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Journal of Virology, August 2006, p. 8030-8037, Vol. 80, No. 16
0022-538X/06/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JVI.00474-06
Copyright © 2006, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Institute of Comparative Medicine, University of Glasgow Veterinary School, Glasgow, United Kingdom,1 Moredun Research Institute, Edinburgh, United Kingdom,2 Istituto Zooprofilattico Sperimentale degli Abruzzi e Molise, Teramo, Italy,3 Facultad de Veterinaria, Universidad de Zaragoza, Zaragoza, Spain4
Received 7 March 2006/ Accepted 30 May 2006
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Among oncogenic retroviruses, JSRV appears to employ unique mechanisms to induce cell transformation. The JSRV envelope glycoprotein (Env) is an oncoprotein (1, 20, 33) which induces transformation of a variety of primary and established cell lines in vitro (1, 9, 18-20, 33, 44) via the activation of the phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase/Akt and MEK/mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathways by as-yet-uncharacterized mechanisms (18, 19, 27). In addition, immunodeficient mice inoculated with an adeno-associated virus vector expressing the JSRV Env develop lung adenocarcinoma, indicating that the JSRV Env can also behave as an oncoprotein in vivo, although the same vector is not efficient in inducing tumors in immunocompetent mice (41).
The role of the JSRV Env in OPA tumorigenesis in sheep, the natural host of JSRV infection, is not completely clear. OPA is experimentally reproducible when lambs are inoculated intratracheally with concentrated virus preparations obtained from lung secretions (or lung fluid) of OPA-affected sheep or from supernatant of cells transfected with JSRV infectious molecular clones (12, 29, 35, 37). The incubation period, in this experimental model of OPA, can be as short as a few weeks, suggesting that the viral Env can function as a dominant oncogene in vivo as well as in vitro. However, naturally occurring OPA is characterized by a very long incubation period lasting even a few years (6, 39, 40). Diseases with a long incubation time, in retrovirus-induced tumorigenesis, are often associated with the classical mechanisms of insertional activation. This is the case with, for example, mice, chickens, and cats with leukemias induced by Moloney murine leukemia virus, avian leukosis virus, and feline leukemia virus, respectively (34). However, common integration sites have not consistently been found in OPA (7) and tumors appear to be multiclonal (30).
We have established recently that, under natural conditions, the majority of JSRV-infected animals do not develop OPA lesions during their commercial lifespan (6). In addition, it is relatively difficult to find JSRV in the lungs of infected sheep with no tumor lesions, suggesting that the target cells for JSRV transformation might not necessarily be the reservoirs of virus infection in many cases (6). Thus, many aspects of the pathogenesis of OPA need further clarification.
In this study, we wanted to investigate if expression of the JSRV Env was sufficient to induce lung adenocarcinoma in sheep, the natural host of JSRV infection. To this end, we derived a JSRV replication-defective virus (JS-RD) that upon integration expresses only the viral env under the control of the JSRV long terminal repeat (LTR). JS-RD was able to induce OPA lesions in 4/5 of the inoculated animals, demonstrating that the viral envelope is the primary determinant of oncogenesis in the natural host of JSRV infection.
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env has most of env deleted (between nt 5479 and nt 7074). pGPP+3' has the R-U5 region and the untranslated gag region (nt 129 to 263) deleted. pGPP is derived from pGPP+3', in which the JSRV env and 3' LTR have been replaced by the constitutive transport element (CTE) of Mason-Pfizer monkey virus (MPMV) and the simian virus 40 polyadenylation signal; in addition, a Kozak-like sequence has been added in front of the gag open reading frame. The MPMV CTE was derived from plasmid pGem7fz()MPMV250, a gift from Marie-Louise Hammarskjöld. pGPP+5' is identical to pGPP, with the exception of the addition in the former of the R-U5 and untranslated gag regions. pGPP-MX is derived from pGPP+5' by the deletion, from the latter, of the 5' gag untranslated region (between nt 129 and 263). pCDNA3-HA-Sam68 is an expression plasmid for the RNA binding protein Sam68 (43) and was a gift from David Shalloway.
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FIG. 1. Schematic representation of the plasmids used in this study. JS-RD particles were derived by transfecting 293T cells with pJS-XE and pGPP-MX. VR1, variable region 1; CMV, cytomegalovirus immediate early promoter; , packaging signal; MCS, multiple cloning site.
