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Journal of Virology, May 2005, p. 5363-5373, Vol. 79, No. 9
0022-538X/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JVI.79.9.5363-5373.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Department of Microbiology, Columbia University College of Physicians & Surgeons, 701 W. 168th St., New York, New York 10032
Received 6 October 2004/ Accepted 20 January 2005
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Viral genome replication occurs on the surface of cytoplasmic vesicles induced by the synthesis of viral proteins 2C and 3A and the precursor 2BC (70). These vesicles are formed in conjunction with massive cell membrane proliferation (4, 7) and increased cellular synthesis of phospholipids (32). With the exception of the two viral proteases 2Apro and 3Cpro, all of the nonstructural proteins have been found on the surface of these vesicles and are thought to interact in the replication complex (26, 59, 61, 70). The vesicles assemble into a rosette, and the replication complex forms on the inner face of the rosette (13, 26). Salt-induced dissociation of the rosette demonstrated that the individual vesicles themselves can also support replication initiation and elongation (26). Neither the composition of the replication complex nor its mechanism of formation has been fully elucidated.
The 2B protein and its cleavage precursor, 2BC, bind membranes and are responsible for an increase in cell membrane permeability that occurs late in infection (3, 76). This increased permeability leads to calcium efflux from the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and may contribute to release of virus particles from the cell (5). It is thought that 2B acts as a viroporin, oligomerizing and inserting into membranes via its two hydrophobic domains to form a pore (1, 31, 51, 74, 75). When synthesized in uninfected cells, 2B causes a block in protein secretion from the Golgi complex (24). Protein 2C is a multifunctional protein. Amphipathic
-helices at both the N and C termini are thought to mediate a peripheral association of 2C with cell membranes (25, 64) and contribute to its ability to induce vesicles in the cytoplasm (68). Protein 2C also has nucleoside triphosphate-binding domains (56), which are found in the nonstructural proteins of other similar positive-strand RNA viruses such as flaviviruses (28, 41). The flavivirus NS3 protein, which contains the nucleoside triphosphate-binding domain, possesses helicase activity; however, this activity has not been demonstrated for a picornaviral 2C protein (56). Protein 2C also has RNA-binding activity (6, 55, 56) and may have a role in encapsidation of viral RNA (73).
The precise function of 3A is not known; however, 3A has a strongly hydrophobic region near its C terminus that mediates association with membranes and inclusion in the replication complex (72). Amino acid changes in the 3A protein alter host range and tropism of picornaviruses, although how they do so has not been determined (9, 44, 52). Synthesis of 3A alone in uninfected cells leads to a block in protein secretion from the ER and massive ER swelling but not vesicle formation (23, 24). The 3AB protein, a precursor to 3A, may serve as an anchor for the replication complex by binding both viral RNA and membranes (11). Protein 3AB binds 3Dpol and its precursor, 3CDpro, and stimulates the activities of these proteins (10, 43, 53). In addition, it has been postulated that 3AB is the donor for 3B(VPg), the protein primer for positive-strand RNA synthesis. The arrangement of viral proteins in the replication complex is unknown, but it is suspected that many of the nonstructural proteins interact with each other. For example, it has been suggested that proteins 2B and 3A interact (71) and that 2C binds 2B and 3A in the replication complex (65).
Because of the limited coding capacity of viral genomes, many steps of viral replication are dependent on host cell components. Several cellular proteins that interact with the picornaviral genome have been found. Electrophoretic mobility shift assays identified poly(rC) binding protein 2 (14-16) and poly(A) binding protein 1 (62) as viral RNA-binding proteins. Nucleolin was shown to bind to the poliovirus 3' noncoding region (78) and stimulate viral translation (38). In addition, unr, as well as a unr-interacting protein called unrip, interacts with polypyrimidine tract-binding protein to stimulate picornavirus internal ribosome entry site-mediated translation (17, 36). La autoantigen has been shown to have a role in the stimulation of translation of several picornaviruses (19, 47, 48). The only host cell proteins known to be involved in poliovirus RNA replication are poly(rC) binding protein 2 (79) and poly(A) binding protein 1 (34).
