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Journal of Virology, June 2006, p. 5308-5320, Vol. 80, No. 11
0022-538X/06/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JVI.02460-05
Copyright © 2006, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Department of Molecular Virology, University of Heidelberg, Im Neuenheimer Feld 345, 69120 Heidelberg, Germany
Received 22 November 2005/ Accepted 18 February 2006
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In regard to the early phase of the HCV life cycle, various systems were developed to identify candidate receptors. Employing serum-derived HCV particles, which are known to associate with low density lipoproteins (45, 46), evidence was provided that the low density lipoprotein receptor is involved in HCV entry (1, 52). CD81 and the human scavenger receptor class B type I (SR-B1) were identified as putative receptors based on their interaction with recombinant soluble E2 protein (36, 40). Likewise, binding of E2 to two C-type lectins (DC-SIGN and L-SIGN) was recognized, and it was proposed that this interaction plays a role in virus infection (16, 28, 37). Moreover, experiments with insect cell-derived virus-like particles and soluble E2 point to an involvement of specific cell surface heparan sulfate proteoglycans in the attachment of HCV (3). Finally, a role of the asialoglycoprotein receptor in binding and entry of HCV structural proteins purified from insect cells was described (39).
The development of retroviral pseudo-particles (HCVpp), carrying unmodified and functional HCV glycoproteins on the surface of retroviral core particles, and transducing reporter genes allowed for the first time reliable and convenient quantification of HCV glycoprotein-dependent infection, thus providing the opportunity to study the functional relevance of the described receptor candidates (4, 20). Utilizing this assay, it was shown that L-SIGN and DC-SIGN are capable of capturing HCVpp and transmitting it to neighboring cells with the appropriate entry receptors. In light of the expression of L-SIGN in endothelial cells in liver sinusoids, this mechanism was proposed to facilitate transinfection of endothelium-proximal hepatocytes (10, 27). Antibody competition experiments and RNA interference studies confirmed a role of SR-BI in the entry of HCVpp (4, 23), and there is ample evidence from different laboratories that implicates CD81 as a key component of the HCV receptor complex (4, 11, 20, 23, 29, 55).
Recently, we along with others have shown that transfection of Huh7 hepatoma cells with the JFH1 genome yields virus particles infectious both in vivo and in vitro (51, 56). In addition, chimeric constructs, consisting of the core to NS2 coding region of the J6CF (GT2a) or the Con1 (GT1b) isolate, and the remaining genome segments derived from JFH1 replicated efficiently and produced infectious particles (24; T. Pietschmann, A. Karl, G. Kontsondakis, A. Shaviuskaya, S. Vallis, E. Steinmann, K. Abid, F. Negro, M. Dreux, F.-L. Cosset, and R. Bartenschlager, unpublished data). This novel system now allows characterization of the early steps of HCV infection in cell culture by using authentic virus particles. To facilitate these studies we have constructed bicistronic genomes encoding a firefly luciferase reporter and shown that these genomes also support production of infectious particles (51). In this study we performed a detailed characterization of these reporter viruses, constructed several chimeras, and used this system to study the early steps of HCV infection.
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Plasmid construction.
The plasmids pFK-Luc-JFH1 and pFK-Luc-JFH1/
E1-E2 were described recently (51) and encode bicistronic reporter constructs of the full-length JFH1 genome (GenBank accession number AB047639) or a variant thereof with an in-frame deletion of 351 amino acids encompassing most of the coding region of E1 and E2 (amino acids 217 to 567) (Fig. 1A). In both cases and in all other constructs used in this study, the HCV polyprotein-coding region is located in the second cistron and is expressed via an internal ribosome entry site (IRES) element derived from the encephalomyocarditis virus (EMCV). The first cistron contains the firefly luciferase reporter gene fused via an AscI site to the JFH1-derived 5' NTR and the first 16 codons of the JFH1 core coding region (nucleotides 1 to 390). To allow simple generation of RNA transcripts with authentic 5' and 3' ends, the NTRs are flanked by a T7 promoter and by the genomic ribozyme of hepatitis delta virus, respectively. Constructs pFK-Luc-Jc1 and pFK-Luc-Con1 encode chimeric HCV polyproteins which consist of codons 1 to 846 derived from J6/CF (GenBank accession number AF177036 [53]) or, respectively, codons 1 to 842 from Con1 (GenBank accession number AJ238799 [26]) combined with codons 847 to 3033 of JFH1. As a consequence, in these chimeras core, E1, E2, p7, and the amino terminal 33 amino acids of NS2 are derived from J6CF or Con1, whereas the C-terminal part of NS2 and the remaining proteins are from JFH1. The choice of this particular junction was based on a mapping analysis of different crossover sites between Con1 and JFH1, which will be described elsewhere (Pietschmann, Karl, Kontsondakis, Shaviuskaya, Vallis, Steinmann, Abid, Negro, Dreux, Cosset, and Bartenschlager, unpublished).
