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Journal of Virology, January 2006, p. 1059-1063, Vol. 80, No. 2
0022-538X/06/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JVI.80.2.1059-1063.2006
Copyright © 2006, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Nucleocytoplasmic Shuttling of Bovine Herpesvirus 1 UL47 Protein in Infected Cells
Janneke Verhagen,
Ian Hutchinson, and
Gillian Elliott*
Virus Assembly Group, Marie Curie Research Institute, Oxted, Surrey, United Kingdom
Received 9 September 2005/
Accepted 27 October 2005

ABSTRACT
Previous studies with transfected cells have shown that the
herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) and bovine herpesvirus 1
(BHV-1) UL47 proteins shuttle between the nucleus and the cytoplasm.
HSV-1 UL47 has also been shown to bind RNA. Here we examine
the BHV-1 UL47 protein in infected cells using a green fluorescent
protein-UL47-expressing virus. We show that UL47 is detected
in the nucleus early in infection. We use fluorescence loss
in photobleaching to show that nuclear UL47 undergoes rapid
nucleocytoplasmic shuttling. Furthermore, we demonstrate that
actinomycin D inhibits the reaccumulation of UL47 in the nuclei
of infected cells. These results suggest that UL47 exhibits
behavior similar to that of previously characterized RNA-transporting
proteins.

