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Journal of Virology, December 2006, p. 11946-11959, Vol. 80, No. 24
0022-538X/06/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JVI.01722-06
Copyright © 2006, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, Georgia 30322,1 Program in Molecular Cell Biology, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri 631102
Received 9 August 2006/ Accepted 18 September 2006
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Manipulation of the host cell cycle is a
common strategy employed by many DNA viruses to ensure a cellular
environment conducive to viral replication
(64). Among the
gammaherpesviruses, rhadinoviruses such as Kaposi's sarcoma-associated
herpesvirus (KSHV), herpesvirus saimiri, rhesus rhadinovirus, and
murine gammaherpesvirus 68 (
HV68) all encode homologues of
cellular D-type cyclins
(10,
32,
38,
49,
73). While these viral
cyclins have been extensively studied in a cellular context, their
functions in relation to host-pathogen interactions remain poorly
understood. Due to its association with human disease, KSHV v-cyclin
has received significant attention. KSHV v-cyclin preferentially binds
CDK6 but also binds CDK2 and CDK4 and is able to mediate the
phosphorylation of many substrates traditionally associated
with CDK2, thereby deregulating normal cell cycle progression in
numerous cell culture models
(34,
43,
64,
71). Previously, we
demonstrated that when expressed as a transgene in mice,
HV68
v-cyclin promotes cell cycle progression in primary lymphocytes and is
a potent oncogene (68).
HV68 v-cyclin binds and activates CDK2 both in vitro and in
vivo, binds CDK1 in vitro, and mediates the phosphorylation of numerous
G1- and S-phase substrates
(9,
66), all of which likely
contribute to the oncogenic potential of v-cyclin.
As one of the
few identified rhadinoviruses naturally infecting murid rodents,
HV68 has become the tool of choice for analyses of
gammaherpesvirus pathogenesis
(23,
51,
62,
63,
72). Previously, we and
others have shown that the v-cyclin of
HV68 is a critical
regulator of reactivation, as recombinant viruses lacking v-cyclin do
not efficiently reactivate from latency
(25,
70). Additionally,
v-cyclin is required for the maintenance of latency in the absence of B
cells, highlighting both the need for v-cyclin-dependent reactivation
and reseeding of the latent non-B-cell compartment and the distinct
genetic programs required in different cell types
(69). The infrequent
detection of v-cyclin transcripts during latency
(4,
42,
74) further suggests a
specific temporal role of v-cyclin, strengthening the hypothesis that
v-cyclin expression is a critical event in
HV68 reactivation
from latency.
When the mechanisms of v-cyclin-mediated
reactivation are considered, one attractive possibility is that the
same functions required for cell cycle manipulation are required to
regulate reactivation. However, previous findings demonstrated that
providing ex vivo cell cycle stimulation by multiple methods does not
fully ameliorate the reactivation defect of B cells latently infected
with v-cyclin-deficient virus
(25,
47), suggesting that cell
cycle manipulation alone is insufficient to explain the role of
v-cyclin in regulating reactivation. To conclusively determine the
CDK-dependent functions of v-cyclin during viral infection, we have
generated two independent single-amino-acid-substitution
viral mutants, v-cyc[K104E] and
v-cyc[E133V], in which the v-cyclin does not bind
or activate CDKs. Previous characterization of these mutations by
transient expression in cultured cells indicated that these mutants do
not bind or activate cellular CDKs
(66). Analysis of these
mutants in the context of the viral infection reveals that
v-cyclin-CDK interactions are required for acute infection in
the lungs of mice following intranasal infection but are at least
partially dispensable for virus reactivation from latency. These data
provide the first evidence that the
HV68 v-cyclin is a
multifunctional protein encoding both CDK-dependent and CDK-independent
mechanisms of action that regulate virus replication and persistence in
the host.
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Generation of viral mutants.
All recombinant
viruses were generated from the
HV68 bacterial artificial
chromosome (BAC), a kind gift of Ulrich Kozinowski
(3). Initially, the
kanamycin (Kan) cassette and flanking Flip recombinase
(FRT) sites from pCP15
(11) were amplified by
PCR with primers adding an NcoI site to the 5' end of the
cassette and an NsiI site to the 3' end and subcloned into
pL3700 (70) cut with NcoI
and NsiI. The resulting plasmid was cut with HinDIII and BsrGI. The
3.2-kb fragment was gel purified twice and used to generate the
v-cycKAN BAC as previously described
(50).