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FIG. 1. Genetic organization and replication of JFH1 and JFH1-derived luciferase reporter constructs. (A) A schematic representation of parental JFH1 genome is given at the top, and derivates with the reporter gene used in this study are shown below. The 5' and 3' NTR are drawn as thick black lines, and the JFH1 polyprotein is depicted as an open box; individual proteins are separated by vertical lines. In the case of reporter constructs, viral proteins are expressed via an internal EMCV IRES (gray bar). Note that Luc-JFH1/ E1-E2 carries a large in frame deletion in the coding region for E1-E2, which is known to inactivate virus particle formation (51). The luciferase gene (hatched) is fused in frame to the 16 N-terminal residues of the JFH1 core coding region (white). Chimeric genomes are depicted with J6CF (GT 2a) and Con1 (GT 1b) proteins in gray and black boxes, respectively. The junction between the different isolates is located within NS2. (B) RNA replication of JFH1, Luc-JFH1, and Luc-JFH1/ E1-E2 as determined by Northern hybridization. In vitro transcribed RNAs of given constructs were transfected into Huh7-Lunet cells that were harvested at the time points specified above the panel. Total RNA was prepared and analyzed with an HCV-specific probe. Equal sample loading was monitored by detection of ß-actin RNA (bottom). As controls, total RNA of naive Huh7-Lunet cells (N) and serial dilutions of in vitro transcribed RNAs spiked into total RNA of naïve cells were loaded in parallel (lanes 1 to 4). (C) Quantification of the Northern blot shown in panel B by phosphor imaging. The amount of HCV RNA/µg of total RNA was calculated by comparison with the controls loaded in parallel. Values were corrected for differences in loading by using ß-actin signals. (D) Luciferase activity in transiently transfected Huh7-Lunet cells. Transfected cells were lysed at given time points, and the amount of luciferase activity was determined and is given in relative light units (RLU) per well (each point is the average value of duplicate wells; the error bars show standard deviations of the means).
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Electroporation and luciferase assays. Single-cell suspensions of Huh7-Lunet cells were prepared by trypsinization of monolayers and subsequent resuspension with DMEM complete. Cells were washed with phosphate-buffered saline (PBS), counted, and resuspended at 107 cells per ml in Cytomix (48) containing 2 mM ATP and 5 mM glutathione. Unless otherwise stated, 10 µg of in vitro transcribed RNA was mixed with 400 µl of the cell suspension by pipetting and then electroporated and immediately transferred to 20 ml of complete DMEM. Subsequently, the cells were seeded at a density of 4.16 x 104 cells/cm2, which corresponds to 2 ml of the cell suspension per well of a six-well plate. Electroporation conditions were 960 µF and 270 V with a Gene Pulser system (Bio-Rad, Munich, Germany) and a cuvette with a gap width of 0.4 cm (Bio-Rad). For assaying the luciferase activity, cells were washed once with PBS, lysed directly on the plate with 1 ml of ice-cold lysis buffer (0.1% Triton X-100, 25 mM glycylglycine, 15 mM MgSO4, 4 mM EGTA, and 1 mM DTT; pH 7.8), and frozen. Upon thawing, lysates were resuspended by pipetting, and 100 µl was mixed with 360 µl of assay buffer (25 mM glycylglycine, 15 mM MgSO4, 4 mM EGTA, 1 mM DTT, 2 mM ATP, 15 mM K2PO4, pH 7.8) and, after the addition of 200 µl of a luciferin solution (200 µM luciferin, 25 mM glycylglycine, pH 8.0), measured in a luminometer (Lumat LB9507; Berthold, Freiburg, Germany) for 20 s. All luciferase assays were done at least in duplicate measurements.
