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Journal of Virology, November 2006, p. 10868-10870, Vol. 80, No. 21
0022-538X/06/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JVI.01117-06
Copyright © 2006, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Downregulation of Protein Disulfide Isomerase Inhibits Infection by the Mouse Polyomavirus
Joanna Gilbert,1
Wu Ou,2
Jonathan Silver,2 and
Thomas Benjamin1*
Department of Pathology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts,1
Laboratory of Molecular Microbiology, National Institutes of Allergy and Infectious Disease, NIH, Bethesda, Maryland2
Received 31 May 2006/
Accepted 14 August 2006

ABSTRACT
Early stages of infection by the mouse polyomavirus have been
studied using HeLa cells stably expressing small interfering
RNA to protein disulfide isomerase (PDI). Infectibility measured
by nuclear T antigen expression was reduced commensurately with
the degree of PDI downregulation. Infectibility was restored
by transfection with a plasmid expressing PDI but not with a
control expressing catalytically inactive enzyme. Deconvolution
microscopy using fluorescently labeled virus and cellular markers
showed that virus reaches the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) normally
in cells with reduced PDI but subsequently fails to exit the
ER. Simian virus 40 infection was not inhibited in PDI-downregulated
cells. The results are discussed in terms of structural differences
between the two viruses and current knowledge of virus disassembly
in the ER.