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Animals. Animal experiments were performed at the Moredun Research Institute (Penicuik, Scotland) and at the Istituto Zooprofilattico Sperimentale dell'Abruzzo e Molise (Teramo, Italy) in accordance with local approved protocols regulating experimental use of animals. Two independent studies were performed using a total of 11 lambs. In study 1, two lambs were inoculated with JS-RD and two lambs with concentrated supernatants derived from 293T transfected with the JSRV packaging plasmid alone. In study 2, three lambs were inoculated with JS-RD, two with JSRV, and two with concentrated supernatants derived from 293T transfected with the JSRV packaging plasmid alone. All lambs were inoculated intratracheally during the first week after birth. Animals of study 1 were kept for 12 months before being euthanized. In study 2, animals were euthanized at 8 months postinoculation with the exception of one of the lambs injected with JSRV and one of those injected with JS-RD, which were killed at 7 weeks and 4.5 months postinoculation, respectively, because they were showing clinical signs of respiratory distress. At the postmortem examination, tissues were collected from seven distinct anatomical regions of the lungs: the cranial part of the left cranial lobe, caudal part of left cranial lobe, left diaphragmatic lobe, right diaphragmatic lobe, right middle lobe, right cranial lobe, and accessory lobe. Tissue samples were excised from the organ and cut into two portions: one was snap-frozen and stored at 80°C, while the other was fixed in formalin for subsequent histopathological and immunohistochemical examination.
Histopathology and immunohistochemistry. Four- to six-micrometer lung sections were stained with hematoxylin and eosin and examined by light microscopy for tumor lesions. Sections were taken from paraffin blocks of tissues collected from seven anatomically distinct regions, as described above. Sections were examined also by immunohistochemistry for the presence of JSRV Env as previously described, using the EnVision (DAKO) detection system (6, 35). OPA tumor sections were used as positive controls. The activation of MAPK Erk1/2 signaling pathway was detected in tumors induced by JS-RD and JSRV by immunohistochemistry employing rabbit polyclonal anti-phospho-Erk1/2 (Cell Signaling) as described previously (11).
JS-RD- and JSRV-specific PCR assays. The presence of the JS-RD in the inoculated lambs was assessed by PCR with primers designed to amplify specifically the JS-XE genome or JSRV. Four PCR tests were used: two were JS-XE specific (PCRs no. 1 and 2) and the other two were JSRV specific (PCRs no. 3 and 4). Both the JS-XE- and JSRV-specific PCRs employed the same forward primers designed in variable region 1 of JSRV. Reverse primers for the JS-XE-specific PCRs exploited the presence of a multiple-cloning-site region present upstream of the env gene only in JS-XE. For the JSRV-specific PCRs (PCRs no. 3 and 4), reverse primers were designed for a portion of gag not present in JS-XE. Sequences of the PCR primers employed in this study are available on request. The presence of PCR inhibitors or degraded DNA was ruled out for all samples that were tested by amplifying JSRV-related endogenous retroviruses (enJSRVs) gag (PCR no. 5) as already described (24).
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We initially optimized the combination of constructs that could produce the largest amount of JS-RD virions in vitro. A schematic representation of the plasmids used is shown in Fig. 1. Because of the lack of a suitable tissue culture system for the propagation of JSRV, we measured virion production by quantifying virus particles released into the supernatant of transfected cells by Western blotting. The first packaging construct tried was pGPP, which has a cytomegalovirus promoter driving expression of JSRV Gag, Pro, and Pol followed by the MPMV CTE (for optimal RNA export) and a heterologous poly(A) signal (Fig. 1). However, production of viral particles in cells transfected by pGPP was approximately 50 times less abundant than that in cells transfected with the expression plasmid for JSRV (Fig. 2A and B). Restoration of the 3' end of the JSRV genome in pGPP+3' did not increase the production of viral particles, suggesting that the lack of env and 3' LTR in pGPP was not responsible for the defect shown by this construct. Indeed, transfection of 293T cells with pGPP+5' produced quantities of viral particles comparable to JSRV (78% ± 8.1%) as judged by the content of p23 in the supernatants of transfected cells. We modified pGPP+5' by deleting the untranslated region upstream of the gag open reading frame in order to use the resulting plasmid (called pGPP-MX) as a packaging construct. pGPP-MX RNA would presumably not be efficiently packaged by JSRV virions, considering the fact that the untranslated gag region is invariably a major part of a retroviral packaging signal (32), although this has not been precisely mapped in JSRV. Cells transfected with pGPP-MX produced approximately half (47.8% ± 10.5%; P = 0.03) the quantity of viral particles produced by JSRV, suggesting that either the untranslated gag region has some beneficial role for JSRV expression or the lack of viral genomic RNA negatively influences virus assembly/exit. The latter seems most likely because Gag expression in the cell lysates is comparable between the various constructs. In order to enhance the production of viral particles by pGPP-MX, we provided the RNA binding factor Sam68 in trans, as it was previously shown that Sam68 increases the cytoplasmic utilization of RNA containing the MPMV CTE (8). Indeed, cells cotransfected with pGPP-MX and pCDNA3-HA-Sam68 produced quantities of viral particles comparable to JSRV (Fig. 2C).