Preparation of total RNA and Northern blot analysis. Total RNA was prepared by a single-step isolation method as described previously (9). Three micrograms of total RNA was mixed with glyoxal, dimethyl sulfoxide, and sodium phosphate buffer (pH 7.0) at a final concentration of 5.9%, 50%, and 10 mM, respectively, and denatured for 1 h at 50°C. Samples were separated by denaturing agarose gel electrophoresis, and RNA was transferred to positively charged nylon membranes (Hybond-N+; Amersham Biosciences, Freiburg, Germany) with 50 mM NaOH, and cross-linked by UV irradiation. Positive-strand HCV RNA was detected by hybridization with a 32P-labeled negative-sense riboprobe complementary to nucleotides 6273 to 9678 of the HCV JFH1 isolate. Hybridization with a ß-actin-specific riboprobe was used to monitor equal sample loading in each lane of the gel.
Preparation of virus stocks. Huh7-Lunet cells were transfected by electroporation with reporter constructs as described above. Culture fluid of transfected cells was harvested and cleared by passing through 0.45-µm-pore-size filters. In the case of Luc-JFH1 and Luc-Con1, medium was harvested 72 to 96 h after transfection, whereas maximal yield for Luc-Jc1 was obtained at 48 h. Virus preparations were used directly or stored at 4°C or 80°C. We noted that each cycle of freeze and thaw results in a twofold reduction of infectivity. As the virus is stable at 4°C for at least several days, for short-term storage virus preparations were kept at this temperature.
Preparation of retroviral pseudo-particles.
Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-based pseudotypes bearing vesicular stomatitis virus glycoproteins (VSV-G) or amphotropic murine leukemia virus envelope protein (A-MLV) were generated by calcium phosphate-based cotransfection of 293T cells (12). Briefly, 2.5 x 106 293T cells were seeded in 10-cm diameter plates 1 day before transfection with 2.7 µg of envelope protein expression construct (pczVSV-G [21] or pHIT456 [7]), 8.1 µg of HIV-Gag-Pol expression construct (pCMV
R8.74 [13]), and 8.1 µg of a firefly luciferase transducing retroviral vector by using CalPhos transfection reagents (Becton Dickinson, Heidelberg, Germany). The retroviral vector employed is a derivate of pHR'-CMV-GFP (57) (where CMV is cytomegalovirus and GFP is green fluorescent protein), which was generated by replacing the GFP gene in the parental vector by the gene encoding firefly luciferase. The medium was replaced 8 h after transfection. Supernatants containing the pseudo-particles were harvested 48 h later, cleared by passage through 0.45-µm-pore-size filters, and used for infection assays. Luciferase activity in the infected cells was measured 72 h after inoculation as described above. Envelope protein expression plasmids and HIV-based vectors were kindly provided by D. Lindemann (Technical University Dresden, Germany) and D. Trono (Swiss Institute of Technology Lausanne, Switzerland).
Indirect immunofluorescence. Cells were seeded on glass coverslips in 24-well plates at a density of 2 x 104 per well 24 h before infection, followed by inoculation with 250 µl of filtered cell culture supernatant. After 48 h, cells were fixed with 3% paraformaldehyde in PBS and permeabilized with 0.5% Triton X-100 in PBS. Immunostaining of NS3 was performed according to standard protocols by using a rabbit polyclonal serum directed against the helicase domain at a dilution of 1:1,000 in PBS supplemented with 5% normal goat serum. Bound primary antibodies were detected using goat antibodies conjugated to AlexaFluor 546 at a dilution of 1:1,000 in PBS with 5% normal goat serum. DNA was stained with DAPI (4',6'-diamidino-2-phenylindole) (Molecular Probes, Karlsruhe, Germany). To determine infectivity titers, virus preparations were serially diluted 10-fold and used to inoculate Huh7-Lunet cells. The number of HCV antigen-positive cell foci obtained at a given dilution per inoculated well was used to calculate the tissue culture infectious units.
Luciferase infection assays. For standard infection assays, cells were seeded at a density of 4 x 104 per well of a 12-well plate 24 h prior to inoculation with 500 µl of virus preparation. We noted that maximum infectivity can be achieved when cells are inoculated for 4 h at 37°C. Therefore, unless otherwise stated, cells were inoculated for 4 h at this temperature and lysed in 350 µl of lysis buffer 72 h later. Luciferase activity was determined as described above. For the experiments analyzing the kinetics of HCV entry (see Fig. 9), we used six-well plates and inoculated with 1 ml of virus preparation in order to improve the sensitivity of the assay.
