CMV UL53 is a component of extracellular virions, UL31 of HSV-1 and PrV are not. Our present results indicate that BFLF2 is a nuclear phosphoprotein of approximately 35 kDa, expressed early during the viral replicative cycle, which is not detectable in extracellular virions. The kinetics of BFLF2 expression differs from those of all other herpesvirus homologs, which have been reported as true late proteins.
The generation of a specific MAb has allowed us to study the intracellular localization of the protein in virus-infected cells and its interaction with the recently described BFRF1 gene product (14), the UL34 positional homolog of EBV. Although the function of BFLF2 is still unknown, clues come from its intracellular localization and from its interaction with BFRF1, as well from analogies with other herpesviral homologs. Pull-down experiments (50) and yeast two-hybrid studies (17) have previously demonstrated a physical interaction between UL34 and UL31. Muranyi et al. also showed that M50/p35 and M53/p38, their respective homologs in mouse cytomegalovirus, coprecipitate (28). Accumulating evidence from several herpesvirus systems suggests that the physical interaction of UL31 with UL34 is a necessary event for their colocalization on the nuclear rim and for correct viral envelopment at the nuclear membrane. Our demonstration that BFRF1 also is essential for efficient envelopment of EBV (16) and the results presented in the present paper, showing that BFRF1 and BFLF2 coprecipitate and colocalize in both infected and cotransfected cells, are all consistent with the model proposed for other herpesviruses (reviewed in reference 26).
Concerning UL34 localization, our present confocal and previous immunoelectron microscopic analyses (15) have now clearly defined the unequivocal predominant nuclear membrane localization of BFRF1. Previous apparently conflicting results regarding the localization of BFRF1 homologs in other herpesviruses might simply reflect differences in the visualization methods (conventional versus confocal fluorescence) or be due to different viral strains or various target cell lines used. For example, UL34 in HSV-2 appears to be preferentially localized on the endoplasmic reticulum, and the presence of UL31 relocates the protein from the endoplasmic reticulum to the internal nuclear membrane (48).
Different results have also been reported regarding the presence of UL34 in extracellular virions. In the case of HSV-2, UL34 was detected on mature virions (40), while both the presence and absence of HSV-1 UL34 in the virion have been documented (36, 50). EHV-1 UL34 was not detectable in extracellular virions (30), and in PrV it was visualized on intracellular virions but not on the mature extracellular virions (17). The latter behavior was considered further evidence in favor of the envelopment-de-envelopment-reenvelopment process of alphaherpesviruses. Similarly, our recent results (16) and our previous observation by immunoelectron microscopy showing BFRF1 labeled intracellular virions but unlabeled extracellular virions (15) suggest that BFRF1 is not a component of the mature virions.
The reduced BFLF2 expression in cells not expressing BFRF1 is also similar to previous data reported for HSV-1, where immunoblot analysis indicated a reduction of UL31 protein in cells infected with a UL34 mutant virus (49), suggesting that some UL31 was mistargeted and degraded through the proteasome pathway in the absence of UL34. Our preliminary observations with the proteasome inhibitor MG132 suggest a similar degradation of BFLF2. In PrV, in contrast, UL34 does not seem to be required for stable expression of UL31 (17).
Viruses have often been used as a tool to investigate the cell biology of intracellular organelles and of the nuclear membrane, and the occurrence of morphological nuclear alterations in the course of viral infection is a well-known phenomenon. These modifications have been particularly documented in the process of viral entry, where incoming virions need to modify the nuclear membrane to gain access to the nucleus (46). For herpesviruses, binding of HSV-1 capsids to microtubules to reach the nuclear pore complex has been shown (42). In addition, HSV-1 UL34 and UL31 were shown to form complexes with dynein intermediate chains (50), but the significance of this interaction for virus entry is unclear. Since we showed here and in the accompanying paper (16) that both BFLF2 and BFRF1 are not components of the extracellular virions, it is unlikely that they participate in the process of viral entry.
One common feature shared by several viruses during the envelopment process to exit from the nucleus is the modification of the nuclear envelope structure. The nuclear envelope is composed of the outer and inner nuclear membranes and a complex network of stable, filamentous proteins called lamins, which are attached to the nuclear membrane by a large number of integral membrane proteins and which collectively form the nuclear lamina. For herpesviruses, dismantling of the nuclear lamina during HSV-1 infection has been reported by Scott and O'Hare (39), and, remarkably, a similar effect has been attributed to protein kinase C (PKC)-mediated phosphorylation of the nuclear lamina induced by the BFRF1 and BFLF2 homologs during mouse cytomegalovirus infection (28). Our results, showing the association of the BFRF1-BFLF2 complex with lamin B at the nuclear membrane, are consistent with the possible involvement of these proteins in affecting nuclear lamina structure and function. In addition, an interesting observation is represented by the profound nuclear alterations induced by expression of BFRF1, which is more strikingly observed when it is coexpressed with BFLF2, which are reminiscent of the nuclear membrane reduplications described previously as a peculiar, although not specific, feature of EBV replication (13, 43). These observations, together with our previous immunoelectron microscopic findings (15) on the preferential localization of BFRF1 over duplicated domains of the nuclear membrane in infected cells, strongly suggest that BFRF1, in conjunction with BFLF2, plays a key role in viral envelopment. These nuclear membrane duplications differ from the effects induced by HSV-1 UL34, which consist of dissociation of the inner and outer nuclear membranes (50).