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FIG. 2. Optimization of the JSRV packaging construct. Cell lysates (bottom panel) and virus pellets from supernatants (top panel) of transfected cells were analyzed 48 h posttransfection by SDS-PAGE/Western blotting employing an antiserum against the JSRV p23 (matrix). (A) 293T cells were transfected with the plasmids indicated above each lane. Note that only cells transfected with plasmids containing the R-U5 region of the JSRV-proximal LTR released viral particles into the supernatant. Note that the bands below Gag in the cell lysates are likely the product of partially cleaved Gag (present also in panel C). (B) Quantification of virus release was done by chemifluorescence on Western blots of viral pellets. Shown are the means (± standard errors) obtained in three independent experiments. (C) A positive effect on JSRV particle release was observed in 293T cells cotransfected with pGPP-MX and increasing amounts (from 0.5 to 14 µg) of an expression plasmid for Sam68.
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Env, in which we removed most of the env region of JSRV, and pJSRVstop1, in which we introduced two mutations that altered the splice acceptor and the first ATG of env (Fig. 1). Both these constructs were able to produce viral particles with no detectable envelope (Fig. 3A to C). However, cells transfected with pJSRV
Env and pJSRVstop1 produced, respectively, 16% ± 10.4% and 52% ± 10.9% viral particles compared to cells transfected with the expression plasmid for JSRV; in both cases, differences with JSRV were statistically significant (P = 0.001 and 0.01, respectively). Cotransfection of pJS-XE with pJSRVstop1 or pJSRV
Env almost doubled the amount of viral particles compared to cells transfected by pJSRVstop1 or pJSRV
Env alone, although in the latter case, differences were above significance (P = 0.1). Thus, available data suggest that the JSRV env facilitates viral particle release in cis and likely in trans.
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FIG. 3. The JSRV env region is important for optimal viral particle production. (A) 293T cells were transfected with the plasmids indicated above each lane. Virus pellets from cell supernatants (top panel) and cell lysate (50 µg) were analyzed 48 h posttransfection by SDS-PAGE/Western blotting. Where indicated, Env was supplied in trans by the JS-XE plasmid. Note that the bands below Gag in the cell lysates are likely the product of partially cleaved Gag (present also in panel D). (B) Quantification of virus release was performed by chemifluorescence on Western blots of virus pellets. Shown are the means (± SE) obtained in three independent experiments. (C) 293T cells were transfected with the plasmids indicated. Forty-eight hours posttransfection supernatants were harvested. Virus pellets were analyzed by SDS-PAGE/Western blotting employing an antiserum raised against the JSRV Env. As expected, neither JSRV Env nor JSRVStop1 expresses detectable Env. (D) 293T cells were transfected with the indicated plasmids and p23/Gag was detected as described above. Note that cotransfection of pGPP-MX, pJS-XE, and pCDNA3-HA-Sam68 yields JS-RD virus particles in quantities similar to those of replication-competent JSRV.