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FIG. 9. Kinetics of inhibitory activity exerted by various compounds. (A) Schematic drawing of the experimental setup of the experiment depicted in panel B. Inhibition of Luc-Jc1 entry into Huh7-Lunet cells by heparin (50 µg/ml), CD81-specific antibodies (JS-81; 2 µg/ml) and ConA (5 nM) was compared using five different experimental protocols (indicated by roman numerals I through V). Virus binding to target cells was performed for 1 h at 4°C in the absence (II to IV) or in the presence (I) of compounds. Subsequently, cells were washed with PBS and shifted to 37°C to allow entry to proceed. Depending on the protocol, inhibitors were added directly or 1, 2 or 3 h thereafter (II, III, IV, and V, respectively). Dotted lines indicate the time interval during which an inhibitor was present; black arrows indicate the addition and removal of virus inoculum (B). Efficiency of infection using the compounds given below the bars and the protocols described for panel A was determined by luciferase assays 72 h postinfection and is expressed relative to infection in the absence of inhibitors (black bar). Mean values of two wells and the standard errors of the means are given. (C) A schematic drawing of the experimental setup is depicted at the top of the panel. Huh7-Lunet cells were incubated with Luc-Jc1 virus for various times at 37°C in the presence of heparin (50 µg/ml; left) or anti-CD81 antibodies (2 µg/ml; right) or in the absence of either compound (black diamonds and open squares, respectively). Subsequently, virus inocula were removed; cells were washed with PBS and supplemented with fresh culture medium containing either heparin (50 µg/ml) or anti-CD81 antibodies (2 µg/ml). Four hours later, culture medium was replaced by medium without inhibitors. The efficiency of infection was measured by luciferase assays 48 h later and is given for each time point relative to control infections performed in the same way but always without inhibitor. Mean values of two wells and the standard errors of the means are given.
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Antibodies and sources of inhibitors of HCV entry. Heparin sodium salt from bovine lung (Calbiochem, Darmstadt, Germany), heparan sulfate sodium salt from bovine kidney (Sigma-Aldrich, Munich, Germany), chondroitin sulfate A sodium salt from bovine trachea (Sigma-Aldrich), chondroitin sulfate B sodium salt from porcine intestinal mucosa (Sigma-Aldrich), and chondroitin sulfate C sodium salt from shark cartilage (Sigma-Aldrich) were used in infection assays at concentrations given in the text. JS-81 (Becton Dickinson), 1.3.3.22 (Ancell Immunology Research Products, Bayport, MN), and WM15 (Becton Dickinson) are isotype-matched (immunoglobulin G1) mouse monoclonal antibodies directed against CD81 (JS-81 and 1.3.3.22) and CD13 (WM15) and were used as given in the text.
Treatment of target cells with glycosaminoglycans (GAG) lyases. Huh7-Lunet cells were washed with PBS and then incubated with a buffer consisting of 20 mM Tris-HCl pH 6.8, 50 mM NaCl, 4 mM CaCl2, 0.01% bovine serum albumin (BSA) (mock treated) or the same buffer containing 0.5 U/ml heparinase I (Sigma-Aldrich), or heparinase III (Sigma-Aldrich) or chondroitinase ABC (Sigma-Aldrich). After incubation for 1 h at 37°C, cells were washed three times with PBS and then inoculated with 500 µl of reporter virus preparation for 1 h. Forty-eight hours later, cells were lysed in 350 µl of lysis buffer, and luciferase activity was measured as described above.