One way to identify viral proteins that interact with host cell proteins is to study viral variants with expanded host range. We have pursued this approach with two serotypes of rhinovirus. Wild-type human rhinovirus type 16 (HRV16) productively infects mouse ICAM-L cells (33), but viral yields are low and cytopathic effect is absent. Variants of HRV16 with improved growth in these cells were selected by alternately passaging the virus between HeLa and mouse L cells producing the viral receptor ICAM-1 (ICAM-L cells) (33). Amino acid changes in the 2C protein of HRV16 conferred an altered growth phenotype, with increased cytopathic effect, elevated levels of viral RNA production, and higher viral titers in mouse cells (33). However, attempts to identify host cell proteins that interact with viral protein 2C were unsuccessful. In contrast to HRV16, human rhinovirus 39 (HRV39) is unable to replicate in mouse cells. Here we describe the adaptation of HRV39 to growth in mouse cells. Changes in the mouse-adapted virus are located in viral proteins that are involved in the formation of the replication complex. The mechanisms of vesicle production and replication complex formation in picornavirus-infected cells have not been defined. The vesicles, which are induced by the synthesis of 2BC, 2C, and 3A proteins, may initially form as COPII vesicles (57), autophagic vesicles (59, 61), or COPI vesicles (30). Regardless of the origin of picornavirus-induced vesicles, some viral proteins must interact with host cell proteins to generate the membrane alterations that occur in the cell and lead to the formation of replication complexes. The adaptation of picornaviruses for growth in nonpermissive host cells can identify viral proteins involved in these processes and will facilitate identification of cellular proteins needed in viral replication.
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Cloning viruses. Viral RNA was isolated from the supernatant of infected cells or from pelleted virus (40,000 rpm for 120 min in an SW41 rotor) using Trizol reagent (Gibco), according to the manufacturer's instructions. 5' and 3' rapid amplification of cDNA ends was performed using the 5'/3' rapid amplification of cDNA ends kit from Roche (catalog no. 1734792) to determine the nucleotide sequence of the ends of HRV39 RNA. This information was used to design primers to amplify a DNA copy of the genome. The 5' virus-specific primer includes a SacI site and a T7 RNA polymerase binding site. Reverse transcription was performed using Superscript II (Gibco), and the first-strand DNA was amplified as two half-genome fragments. The 5' half of the genome (nucleotides 1 to 3800) was amplified with Expand Long Template DNA polymerase (Boehringer Mannheim), cloned into pCR-XL-TOPO (Invitrogen), and excised using EcoRV and HindIII. This fragment was then inserted into pACYC177 cleaved with HindIII/SmaI to generate pACYC177-5'39. The 3' half of the genome (nucleotides 3400 to 7150) was amplified and inserted into pCR-XL-TOPO and excised with PpuMI/BciVI. This fragment was inserted into pACYC177-5'39 that had also been cleaved with PpuMI/BciVI to produce pACYC177-39. This procedure was also used to produce a DNA copy of the genome of RV39/L (pACYC177-39/L). The plasmids were linearized by cleavage with SphI, and infectious RNA was generated using in vitro transcription with T7 RNA polymerase (Promega). Multiple attempts to insert a full-length DNA copy of the viral genome into a higher-copy-number vector (pUC19) always resulted in deletions or alterations in the genome after bacterial propagation that rendered the viral transcripts noninfectious in mammalian cells.
Isolation of RV39/IGE and RV39/RM. DNA from both pACYC177-39 and pACYC177-39/L was cut at the unique restriction site BsiEI, located between the 2B and 3A proteins (Fig. 3). The 5' portion of HRV39 DNA was ligated to the 3' portion of RV39/L DNA, and the 5' portion of RV39/L DNA was ligated to the 3' portion of HRV39 DNA. The resulting DNAs were transcribed in vitro. Infectious viruses containing either the 2B changes alone (RV39/IGE) or the 3A changes alone (RV39/RM) were isolated after transfection of viral RNA transcripts and plaque purification on HeLa R19 cells. Total RNA was extracted from the infected cell supernatant, and the 2BC3AB region was amplified using reverse transcription-PCR (RT-PCR). The nucleotide sequence of PCR products was determined to ensure that changes were present only in the 2B or the 3A coding region and that the sample was free of contaminating wild-type HRV39 or RV39/L.