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TABLE 1. Summary of the results obtained in the in vivo studiesa
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FIG. 4. Macroscopic and microscopic lesions induced by JS-RD. Three of the five JS-RD-inoculated lambs showed numerous isolated lesions creamy in color and of hard consistency (A and B). (C) Histology from a lung section of a JS-RD-inoculated lamb shows the presence of a papillary to acinar expanding nodule that compresses the surrounding normal alveoli. (D and E) Immunohistochemistry in lung sections from a JS-RD-inoculated lamb shows expression of the JSRV Env in tumor cells (characterized by the intracytoplasmic brown color). Micrographs are shown at both low (D) and high (E) magnification. (F and G) Immunohistochemistry of lung sections of JSRV-inoculated lamb no. B689. Note the presence of neoplastic foci of various sizes in close proximity. Micrographs are shown at both low (F) and high (G) magnification. (H and I) Phosphorylated Erk1/2 is detectable both in JSRV- and JS-RD-induced tumors. Detection of phospho-Erk1/2 was achieved by immunohistochemistry both in lung sections from JSRV-inoculated lambs (I) and JS-RD-inoculated lambs (H). A positive reaction is characterized by a cytoplasmic brown color. Bars, 100 µm (panels E, G, H, and I) and 500 µm (panels C, D, and F).
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Expression of the JSRV Env in all the experimental animals was assessed by immunohistochemistry (Fig. 4D to G). As expected, abundant expression of JSRV Env was detected in tumor cells of JS-RD- and JSRV-inoculated animals, while no JSRV Env-expressing cells were detected in the negative-control animals (data not shown).
Histopathological appearance of OPA lesions in JSRV- and JS-RD-inoculated sheep. OPA lesions in JS-RD-infected animals appeared to be mostly formed by isolated tumor nodules composed by cuboidal or columnar proliferating cells growing in an acinar or papilliform pattern and compressing the surrounding normal alveoli (Fig. 4C and D). Larger neoplastic foci were observed occasionally in lamb no. 77. Occasionally, myxomatous tissue (probably of mesodermal origin) was also present around the neoplastic lesions (not shown). The myxomatous component is often seen in naturally occurring OPA, but its origin (neoplastic versus nonneoplastic) is not clear (10).
Lesions in lambs experimentally infected with JSRV were mostly formed by neoplastic foci with characteristics similar to those induced by JS-RD. However, neoplastic foci of various sizes were surrounded by satellite often coalescing nodules (Fig. 4F). The histopathological features and appearance of neoplastic cells were essentially the same in JSRV- and JS-RD-induced tumors, as can be appreciated by the high-magnification micrographs shown in Fig. 4E and G.
Involvement of the H/N-Ras-MEK-MAPK pathway has been shown in JSRV-induced cell transformation in vitro and in vivo (11, 19). In order to test whether virus replication and spread could determine differences in MAPK (Erk1/2) activation, we performed immunohistochemistry in tissues from both JS-RD- and JSRV-inoculated animals. Lung sections were stained with an antibody specific for pErk1/2. Tumor cells in neoplasms induced by both JS-RD and JSRV showed activation of the MAPK pathway (Fig. 4H and I).
JS-XE is detectable in JS-RD-inoculated lambs. Finally, we investigated whether we could detect JS-XE or JSRV in the lungs of JS-RD-inoculated animals and in the positive- and negative-control animals by developing two PCR assays that specifically amplified the viral genome with deletions (JS-XE) (PCRs no. 1 and 2) and two that detected full-length JSRV (PCRs no. 3 and 4). Given the lack of obvious macroscopic OPA lesions in some of the experimentally infected lambs, we collected tissues from seven distinct anatomical regions in the lungs. Animals were considered positive for JS-RD or JSRV when at least one of seven aliquots was positive with either JS-XE- or JSRV-specific PCR. The results are summarized in Table 1, and representative data are shown in Fig. 5.
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FIG. 5. Detection of JS-RD in experimentally inoculated lambs. Representative examples of PCRs from lambs inoculated with JS-RD, JSRV (positive control), or packaging construct only (mock). DNA was extracted from seven anatomical regions (indicated with letters A to G and corresponding, respectively, to the cranial part of the left cranial lobe, caudal part of left cranial lobe, left diaphragmatic lobe, right diaphragmatic lobe, right middle lobe, right cranial lobe, and accessory lobe) and tested by PCR specific for either JS-XE (no. 1 and 2) or JSRV (no. 3 and 4) as indicated in Materials and Methods. Specific PCR products for JS-XE are found only in JS-RD-infected lambs (no. 77 and 74). JSRV is amplified only by PCRs no. 3 and 4 in DNA extracted from tumor tissue of lamb no. 685 (lanes indicated with +). PCR for enJSRV DNA was used to control for the quality of the DNA preparations.