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Next, we assessed the ability of the reporter construct Luc-JFH1 to release infectious particles and the possibility to quantify their infectivity by using reporter assays. To this end, Huh7-Lunet cells were transfected with the parental JFH1, the Luc-JFH1, and the Luc-JFH1
E1-E2 genomes, and release of virus particles and infectivity into the culture fluid were quantified up to 96 h posttransfection by using a core-specific ELISA, immunofluorescence-based virus titrations, and reporter assays where applicable (Fig. 2A). Equivalent transfection efficiency was monitored by measuring intracellular core expression 4 h posttransfection (data not shown). For all constructs, at this time point neither infectivity nor release of core protein above the cutoff value of the ELISA (1.5 pg/ml) was detected (Fig. 2A, upper left and right graphs). Accordingly, transduction of luciferase reporter activity to cells inoculated with these supernatants was not observed (Fig. 2A, lower left graph). As expected, transfection of Luc-JFH1
E1-E2 did not yield infectious virus particles. Correspondingly, core protein release was below the detection limit for most of the time course except for 96 h posttransfection, when some low-level nonspecific core release that was not associated with infectivity was measured. Importantly, Luc-JFH1
E1-E2-conditioned culture medium did not transfer reporter activity to inoculated cells, demonstrating that nonspecific transduction does not occur (Fig. 2A, lower left graph). In contrast, cells transfected with the parental JFH1 genome and Luc-JFH1 produced easily detectable levels of infectious virus particles, with a peak of infectivity (ca. 1,000 and 350 tissue culture infectious units/ml, respectively) associated with the culture fluid collected 72 to 96 h posttransfection (Fig. 2A). Similar to the delayed kinetics of RNA replication displayed by Luc-JFH1 (Fig. 1), release of infectivity and core protein was somewhat slower and less efficient compared to the parental genome. Importantly, the infectious titer of Luc-JFH1 as measured by the immunofluorescence-based limiting dilution assay correlated well with the amount of reporter activity observed 72 h postinoculation with the respective Luc-JFH1-conditioned culture fluid.
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FIG. 2. Release of core protein and infectivity upon transfection of JFH1 constructs into Huh7-Lunet cells. (A) In vitro transcribed RNAs of JFH1 (black circles), Luc-JFH1 (black diamonds), and Luc-JFH1 E1-E2 (open squares) were transfected into Huh7-Lunet cells, and cell-free culture fluids were collected at 4 h to 96 h posttransfection. The amount of core protein present in the respective culture medium was determined employing a core-specific immunoassay (upper left graph). In parallel, supernatants were used to inoculate naïve Huh7-Lunet cells, and infectivity associated with the respective samples was quantified by using an immunofluorescence-based limiting dilution assay (upper right graph) and (where applicable) by assessing the amount of reporter activity present in target cells 72 h postinoculation (lower left graph). The gray lines indicate the background of the reporter assay from naïve Huh7-Lunet cells and the detection limit of the core ELISA, respectively. Mean values of two experiments are given; error bars represent standard errors of the means. (B) Huh7-Lunet cells were inoculated with serial dilutions of Luc-JFH1-containing medium or with undiluted Luc-JFH1/ E1-E2 culture fluid and lysed at the indicated time points postinoculation to quantify luciferase activity. Mean values of two independent wells are given (error bars show standard deviations). The gray line indicates the background of the assay determined by measuring mock-infected cells.
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It has been reported previously that in Huh7 cells the efficiency of RNA replication attained by subgenomic Con1-derived replicons is tightly linked to cell growth. While maximum activity is observed in exponentially growing cells, HCV copy numbers rapidly decline when cells reach confluence (18, 35). In order to identify optimal conditions for production of high-titer reporter virus stocks, we investigated if and to what extent this may affect production of infectious virus particles. To this end, we transfected Huh7-Lunet cells with Luc-JFH1 RNA and seeded the cells at different densities into parallel culture dishes (Fig. 3). Subsequently, we harvested cells and supernatants at regular intervals up to 144 h posttransfection and measured replication in transfected cells by luciferase assays (Fig. 3, left graph). Moreover, we determined the quantity of infectious virus particles present in the culture supernatant at a given time point by inoculating naïve Huh7-Lunet cells and assessing luciferase expression 72 h later (Fig. 3, right graph). Four hours posttransfection, reporter activity varied roughly according to the number of cells seeded. Irrespective of the cell density, we observed an approximately twofold increase of luciferase activity between 4 and 24 h. The steepest rise of reporter activity occurred between 24 and 48 h posttransfection, indicating that during this phase RNA replication was most efficient. When cells were seeded at high density (8.32 x 104 and 4.16 x 104 cells/cm2), peak luciferase activity was reached already 48 and 72 h after transfection, respectively, and declined rapidly thereafter. In contrast, in cells seeded at lower density, reporter activity reached a plateau at 72 h, which was maintained until 144 h (2.08 x 104 cells/cm2); reporter activity rising until 120 and 144 h postseeding when cells were seeded at a density of 1.04 x 104 and 0.52 x 104 cells/cm2, respectively. Not surprisingly, the different seeding conditions markedly affected the kinetics and efficiency of release of infectious virus. In all cases, no infectivity could be detected in the culture fluid harvested 24 h after transfection, whereas at 48 h it was readily measurable. At this time point, toward the end of the most efficient period of intracellular RNA replication, the virus titers differed by about 20-fold, depending on the seeding conditions. Highest titers were generally reached 24 h subsequent to the respective intracellular peak of reporter activity, and highest overall titers could be obtained by seeding cells at high density (8.32 x 104 and 4.16 x 104 cells/cm2). Together, these data indicate that Luc-JFH1 replicates efficiently in subconfluent Huh7-Lunet cells and that the efficiency of RNA replication decreases when transfected cells reach confluence. Moreover, the amount of infectivity present in the culture fluid is closely linked to the number of virus-producing cells and intracellular RNA replication level within a given cell, and as a consequence maximum titers can be obtained concomitant to or shortly after cells reach confluence.