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FIG. 3. Schematic for generation of viral transcripts containing mouse-adapted amino acid changes in either the 2B or 3A protein. A DNA copy of the HRV39 and RV39/L viral genomes was cloned into pACYC177. The plasmids were cleaved with BsiEI and SacI or BsiEI and SphI, and DNA fragments containing (i) the T7 promoter and the 5' half of the viral cDNA or (ii) the 3' half of the viral cDNA and the poly(A) sequence were purified. Ligations of the 5' half of HRV39 DNA and the 3' half of RV39/L DNA or the 5' half of HRV39/L DNA and the 3' half of HRV39 DNA resulted in full-length DNAs with changes in either 2B or 3A. RNA transcripts were generated by in vitro transcription, and the RNA was introduced into cells by transfection to produce virus.
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RNA analysis. Dot blot assays were performed as described previously (33). Briefly, replica plates were infected at a multiplicity of 10 PFU per cell, and total cellular RNA was isolated with Trizol (Gibco) at 0, 6, and 12 h postinfection. The RNA was transferred onto a nitrocellulose membrane and cross-linked, and the blot was hybridized to a 32P-labeled RNA probe. The hybridization probe included nucleotides 1600 to 7150 of the HRV39 sequence and was complementary to positive-strand viral RNA. The blot was exposed to a PhosphorImager, and RNA levels were quantitated with ImageQuant software (Molecular Dynamics).
Viral growth curve analysis. Growth curves were performed by infecting duplicate plates of 105 ICAM-L or HeLa cells at a multiplicity of 10 PFU/cell. Infections were stopped at various times postinfection, HEPES buffer (Gibco) was added to a final concentration of 50 mM, and the cells were frozen. After 48 h, all samples were frozen and thawed three times and centrifuged, and viral titers in the supernatants were determined by plaque assay. Plaque assays were performed as described previously (33).
Nucleotide sequence accession number. The complete sequence of HRV39 has been deposited in NCBI (accession number AY751783).
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FIG. 1. Growth of HRV39 and RV39/L in cultured cells. Wild-type HRV39 or RV39/L was used to infect (A) ICAM-L cells or (B) HeLa R19 cells at a multiplicity of infection of 10. Infections were halted at the indicated times postinfection, and viral titers were determined by plaque assay.
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FIG. 2. Multiple alignment of picornaviral 2B and 3A proteins. The boxed regions in both proteins represent hydrophobic domains. Dashed boxes in 3A correspond to the 3A homodimer interface. Amino acid differences between HRV39 and RV39/L proteins are indicated by underlined residues in the HRV39 sequence. The amino acid changes in RV39/L are shown above the HRV39 residue.
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FIG. 4. Growth of HRV39, RV39/L, RV39/IGE, and RV39/RM in cultured cells. Infections were carried out in (A) ICAM-L cells or (B) HeLa R19 cells at a multiplicity of infection of 10. Infections were halted at the indicated times postinfection, and viral titers were determined by plaque assay.
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TABLE 1. Amino acid changes in 2B and 3A of HRV39 during growth in ICAM-L cells
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Replication of HRV39/L but not HRV39 viral RNA early in infection. To identify the step at which HRV39 replication is blocked in ICAM-L cells, we examined positive-strand viral RNA synthesis in infected cells by dot blot hybridization analysis. While all viruses produced significant levels of viral RNA by 12 h postinfection in HeLa R19 cells, high levels of positive-strand RNA in ICAM-L cells were observed only during infection with RV39/L (Fig. 5A and B). Although both RV39/IGE and RV39/RM had begun producing positive-strand viral RNA at 12 h postinfection, neither virus produced as much viral RNA as RV39/L. These observations provide additional support for a role for both the 2B and the 3A proteins in adaptation of HRV39 to mouse cells. The results also demonstrate that HRV39 replication is blocked in ICAM-L cells at a step prior to positive-strand viral RNA production.
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FIG. 5. Positive-strand viral RNA production in infected cells. Infections were carried out in (A) ICAM-L cells or (B) HeLa R19 cells at a multiplicity of infection of 10. At 0, 6, and 12 h postinfection, total RNA was isolated from infected cells and transferred onto a nitrocellulose membrane. A radiolabeled RNA hybridization probe complementary to positive-strand viral RNA was used to measure levels of viral RNA present at various times postinfection. The amount of hybridized RNA probe was determined with a PhosphorImager, analyzed using ImageQuant software, and reported as optical density.