TEXT
Polyomaviruses pass through the endoplasmic reticulum (ER),
where they undergo rearrangement before exiting into the cytosol
and entry into the nucleus (
4,
5,
8,
9,
11,
13). The need for
structural rearrangement or partial disassembly is clear from
the fact that although nuclear localization sequences are abundant
(>500/particle distributed among the major and minor capsid
proteins and cellular histones in the viral minichromosome),
none are exposed in the fully assembled virus. Structural studies
have shown that disulfide bonds and calcium binding sites are
important in the assembly and stability of polyoma particles
(
3,
12); disassembly in vitro is achieved by reduction of disulfide
bonds and chelation (
1).
Steps of disassembly in vivo and the cellular factors involved are only partially understood. Der-2, a member of the derlin family of proteins, has recently been shown to be essential for infection by the mouse polyomavirus (Py) (7). The derlins normally function by recognizing misfolded proteins in the ER and directing their translocation into the cytosol for proteasomal degradation. This suggests that a partially unfolded intermediate in virus disassembly utilizes the "quality control machinery" in the ER to escape. ERp29, a chaperone-like protein, brings about a conformational change in the virus. This leads in vitro to exposure of the C-terminal arm of the major capsid protein VP1, allowing cleavage by trypsin and also to increased hydrophobicity of the particle. The expression of a dominant-negative form of ERp29 inhibits infection (8). ERp29 is a member of the protein disulfide isomerase (PDI) family that lacks the CXXC motif in its thioredoxin domain (2) and is catalytically inactive. This raises the question of whether PDI itself may also be essential for Py disassembly in the ER and for infectibility.
A series of HeLa cell clones stably expressing a small interfering RNA (siRNA) targeting PDI have been constructed and used in studies of infection by human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (10). Though HeLa cells are not fully permissive to Py, they express all the factors necessary for the early steps of infection, from virus attachment and internalization to initiation of early gene expression in the nucleus. To investigate the role of PDI in Py infection, this series of HeLa clones was infected by the RA wild-type strain of Py. Infected cells were examined 32 h later at the single-cell level by large-T-antigen (LTAg) nuclear immunofluorescence. The percentages of cells expressing large T antigen were substantially reduced in two independent clones expressing siRNA to PDI (clones 1-2 and 4-1) compared to those in either the parental HeLa cells (TZM-b1) or cells expressing a control siRNA (clone 5-1) (Fig. 1A). Levels of expression of PDI in the clones were determined by Western blotting (Fig. 1B). PDI 1-2, the clone which reproducibly showed the lowest levels of infection, also expressed the smallest amount of PDI. The reduction in infectibility appears to be roughly commensurate with the degree of downregulation of PDI.
Rescue experiments were undertaken to further establish the
importance of PDI in infection by Py. PDI 1-2 cells were transfected
with plasmids expressing wild-type PDI, a catalytically inactive
PDI (in which the CXXC motif was replaced by SXXS) (
10), or
empty vector. An eGFP plasmid was included as a transfection
marker. Twenty-four hours posttransfection, cells on coverslips
were infected by Py at a multiplicity of infection of several
hundred PFU/cell (determined by a plaque assay of the input
virus on NIH 3T3 cells). After an additional 32 h, cells were
fixed and assayed for LTAg expression. Cells were analyzed in
two groups based on the expression or absence of expression
of the eGFP transfection marker. As shown in Table
1, the percentages
of eGFP-positive cells that were also LTAg positive were four-
to sixfold higher following transfection with wild-type PDI
than those for mutant PDI or the vector control. No rescue of
infectibility was seen in eGFP-negative cells on the same coverslips,
i.e., cells that were not transfected. Restoration of active
PDI in PDI-downregulated cells thus restores their ability to
be infected by Py.
To examine the stage of infection where Py is blocked in PDI-deficient
cells, fluorescently labeled virus (TRPy) was used to infect
PDI 1-2 and PDI 5-1 cells at roughly 100 TRPy particles/cell.
Uptake and colocalization of virus with PDI and calreticulin
as ER markers were followed by deconvolution microscopy as previously
described (
4). At 4 h postinfection, virus was found colocalized
with PDI and calreticulin in clone 5-1 (Fig.
2A) and with calreticulin
in clone 1-2 (Fig.
2B) (PDI was nearly undetectable by immunofluorescence
in clone 1-2, consistent with results obtained by Western blotting
[Fig.
1B]). Quantitation and kinetics of colocalization were
followed over a 10-h period. The numbers of virus particles
internalized and reaching the ER from 2 to 4 h postinfection
were the same in both clones, indicating that PDI does not affect
virus attachment or endocytosis. In clone 5-1, which expresses
normal levels of PDI, the amount of TRPy colocalizing with ER
markers declined progressively from 4 to 8 h. The kinetics of
virus entry and exit from the ER in these cells are closely
similar to those seen in other virus-susceptible cells (
4).
In contrast, in the PDI-deficient clone 1-2, virus failed to
leave the ER over the 10-h period (Fig.
2C). The kinetics of
accumulation and retention in the ER in these cells are similar
to those observed in cells blocked in infection due to the expression
of a dominant-negative form of Der-2 (
7). These results indicate
that Py undergoes rearrangement in the ER mediated by PDI in
order to escape from the ER and to establish an infection.
Py and simian virus 40 (SV40) share extensive structural and
biological properties yet differ in receptor specificity (
13)
and other important respects. To determine whether SV40 also
requires PDI for infection, the HeLa clones were infected with
SV40 or Py and monitored for expression of the respective LTAgs
by immunofluorescence. While Py was inhibited by over 95% in
clone 1-2 compared to parental or siRNA control cells, infection
by SV40 was essentially the same in all three clones (Fig.
3).
SV40 thus does not depend on PDI for infection of HeLa cells.
The cysteines in SV40 VP1 undergo multiple intra- and intermolecular
disulfide bond formation during synthesis and assembly of pentamers
in the cytoplasm (
6), presumably in a PDI-independent manner.
The positions of cysteines in the VP1s of Py and SV40 are only
partly conserved, and the dispositions of disulfide bonds in
fully assembled particles are different for the two viruses.
In Py, the VP1s within each pentamer are linked by disulfide
bonds involving Cys-19 and Cys-114 of neighboring VP1 molecules
(
12). This disulfide ring at the base of the pentamer is not
found in SV40 due to the replacement of the N-terminal cysteine
with a proline.
The results presented here indicate an important role for PDI
in infection by Py, possibly in reducing and rearranging disulfide
bonds that stabilize the capsomeres. The action of PDI together
with that of ERp29 may represent sequential or coordinated steps
in the disassembly of Py in the ER. These factors most likely
act upstream of the step mediated by Der-2 in the translocation
of the rearranged and partially disassembled particle (
7). Additional
factors may also be involved. The nature of the altered particle
that crosses the ER membrane and the portal of exit remain unknown.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
The expert technical assistance of John You and John Carroll
is gratefully acknowledged. We also thank Thilo Stehle for helpful
discussions comparing Py and SV40 structures.
This work was supported by grant RO1 CA-082395 from the National Cancer Institute. The TZM-b 1 reagent was obtained from John C. Kappes, Xiaoyun Wu, and Tranzyme Inc. through the NIH AIDS Research and Reference Reagent Program, Division of AIDS, NIAID, NIH.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of Pathology, NRB-939I, 77 Avenue Louis Pasteur, Boston, MA 02115. Phone: (617) 432-1960. Fax: (617) 432-2689. E-mail:
thomas_benjamin{at}hms.harvard.edu.

Published ahead of print on 23 August 2006. 

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Journal of Virology, November 2006, p. 10868-10870, Vol. 80, No. 21
0022-538X/06/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JVI.01117-06
Copyright © 2006, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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