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FIG. 3. Influence of cell growth on replication and release of infectious Luc-JFH1 virus particles. Huh7-Lunet cells were transfected with Luc-JFH1 RNA and seeded into multiple culture dishes with the given cell density (8.32 x 104 to 0.52 x 104 cells/cm2). Luciferase activity in transfected cells was determined at the indicated time points posttransfection (left). Cell-free supernatants from cells seeded with the given densities were collected 24 to 144 h after transfection and used to inoculate naïve Huh7-Lunet cells. Luciferase activity in the inoculated cells was determined 72 h later (right). Mean values of two independent wells measured are given (error bars represent the standard errors of the means).
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FIG. 4. Replication and production of infectious virus particles upon transfection of chimeric reporter viruses. (A) Replication kinetics of given HCV genomes and the deletion mutant as determined by luciferase assay measured at various time points posttransfection. Release of core protein (B) and infectivity into the supernatant (C) were quantified by using a core-specific immunoassay and by inoculating naïve Huh7-Lunet cells and subsequent luciferase assays, respectively. ELISAs were performed in singleton; for reporter assays, two independent wells were analyzed, and mean values are given (error bars represent the standard errors of the means).
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FIG. 5. Neutralization of genotype 1b and 2a HCV infection by different CD81-specific antibodies. Huh7-Lunet cells were infected with reporter viruses in the presence of increasing amounts of CD81-specific (JS-81 and 1.3.3.22) antibodies or isotype-matched control antibodies (WM15) directed against CD13, an irrelevant surface molecule on Huh7-Lunet cells. Inoculation was terminated after 4 h by washing cells with PBS and supplementing them with fresh culture medium without antibodies. Luciferase activity was determined 72 h postinfection and is expressed relative to the amount observed in the absence of inhibitory antibodies (hatched bar). White, gray, and black bars represent infections in the presence of antibodies at a concentration of 0.08 µg/ml, 0.4 µg/ml, and 2 µg/ml, respectively. The graphs (from top to bottom) depict results obtained with Luc-JFH1, Luc-Con1, and Luc-Jc1 particles, respectively. Mean values of duplicate wells are given (error bars represent standard errors of the means).
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TABLE 1. Competition of various glycosaminoglycans with HCV infectiona
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FIG. 6. Pretreatment of target cells with entry inhibitors. Huh7-Lunet cells were incubated with regular medium or medium supplemented with heparin (50 µg/ml) or antibodies against CD81 (JS-81; 2 µg/ml) for 1 h at 4°C. Subsequently, cells were washed with PBS and inoculated with reporter viruses. Infection was quantified as described in the legend of Fig. 5.
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FIG. 7. Infection of Huh7-Lunet cells after pretreatment with GAG-lyases. Huh7-Lunet cells were treated with buffer alone (mock) or with buffer containing 0.5 U/ml heparinase I, heparinase III, or chondroitinase ABC for 1 h at 37°C. Subsequently, cells were washed three times with PBS and then inoculated with Luc-Jc1 for 1 h at 37°C. The efficiency of infection was determined 48 h postinoculation as described in the legend of Fig. 5.