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FIG. 6. Formation of membranous vesicles in infected cells visualized by electron microscopy. HeLa R19 cells are (A) uninfected or infected with (C and G) HRV39 or (D and H) RV39/L. ICAM-L cells were (B) uninfected or infected with (E and I) HRV39 or (F and J) RV39/L.
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To identify viral proteins that might interact with cell proteins, we selected a variant of HRV39 that replicates in mouse cells. Although replication of this serotype cannot be detected in mouse cells, stocks of this virus may contain low levels of viral variants that are able to grow in mouse cells. These variants are presumably selected upon passage in ICAM-L cells. The genome of the mouse-adapted virus RV39/L encodes amino acid changes in both the 2B and the 3A proteins. Previously, human rhinovirus 2 (HRV2), a minor-group serotype of rhinovirus related to HRV39, was adapted to mouse cells (81). In infected cells, the adapted virus RV2/L produced P2 proteins that migrate with altered mobility on protein gels compared with P2 proteins of HRV2. Nucleotide sequence analysis of RNA encoding 2ABC3AB revealed 10 coding changes in the genome of RV2/L, three of which are identical to changes seen in RV39/L (V2I and K36E of 2B and I35M of 3A) (Fig. 2) (F. Yin, personal communication). RV2/L also exhibited altered sensitivity to inhibitors that specifically block viral RNA replication, leading the authors to suggest that the process of viral RNA replication was altered in an unknown manner. The influence of the individual amino acid changes of RV2/L in the adaptation to mouse cells has not been determined. The same group subsequently isolated mouse-adapted variants of HRV39 by transfection of viral RNA in L cells (46). Of three independent virus stocks used, only one produced infectious virus after RNA transfection. Sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis analysis indicated that a P2 protein of the virus that replicated in mouse cells migrated differently from that of the other two virus stocks. Nucleotide sequence from the adapted virus was not obtained. The authors suggested that a P2 protein was an essential viral component that could function in mouse L cells only in an altered form and that genetic changes leading to this altered form arose spontaneously during viral growth in permissive human cells (46). A P2 protein was also implicated in the adaptation of HRV16 to growth in mouse cells (33). Amino acid changes needed for replication of HRV16 in mouse cells are located in protein 2BC and appear to cause conformational changes in the viral protein that may influence interaction with a host cell protein.
To identify the specific protein(s) involved in our adaptation of HRV39 to mouse cells, viruses with the amino acid changes of RV39/L in either the 2B or 3A protein were produced (Fig. 3). The results of one-step growth curve analysis in ICAM-L cells indicated that RV39/IGE replicated with kinetics similar to those of RV39/L (Fig. 4). While the titers of both RV39/IGE and RV39/L reached similar levels by 12 h postinfection, the titer of RV39/IGE did not exceed the starting titer, while RV39/L titers increased 10-fold. These differences were reflected in the results of RNA analysis: at 12 h postinfection, the amount of RV39/IGE RNA did not exceed starting levels, while the amount of RV39/L viral RNA increased (Fig. 5). However, despite the large difference in viral RNA levels at 12 h postinfection, titers of RV39/L and RV39/IGE were nearly identical. The reason for this observation is not known, but one possible explanation is that RNA packaging or assembly of RV39/L virions is affected by the amino acid changes in 2B and/or 3A. Overall, the growth curve and RNA analyses indicate that, while the amino acid changes in 2B contribute significantly to the adaptation to mouse cells, the additional changes in 3A are required for complete adaptation. In particular, changes in the K36 residue of 2B seem to be important in mouse cell adaptation of HRV39. The similar growth in human cells of viruses with amino acid changes in either the 2B or 3A protein confirmed that the adaptation was specific to mouse cells (Fig. 4B). Analysis of viral RNA production in mouse cells demonstrated that amino acid changes in both 2B and 3A were required to achieve comparable levels of viral positive-strand genome production to that seen in cells infected with RV39/L. RNA levels could not be determined at later times postinfection due to the presence of substantial cytopathic effect.