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JS-RD induced OPA in a high percentage of inoculated animals, comparable to experimental JSRV infection (29). The size of the lesions induced by JS-RD was reduced compared to those observed in lambs experimentally infected with JSRV. OPA lesions in JS-RD-inoculated animals appeared usually as well-isolated neoplastic foci compressing the surrounding normal alveoli. In lambs experimentally infected with JSRV (in this and previous studies) (12, 29, 35, 37), neoplastic foci of different sizes were closely together (often coalescing) and lesions gave the impression of being more invasive. We attribute the histopathological differences noted above to the ability of JSRV, upon infection of target cells, to produce new infectious virus that can then infect (and consequently transform) new target cells compromising the respiratory functions more rapidly. On the contrary, JS-RD, being replication defective, can infect and transform only single cells that expand by cell division, and these growing lesions have fewer chances to coalesce with other lesions unless cells in close proximity are initially infected. Alternatively, it is possible that the neoplastic cells induced by replication competent JSRV have a more malignant phenotype than the JS-RD counterpart. We do not favor the latter scenario, since the histopathological features of the neoplastic cells per se are the same in JSRV- and JS-RD-induced tumors. However, we cannot exclude the possibility that in some instances, proto-oncogenes activated by JSRV by insertional mutagenesis participate in the process of transformation initiated by the viral Env (7).
The histopathologies of field cases of OPA differ, with neoplastic lesions appearing sometimes as isolated nodules and sometimes as large neoplastic foci with smaller satellite foci around them; both types of lesions can be observed in the same animal.
We believe that the age of the animal at the time of infection and/or the physiological state of the lungs (e.g., concurrent bacterial or parasitic infection) influences the histopathological pattern shown in naturally occurring OPA. Most retroviruses, with the notable exception of lentiviruses, require actively replicating cells in order to allow the viral preintegration complex to pass through the nuclear membrane (4). Transformed cells in OPA are derived from the differentiated epithelial cells of the distal lungs, type II pneumocytes, and Clara cells, which in general have been believed to give rise to lung adenocarcinoma in sheep and other species, including humans (10, 21, 31). However, in adult animals, type II pneumocytes and Clara cells have a very low replicative index, and consequently, they would not be easily infectible by JSRV. In contrast, type II pneumocytes/Clara cells divide in the very young lamb or in the adult where the epithelium has been injured in order to repair the lesion; in both cases, these dividing cells would be permissive to JSRV infection.
Recently, bronchioalveolar stem cells (BASCs) have been proposed to maintain the bronchiolar Clara cells and pneumocytes and to be the true origin of lung adenocarcinomas (3, 17). If present also in sheep, BASCs might thus be the true target for JSRV replication in the lungs. It is likely that BASCs are most abundant in the young animal or following a lung injury and thus BASC infection by JSRV would fit the model of OPA development as proposed above.
The development of the JS-RD system has allowed us also to further understand the molecular biology of JSRV. The R-U5 region of the viral 5' LTR is necessary for optimal JSRV expression/particle formation, possibly by interacting with host proteins similarly to the 5'-terminal RNA elements of other retroviruses or by allowing proper Gag assembly (5, 15). Also, our results suggest that for viral particle production, the env region is important both in cis and in trans. Currently, we are trying to determine if a CTE-like structure (13) is present within env of JSRV, as there is in MPMV, and/or whether a Rev-like export protein (and/or a Rev-responsive element) is present within env analogously to mouse mammary tumor virus (16, 22) and HERV-K (42). Additionally, it is likely that the JSRV Env facilitates viral particle exit in the same way as has been shown for MPMV (another betaretrovirus-like JSRV), for which capsid transport is mediated by Env/Gag interactions (36).
This work was supported by grant CA95706-01 from the National Cancer Institute of the National Institutes of Health, a grant from the Italian Ministry of Health, and grant FF66/01 from the Scottish Executive Environment and Rural Affairs Department. M.P. is a Wolfson-Royal Society research merit awardee.
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