TEXT
The alphaherpesvirus UL47 gene encodes a protein that is assembled
into the tegument of the virion (
1,
7,
10,
23). While the role
of UL47 has not yet been defined, its deletion from herpes simplex
virus type 1 (HSV-1), pseudorabies virus, or Marek's disease
virus results in viruses that produce small plaques and replicate
more slowly than wild-type (Wt) viruses (
4,
7,
24,
25). We have
previously studied the HSV-1 UL47-encoded protein VP13/14 expressed
in infected cells and by transient transfection. In both cases,
VP13/14 was targeted to the nucleus, and we have identified
an arginine-rich nuclear localization signal in its N terminus
(
2,
3). Furthermore, we have shown that VP13/14 has the ability
to shuttle between the nucleus and the cytoplasm when expressed
alone (
3).
The bovine herpesvirus 1 (BHV-1) homologue of VP13/14, the UL47-encoded protein VP8, is by far the major structural protein of the BHV-1 virus particle (1), and as yet there has been no report of a UL47 knockout virus for BHV-1. Immunofluorescence studies of infected cells have shown VP8 in the nucleus (22), and a recent study demonstrated that as for VP13/14, VP8 appears to shuttle between the nucleus and the cytoplasm when expressed in isolation (26). Here we have examined the trafficking of the BHV-1 UL47 protein in infected cells by constructing a recombinant virus expressing green fluorescent protein (GFP)-tagged UL47. Infectious BHV-1 genomic DNA (strain P8-2) was cotransfected into COS-1 cells with plasmid pJV46, which consists of the GFP open reading frame flanked by 1 kb of the UL47 upstream sequence and the entire UL47 open reading frame. Green fluorescent plaques were purified three times on MDBK cells, resulting in the recombinant virus jv46v (Fig. 1A). The growth characteristics of jv46v were established by conducting a time course of infection with MDBK cells. Total cell lysates were analyzed by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) and Western blotting with a polyclonal anti-BHV-1 UL47 antibody, indicating that the UL47-reactive species in jv46v-infected cells was around 30 kDa larger than Wt UL47 (Fig. 1B). This species also reacted with a monoclonal GFP antibody (Clontech), confirming that it represented a novel GFP-UL47 fusion protein (Fig. 1B). Importantly, the rates of expression of UL47 in the two viruses were similar, as were the expression kinetics of the bTIF protein encoded by UL48 (Fig. 1B). One-step growth curves for intracellular and extracellular virus also indicated that the introduction of GFP at the N terminus of UL47 had no effect on virus replication (Fig. 1C). Importantly, the recombinant virus also exhibited the same plaque size and the same replication rate under low-multiplicity conditions as the Wt virus (data not shown).
We next addressed the assembly of GFP-UL47 into extracellular
virions that had been purified from 5
x 10
8 infected MDBK cells.
Wt and jv46v virions were isolated by centrifugation through
a 5 to 15% Ficoll gradient and were analyzed by SDS-PAGE followed
by Coomassie blue staining or Western blotting. The high level
of UL47 is obvious from the protein profile of Wt BHV-1 virions
(Fig.
2A). Furthermore, the profile of jv46v BHV-1 virions shows
that the 105-kDa VP8 protein has been replaced by a larger species
of around 135 kDa (Fig.
2A). Western blotting with anti-UL47
and anti-GFP antibodies revealed that this novel component was
GFP-UL47 and that it was packaged into the virus particle in
amounts equivalent to those of native UL47 (Fig.
2B). To determine
if we could establish the fate of virion UL47 at virus entry,
MDBK cells were infected with jv46v in the presence of cycloheximide
(CHX) (100 µg/ml) and examined live 1 h later. GFP-UL47
was clearly localized in the nucleus of these cells, demonstrating
that incoming UL47 was imported into the infected cell nucleus
(Fig.
2C). Newly synthesized GFP-UL47 was also detected in the
nucleus of infected cells as early as 4 h after infection of
MDBK cells in the absence of CHX and increased in intensity
until 6 h, when cytoplasmic GFP-UL47 also began to accumulate
(Fig.
2D). Over the next 8 h, GFP-UL47 became increasingly cytoplasmic
with little detectable nuclear fluorescence (Fig.
2D). The localization
of UL47 as determined by the GFP-UL47-expressing virus was similar
to that described previously in immunofluorescence studies (
22).
Furthermore, our own comparative immunofluorescence studies
between Wt- and jv46v-infected cells using the anti-UL47 antibody
confirmed that the addition of GFP to the N terminus of UL47
had no effect on the localization of UL47 (data not shown).
To address the possibility that UL47 may shuttle during virus
infection, we employed fluorescence loss in photobleaching (FLIP)
technology (
6,
8,
17,
21). Four hours after infection, a small
area of cytoplasm in jv46-infected MDBK cells was photobleached
for 1 s at intervals of 10 s using the laser module on a Deltavision
imaging system. In the example shown, which is one of 10 analyses
carried out, images of the cell were acquired after each bleach
event, resulting in a time-lapse animation that shows a rapid
loss of nuclear fluorescence in the bleached cell compared to
the control cell in the same image (Fig.
3A and B). Furthermore,
quantification of nuclear GFP-UL47 fluorescence showed that
it was reduced to almost background in 7 min (Fig.
3B), suggesting
that UL47 export from the nucleus was an extremely rapid event.
To confirm that this photobleaching effect was truly indicative
of UL47 shuttling, we used a control virus expressing a GFP-tagged
protein that is also predominantly nuclear and subjected it
to FLIP analysis as described above. For this purpose, we used
recombinant HSV-1 that expresses GFP-UL49 (VP22), as described
previously (
5), but which also has the simian virus 40 nuclear
localization signal (NLS) inserted at the N terminus of VP22
(GFP-NLS-VP22). As shown in Fig.
3C (0 s), this results in a
GFP-VP22 fusion protein that is predominantly nuclear 4 h after
infection, rather than the cytoplasmic localization previously
observed for Wt GFP-VP22 (
5). Importantly, photobleaching of
the cytoplasm of a cell containing nuclear GFP-NLS-VP22 conducted
in the same way as for GFP-UL47 had no effect on the level of
fluorescence present in the nucleus, thus confirming that the
effect we observe with GFP-UL47 is specifically due to its shuttling
between the nucleus and cytoplasm. (Fig.
3C).
To further investigate UL47 shuttling, we used the drug actinomycin
D (Act D), which affects the shuttling dynamics of many nucleocytoplasmic
trafficking proteins and causes the accumulation of such proteins
in the cytoplasm rather than the nucleus (
12-
15). We first tested
the experimental conditions for this assay using two endogenous
cellular proteins, namely, the known shuttling protein hnRNPA1
and hnRNPC1, a nuclear protein that does not shuttle (
14-
16).
Hep2 cells grown on coverslips were treated with CHX alone or
CHX and 5 µg/ml Act D, fixed 3 h later in methanol, and
processed for immunofluorescence with antibodies against hnRNPA1
and hnRNPC1. As expected, the addition of Act D had no effect
on the nuclear localization of hnRNPC1 (Fig.
4A). By contrast,
Act D altered the steady-state localization of hnRNPA1 from
entirely nuclear to nuclear and cytoplasmic distributions (Fig.
4B), confirming the efficacy of Act D. MDBK cells infected 4
h previously with jv46v were treated in the same way and examined
after 1 h. As for hnRNPA1, there was a clear shift of UL47 into
the cytoplasm of cells treated with Act D, suggesting that UL47
shuttling was impaired in the presence of Act D (Fig.
4C).
In this study we have provided the first evidence of shuttling
by any alphaherpesvirus UL47 gene product during virus infection.
This confirms the relevance of previous studies carried out
on the nucleocytoplasmic shuttling of UL47-encoded proteins
(
3,
26). Although the exact role of UL47 shuttling has yet to
be determined, it has been reported previously that HSV-1 UL47
binds RNA (
19). Here we demonstrate that Act D, a drug that
inhibits RNA transcription by RNA polymerase II and is known
to inhibit the nuclear reaccumulation of exported RNA binding
proteins (
15,
16), also alters the localization of UL47. This
suggests that UL47 shuttling may be linked in some way to RNA
biogenesis. The essential HSV-1 immediate-early protein ICP27
is an RNA binding protein that has already been proposed, among
other things, to be involved in the nuclear export of viral
RNAs (
11,
13,
18,
20). Nonetheless, viruses expressing ICP27
mutated in its RNA binding domain or its nuclear export signal
can still replicate, suggesting that this function of ICP27
is not absolutely crucial to the virus (
9). It is thus tempting
to speculate that UL47 may also function in the export of at
least some viral RNAs and that this function may in part compensate
for the absence of ICP27-directed RNA export. Furthermore, because
UL47 is delivered to the nucleus immediately upon infection,
it would be available to function in the transport of the immediate-early
viral transcripts. The shift of BHV-1 UL47 steady-state localization
from the nucleus to the cytoplasm at later times in infection
may simply reflect the high levels of viral RNAs that are being
synthesized at this time. However, it may also be indicative
of the active recruitment and retention of UL47 in cytoplasmic
sites of virus assembly.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We thank Vikram Misra, University of Saskatchewan, for BHV-1
strain P8-2, plasmid pcVP8, and polyclonal UL47 and UL48 antibodies.
We also thank G. Dreyfuss for antibodies against hnRNPA1 and
hnRNPC1 and Michelle Donnelly for useful discussion.
This work was funded by Marie Curie Cancer Care.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Virus Assembly Group, Marie Curie Research Institute, Oxted, Surrey RH8 OTL, United Kingdom. Phone: 44 1883 722306. Fax: 44 1883 714375. E-mail:
g.elliott{at}mcri.ac.uk.


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Journal of Virology, January 2006, p. 1059-1063, Vol. 80, No. 2
0022-538X/06/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JVI.80.2.1059-1063.2006
Copyright © 2006, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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