There are two hydrophobic regions in 2B that are both important in the functions of the protein (75) (Fig. 2). HR1, the more amino-terminal hydrophobic region, is a cationic amphipathic
-helix thought to span the membrane. The second hydrophobic region, HR2, is a transmembrane domain. Both HR2 and the hydrophilic region between HR1 and HR2 have been shown to be important in multimerization of coxsackievirus B3 2B (21). This viral protein localizes to the Golgi complex in COS-1 cells: deletion of HR1 changes the localization to the ER (22), although HR2 is also important in proper localization. Other studies have demonstrated that 2B localizes to the ER and the Golgi complex (58). The properties of 2B suggest that it functions as a viroporin, oligomerizing and inserting into membranes to create pores (31). The formation of these pores may explain the increase in intracellular calcium observed in the cytoplasm of infected cells by allowing the passage of calcium from either the ER lumen or the extracellular milieu (37, 76). Another known effect of 2B (and 2BC) synthesis is to block protein export from the Golgi complex (8, 24). At least the N-terminal 30 amino acids of 2BC are likely to be involved in this function (7). Alterations in the 2B protein that impair virus growth but do not affect the ability of the protein to permeabilize membranes or block protein secretion have been described, suggesting additional functions for 2B (77).
Three amino acid changes were identified in the 2B protein of our mouse-adapted RV39/L, including one amino acid changeK36Ein HR1. This residue is a glutamate in several of the picornaviruses shown in Fig. 2. Of the viruses with a glutamate residue at this position, all are able to grow in mouse cells (2, 50, 54, 82), suggesting that this residue may be critical in determining host range. This amino acid is also altered from a K to an E in mouse-adapted HRV2/L (F. Yin, personal communication). The other two amino acid changes in protein 2B of RV39/L, V2I and E11G, do not appear to exhibit any particular pattern in the other viruses that would suggest an obvious role in host range (Fig. 2). It seems unlikely that any amino acid change involved in host range expansion would affect a critical function such as multimerization, pore formation, or inhibition of protein secretion. However, these activities may require a host protein, and the K36 residue could be critical in the interaction between 2B and a host protein.
Considerable evidence implicates the 3A protein and its precursor, 3AB, in RNA replication (10, 35, 53, 69, 80). A strongly hydrophobic region in the C terminus of 3A is involved in membrane association and is likely to mediate inclusion of 3A in the replication complex (45, 72) (Fig. 2). Recently, the solution structure of the soluble N-terminal domain of poliovirus 3A was determined, showing that 3A forms homodimers with unstructured N- and C-terminal regions in each monomer (60). The G41 residue of poliovirus 3A, immediately following the last residue in the second of two amphipathic
-helices, corresponds to the K33 residue of rhinovirus 39 3A (Fig. 2). The W42 residue of poliovirus 3A, which acts in concert with a number of other N-terminal residues to "bury" the dimer interface, is directly adjacent to the rhinovirus I35 residue. While these regions are not directly involved in dimerization of poliovirus 3A, they do contribute to 3A structure. It was suggested that long-range contacts between G41 or its neighbor, W42, and N-terminal residues mediate the structure of poliovirus 3A. Given these data, it seems likely that the amino acid changes observed in RV39/L 3A cause conformational changes in the protein that may alter its interactions with host cell proteins or other viral proteins. Evidence for possible interaction between 2B and 3A comes from studies of chimeric viruses with the hydrophobic domain of poliovirus 3A exchanged for that of rhinovirus 3A. These chimeric viruses are viable but do not replicate as well as wild-type virus. Viruses with improved replication were isolated that contain compensatory changes in the 2B protein, suggesting that 2B and 3A may interact during infection (71). Recent data also suggest interactions between 2B, 2C, and 3A (65).
We observed selection for an amino acid change at residue K36 of 2B protein during growth of HRV39 in mouse cells (Table 1). However, changes in 2B do not fully account for the adaptation of RV39/L to mouse cells: RV39/IGE does not grow as well as RV39/L in mouse cells, nor does it produce the same amount of RNA as RV39/L by 12 h postinfection (Fig. 5). Although RV39/RM did not replicate as well as RV39/IGE, in the presence of the 2B changes, alterations in 3A clearly enhance viral replication in mouse cells. How do these changes facilitate adaptation to mouse cells? It is possible that the interaction of 2B (or a 2B precursor) with a host cell protein mediates growth in mouse cells. If contacts also occur between 2B and 3A, amino acid changes in 3A could facilitate improved interactions with 2B protein of mouse-adapted RV39/L. We were unable to demonstrate interaction between HRV39 2B and 3A using the yeast two-hybrid system (data not shown), but this result should not be considered definitive evidence of a lack of interaction during infection. Alternatively, 2B and 3A might interact with the same host cell protein, or with two different proteins. In either case, the interaction of 2B with its putative cellular partner would have a greater influence on growth in mouse cells than the interaction of 3A and its cellular partner.