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FIG. 8. Susceptibility of HCV entry to drugs inhibiting endosomal acidification. (A) Huh7-Lunet cells were mock-treated (open bars) or incubated for 1 h with medium containing 10 mM NH4Cl or 5 nM ConA (gray or black bars, respectively), washed with medium, and infected with different viruses for 4 h in the presence or absence of the drugs. As control for pH-dependent or -independent virus entry, infections with retroviral pseudo-particles bearing VSV-G or A-MLV envelope proteins, respectively, were performed in the same way. Luciferase activity was determined 72 h postinfection and is expressed relative to the values obtained in the absence of drugs. Mean values of duplicates and the standard errors of the means are given. (B) ConA and NH4Cl do not interfere with HCV RNA replication. Huh7-Lunet cells carrying selectable JFH1-based luciferase reporter replicons were seeded into replicate wells. At 24 h after seeding, cells were treated with drugs for 5 h. RNA replication was monitored by measuring reporter activity at the given time points posttreatment. Mean values of duplicates and the standard errors of the means are given.
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To further distinguish the mode of action exerted by heparin and antibodies against CD81, we performed a series of infection experiments with virus inoculation at 37°C. At this temperature, virus attachment, receptor interactions, and all subsequent steps of the entry process should occur normally and proceed at the regular rate. We inoculated Huh7-Lunet cells for various durations at 37°C in the presence or absence of heparin or anti-CD81 antibodies, respectively (Fig. 9C). Subsequently, cells were washed and in all cases exposed to medium with inhibitors for 4 h before they were washed again and supplemented with normal growth medium. The efficiency of infection under the respective conditions was compared to control infections with the corresponding duration of inoculation in the absence of compound during and after inoculation. As expected, characteristic for a compound blocking virus attachment, heparin competed with productive infection only when it was present during virus inoculation (Fig. 9C, left graph). In contrast, antibodies against CD81 potently interfered with infection also when added after virus binding at 37°C (Fig. 9C, right graph). Even following an extended binding phase at 37°C, more than 60% of bound virus particles were susceptible to neutralization by anti-CD81. In summary, these data suggest that CD81 acts at a stage subsequent to initial virus binding.
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Characterizing the optimal conditions for production of reporter virus stocks, we observed that Luc-JFH1 replication rapidly declines when cells reach confluence. The fact that the infectious titer decreases accordingly with a delay of about 24 h indicates that there is a tight linkage between replication and production of infectious particles, and it has important practical implications for generating high-titer reporter virus stocks. It is currently not known why HCV replication is limited in confluent Huh7 cells. Besides cell death due to overconfluence, the observations that nucleoside triphosphate pools are low in resting cells (44) and that HCV IRES activity varies during the cell cycle and is lowest in the G0 phase of resting cells may explain these findings (19).
In order to allow comparative analysis of HCV infection, we have constructed two further reporter viruses with Con1-derived (GT 1b) and J6-derived (GT 2a) structural proteins. Overall, we found a very similar behavior of Con1, J6CF, and JFH1 particles. This suggests that the mode of entry into Huh7-Lunet cells, which involves interactions with cell surface-exposed GAGs, CD81, and a pH-dependent step, is conserved between these isolates. As pointed out above, evidence from work with HCVpp and authentic HCV particles based on receptor competition studies using antibodies and soluble forms of the large extra cellular loop of CD81, RNA silencing of CD81, and ectopic expression in HepG2 cells, which renders them permissive for HCV, clearly indicates that CD81 is a key molecule required for productive infection by HCV (4, 20, 24, 51, 56). In contrast, however, the exact role of CD81 in the course of virus infection is as yet ill defined, and for HCV the precise sequence of events during entry is not known. The fact that HCV E2 binds CD81 together with the observation that patient-derived virus particles can be captured using the large extra cellular loop of CD81 (36) is consistent with a role of CD81 for virus attachment and may explain why reagents blocking this interaction inhibit infection with HCVpp and authentic HCV particles. However, Cormier and coworkers recently noted that binding of patient-derived HCV to human target cells was not inhibited by anti-CD81 monoclonal antibody and, moreover, demonstrated that HCVpp particles that were prebound to Huh7 cells at low temperature were fully susceptible to neutralization when anti-CD81 antibodies were added subsequent to virus binding (11). In line with these data, we observed potent inhibition of Luc-Jc1 infection irrespective of whether antibodies were added prior to, during, or after virus binding to Huh7-Lunet cells. Although we cannot rule out that a high-affinity interaction between the antibodies and CD81 may displace bound virions from the target cells, these data suggest that the interaction with CD81 may not necessarily be required for virus attachment but, rather, for a postbinding step such as routing the particle into the endocytic pathway or priming it for the pH-dependent fusion mechanism as described for avian leucosis virus (31). In that respect it is worth mentioning that recent data provided by Tscherne and coworkers are in agreement with ours, demonstrating that HCV enters Huh7 cells in a pH-dependent fashion (47). Moreover, these authors illustrate that HCV, similar to the related bovine viral diarrhea virus, requires a priming event before pH-dependent entry can occur. While it is currently not known which "signal" (e.g., receptor interaction) activates the virus to undergo pH-triggered fusion, the mode of inhibition exerted by antibodies against CD81 is, in principle, compatible with the notion that CD81 interaction serves such a function.