The nuclear envelope alterations observed in the course of herpesviral infection can be also reminiscent of some features of nuclear membrane reconstruction occurring after mitotic division (for recent reviews, see references 25 and 47). One of the factors that is required for nuclear envelope assembly events is the small GTPase Ran. It has been proposed that chromatin-associated Ran-GTP recruits importin-ß, which then binds to nucleoporins, to begin the assembly of the nuclear envelope (reviewed in reference 32). In addition, it has been shown that an excess of Ran-GTP or removal of importin-ß induces formation of nuclear pore-containing membrane structures, known as annulate lamellae (45). Interestingly, while studying the intracellular maturation pathway of a human betaherpesvirus, human herpesvirus 6, we observed (5, 44) that annulate lamellae are also formed following human herpesvirus 6 infection of T cells and that they might represent a storage compartment of the viral glycoprotein gp116. However, we never observed annulate lamellae in the course of EBV replication, and we can exclude the possibility, by their ultrastructural characteristics as well as by the lack of staining with the antibody directed against the nuclear pore complex, that the cytoplasmic perinuclear organelles observed in the present work (Fig. 8) are annulate lamellae.
Furthermore, the nuclear membrane duplications induced by BFRF1 suggest that the BFRF1-BFLF2 complex might act, either directly or through binding to some of the nuclear proteins (such as emerin, LAP2, or MAN1) involved in the bridge between the nuclear membrane and the lamina, in the process of nuclear membrane reorganization. Of great interest is that very recent reports have demonstrated the role of UL34 and UL31 in altering the distribution of LAP2 and lamin A/C following HSV-1 infection (35, 41).
The relevant differences between the effects caused by BFRF1 alone and those caused by BFRF1 plus BFLF2 on the structure of the nuclear membrane are in accordance with the scenario proposed by Muranyi et al. (28) for mouse CMV, where the BFRF1 homolog strongly modifies the nuclear membrane, whereas the BFLF2 homolog qualitatively and quantitatively modulates this effect.
Further work to elucidate the role of BFRF1-BFLF2 complex in nuclear membrane disruption and reconstitution and to identify potential nuclear membrane proteins which might participate to this process will most likely represent a fruitful area for future studies.
In HSV-1 and in PrV an additional viral protein, a viral kinase encoded by the US3 gene, is also essential for viral envelopment by interacting with the UL34-UL31 complex (26). A US3 homolog is not present in the EBV genome, and preliminary results from Lake and Hutt-Fletcher (24) suggest that BGLF4, the only known EBV-encoded kinase (7, 18), is not responsible for phosphorylation of BFRF1 and BFLF2, which are thus probably phosphorylated by a cellular kinase. Of interest is that in mouse CMV, the BFRF1 homolog has been shown to recruit cellular PKC to dissolve the nuclear lamina, allowing virions to gain access to the nuclear membrane for primary envelopment (28). Since it has been shown that PKC-ßII is directly responsible for lamin B phosphorylation and solubilization (21) and that the selective PKC-ß inhibitor hispidin reduces lamin B phosphorylation and totally prevents lamin B proteolysis (8), it might be of interest to investigate whether the use of selective PKC inhibitors might interfere with the correct intracellular localization of lamin B or with its interaction with BFRF1, ultimately leading to the lamina disassembly that is needed for the breakdown of the nuclear envelope.
In conclusion, our results confirm the preliminary observations of Lake and Hutt-Fletcher (24) and provide, in conjunction with the data reported in the accompanying paper (16), a mechanistic explanation of the BFRF1-BFLF2 interaction in infected cells. Our experiments with the BFRF1-KO virus, where BFLF2 expression also is drastically reduced, indicate that the two proteins are necessary for efficient viral envelopment at the nuclear membrane. Whether the lack of BFLF2, in the presence of BFRF1, would also affect the process of viral envelopment will be analyzed in future studies by constructing, with the use of bacterial artificial chromosomal technology, a viral mutant with the BFLF2 gene deleted.
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