Most of what is known about virus-induced alterations of cell membranes comes from studies of poliovirus, the prototype picornavirus. The most drastic structural change observed in poliovirus-infected cells is the loss of intact ER and Golgi complex and the accumulation of membranous vesicles in the cytoplasm (18). Most of the nonstructural proteins and some nonstructural protein precursors have been found on the surface of these vesicles (12, 26, 59, 61, 70). The synthesis of 2BC and 3A in uninfected cells leads to the formation of vesicles identical in buoyant density and appearance to those present during poliovirus infection (61). The vesicles include markers from different organelles, including the ER and the Golgi complex (23, 57, 58). The requirement for de novo phospholipid synthesis for poliovirus replication suggests that vesicle membranes may be newly synthesized rather than exclusively derived from preexisting membranes (32).
There is controversy over the origin of the vesicles induced by poliovirus infection. Many of the vesicles found in poliovirus-infected cells are double membraned, originate from multiple organelles, and have cytosolic content, suggesting a mechanism of formation similar to cellular autophagy (59, 61). However, recent evidence demonstrated that poliovirus-induced vesicles are morphologically similar to COPII vesicles, which are involved in anterograde transport (57). The COPII proteins Sec13/31 were shown to colocalize with the viral 2B protein on the surface of the vesicles. The authors found that viral vesicles bud from the ER but do not fuse with the ER/Golgi intermediate complex and suggested that the cellular COPII machinery participates in the induction of vesicles suitable for poliovirus replication. However, the inhibition of poliovirus and rhinovirus RNA replication by brefeldin A directly contradicts this hypothesis (20, 30). Brefeldin A inhibits formation of COPI but not COPII vesicles. In addition, overproduction of dominant-negative Sar1, a COPII component, was found to block anterograde transport but not poliovirus replication (63). These observations argue against a COPII origin for poliovirus vesicles.
The vesicles formed by HRV39 in ICAM-L and HeLa R19 cells appear different from each other when examined by electron microscopy. The vesicles in HeLa R19 cells are densely packed, similar to vesicles observed during infection with other picornaviruses (12, 27). The vesicle shape is elongated and irregular, and the vesicles appear to contain electron-dense material. Vesicles induced in ICAM-L cells are mostly round, larger, and more dispersed. Most of the rhinovirus-induced vesicles appear to have single membranes, in contrast to poliovirus-induced vesicles. However, the formation of predominantly single-membraned vesicles has been reported for other picornaviruses (49), and vesicles of this morphology have also been observed during poliovirus infection (61).
Despite the absence of detectable HRV39 RNA replication in mouse cells (Fig. 5), vesicles are formed during HRV39 infection (Fig. 6E and I). This observation suggests that the viral proteins translated from genomes that initially enter the cell are able to induce vesicles in mouse cells. Therefore, interactions of wild-type viral proteins with membranes or with host cell proteins required for vesicle formation are presumably not compromised in mouse cells. The absence of HRV39 viral replication in mouse cells demonstrates that HRV39 must be blocked at a step subsequent to vesicle formation but prior to the initiation of replication, such as replication complex assembly or RNA synthesis. The replication complex is believed to form in cis, coupling vesicle formation, genome translation, and viral RNA replication (67). Preformed vesicles are unable to support replication of superinfecting poliovirus (27), and trans-complementation with nonstructural viral proteins is extremely limited (39, 40, 70). Our data suggest that the vesicle-forming functions of the 2B and 3A proteins (or their precursors) are not linked to their ability to facilitate replication. The viral precursor proteins may recruit cellular proteins at a step prior to the formation of vesicles that either initiates or nucleates replication complex formation. Alternatively, replication complexes may form and subsequently require cell proteins to render them replication competent. As wild-type HRV39 is able to replicate efficiently in HeLa R19 cells, the block to HRV39 growth in mouse cells cannot be due to viral cis-acting factors. Host cell proteins provided in trans must play a role in the formation of a functional replication complex. Efforts to isolate these proteins are under way.
We thank O. Roger Anderson, Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory of Columbia University, for electron microscopy and helpful suggestions.
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