Besides CD81, several receptor candidates have been proposed to be essential for HCV entry. These may act in combination to mediate adhesion to target cells and could in a programmed series of steps eventually result in productive infection. Proteoglycans carrying certain types of GAGs were proposed to play a role for HCV attachment (3). While such negatively charged moieties in principle could promote particle association with the target cell predominantly via nonspecific electrostatic interactions with positively charged groups on the virus surface, susceptibility to herpes simplex virus 1 infection requires not only heparan sulfate chains but also the presence of unique monosaccharide sequences (41). Moreover, dengue virus, like HCV a member of the family Flaviviridae, uses a highly sulfated type of heparan sulfate as a cellular receptor (8). Similarly, Barth and colleagues recently demonstrated that heparin and liver-derived highly sulfated heparan sulfate but not other soluble GAGs inhibited attachment and entry of insect cell-derived HCV virus-like particles, suggesting that highly sulfated GAGs may be important for HCV attachment (3). Callens and colleagues, however, did not observe an interaction of detergent-solubilized E1-E2 complexes derived from HCVpp with heparin and, since HCV glycoprotein complexes derived from cell lysates bound heparin, concluded that the heparin-binding domain may no longer be accessible on mature glycoproteins on the surface of HCVpp (6). On the other hand, HCV particles can efficiently be purified from patient sera by using heparin, and GAG-binding sites within E2 have been characterized (32, 54). It is not clear if differences in glycoprotein structure between the particles are responsible for this discrepancy, but it is possible that virus particle-associated glycoprotein complexes generally have a lower affinity for heparin than cell-derived complexes. This residual affinity appears to be sufficient to purify serum-derived HCV but may be insufficient to allow detection by the pull-down assay employed for HCVpp-derived glycoprotein complexes. Nevertheless, together these data suggest that HCV can interact with highly sulfated GAGs, which may contribute to its cell adhesion and consequently to virus invasion of target cells. Our data demonstrating that heparin, but not other soluble GAGs which differ in their degree of sulfatation and the composition of disaccharide units (38), competes with productive entry of HCV virus particles into Huh7-Lunet cells are in line with this model and suggests that interactions with a specific highly sulfated type of GAG may contribute to efficient HCV infection. The finding that heparin inhibits infection only when administered during virus binding and not afterwards or when applied to the cells before the addition of virions implies that it acts via binding to positively charged residues on the surface of the virus particle, thus blocking interactions required for effective attachment. While in principle this binding could nonspecifically block interaction with any viral receptor, the observation that pretreatment of target cells with heparinase I and III reduces the efficiency of HCV infection whereas chondroitinase ABC exerts no effect lends further support to the notion that interactions with specific highly sulfated GAG residues are involved in infection. However, considering the moderate inhibition by heparin and treatment with GAG lyases, it is unlikely (at least in the case of Huh7-Lunet cells) that highly sulfated GAGs serve as the principal attachment sites for HCV.
In summary, in this study we have characterized the properties of JFH1-based HCV luciferase reporter viruses and validated the system by applying it to dissect the early steps of HCV infection using viral particles from three different strains. Although the JFH1 isolate is certainly exceptional among other HCV isolates with respect to the extraordinary replication efficiency, in terms of virus entry, JFH1-derived particles did not deviate from Con1- or J6CF-based virus particles. This suggests that at least these strains utilize a common entry strategy. The novel reporter viruses should be a valuable instrument to further dissect HCV entry and to develop specific inhibitors.
This work was supported by grants from the VIRGIL European Network of Excellence on Antiviral Drug Resistance (LSHM-CT-2004-503359), the European HepCVax cluster (QLK2-CT-2002-01329), and the Bristol-Myers Squibb Foundation and by the Sonderforschungsbereich 638 (Teilprojekt A5).
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