v-cyc[K104E] and v-cyc[E133V] mutants were
generated by allelic exchange essentially as previously described
(60). pCMV-TAG2B-K104E
and pCMV-TAG2B-E133V (66)
were each digested with NcoI and NsiI, and the 475-bp fragments were
isolated by gel extraction. These fragments were subcloned into pL3700
cut with NcoI and NsiI to generate pL3700-K104E and pL3700-E133V,
respectively. The resulting plasmids were cut with NheI and SalI, and
the 3.7-kb fragment was gel purified and cloned into the suicide
targeting vector pGS824 cut with NheI and SalI. O72.Stop was generated
by digesting pL7300.Stop
(70) with NheI and SalI,
and the 3.7-kb fragment was cloned into the same sites of pGS284. All
resulting plasmids were confirmed for authenticity and orientation by
restriction enzyme mapping. Bacterially mediated allelic exchange was
performed as previously described
(18,
44,
60) by using v-cycKAN BAC
as the target for recombination. Potential mutant clones were screened
by PCR, restriction mapping, and Southern blotting. Marker rescue
viruses were generated by cloning the NheI-SalI fragment of pL3700
containing wild-type sequences into the same sites of pGS284, and
allelic exchange was performed as described above using each mutant BAC
as the target for recombination. To generate viral stocks, it was
necessary to remove BAC vector sequences
(2). Recombinant BAC DNA
was isolated and transfected into Vero-CRE cells, and viral
supernatants were passaged through Vero-CRE cells a second time and
then used to generate large viral stocks in NIH 3T12 cells. Wells were
observed over time via fluorescence microscopy, and no green
fluorescent protein expression was observed, indicating the excision of
BAC sequences. The titers of all stocks were determined by
plaque assay using NIH 3T12 fibroblasts in three independent
experiments.
Southern blotting. One microgram of BAC DNA of each recombinant was digested with BamHI and EcoRI for diagnostic fragments of the v-cyclin region. Additional diagnostic cuts were performed to assess the introduction, and subsequent rescue, of specific mutations: HpaI for O72.Stop, NgoMIV for K104E, and SpeI for E133V. Digests were electrophoresed on 0.9% agarose gels and transferred by alkaline transfer onto Nytran nylon membranes (Turboblot; Schleicher and Schuell, Keene, NH) according to the manufacturer's recommendations. Southern blots were probed with the BamHI-HinDIII fragment of pL3700 for analysis of the v-cyclin region. The probe was 32P labeled by random primer extension according to the manufacturer's recommendations (Megaprime DNA labeling kit; Amersham International). Blots were hybridized at 68°C and washed with two changes of 2x SSC (1x SSC is 0.15 M NaCl plus 0.015 M sodium citrate)-0.1% sodium dodecyl sulfate followed by two changes of 0.2x SSC-0.1% sodium dodecyl sulfate prior to exposure to film.
Immunoblotting and kinase assays. NIH 3T12 cells were infected at a multiplicity of 10 for 1 h and washed twice with phosphate-buffered saline (PBS), and medium wasreplaced with complete medium for 24 h. Infected cells were harvested by scraping and centrifugation, and cell lysates were made in ELB with protease and phosphatase inhibitors (66). One hundred micrograms of total protein was subjected to sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE) and transferred onto nitrocellulose membranes. Membranes were incubated in blocking buffer (PBS with 0.05% Tween-20 [PBS-T] and 5% nonfat milk) for 1 h at room temperature and then incubated with the indicated antibody in blocking buffer overnight at 4°C. Blots were washed three times in PBS-T and incubated with horseradish peroxidase-conjugated donkey anti-rabbit, anti-mouse (Jackson Immunochemicals), or anti-chicken (Gallus Immunotech) secondary antibodies at a 1:5,000 dilution in blocking buffer for 1 h at room temperature. Blots were washed three times in PBS-T, developed with ECL-Plus reagent (Amersham Biosciences), and exposed to film. Primary antibodies used were rabbit polyclonal anti-v-cyclin antiserum (68), chicken polyclonal anti-ORF59 (66), and mouse anti-ß-actin (Sigma). Kinase assays were performed essentially as previously described (66). Briefly, NIH 3T3 cells were plated and allowed to grow to confluence. Cells were then serum starved for 72 h in low-serum media containing 0.05% fetal calf serum. Cells were infected in low-serum medium at a multiplicity of 10 for 1 h, washed twice with PBS, and replaced with low-serum medium. Twenty-four hours postinfection, cells were harvested, and lysates were made as described above. Three hundred micrograms of total protein was subjected to immunoprecipitation with agarose bead-conjugated rabbit anti-CDK2 antibodies (M2; Santa Cruz) overnight at 4°C with gentle orbital agitation. Beads were collected by centrifugation, washed four times in ice-cold ELB with protease and phosphatase inhibitors, and washed twice in kinase buffer. In vitro kinase reactions were performed using glutathione S-transferase-C-terminal retinoblastoma protein (GST-pRb) fusion protein (Santa Cruz) as an exogenous substrate. Reactions were terminated by the addition of SDS running buffer and boiling for 10 min. Samples were subjected to SDS-PAGE, and the gels were fixed and dried. Samples were then analyzed by autoradiography using phosphorscreens and visualized using a Typhoon9410 apparatus (Amersham Biosciences). Relative kinase activity was determined using ImageQuant software (Amersham Biosciences) by spot intensity analysis normalized to mock infection. All lysate protein concentrations were calculated from a standard curve of bovine serum albumin in lysis buffer with the DC protein assay (Bio-Rad).
Plaque assays, in vitro growth, and determination of viral titers. Plaque assays were performed on NIH 3T12 fibroblasts. Viral growth in vitro was determined by infection of NIH 3T12 cells at a multiplicity of infection (MOI) of 10 PFU per cell, with removal of the inoculum after 1 h of infection to measure a single cycle of virus replication, or at 0.01 PFU per cell (NIH 3T12) or 0.05 PFU per cell (LA-4) to measure multiple cycles of virus replication. Seventy-two hours prior to infection, 2 x 105 LA-4 cells were plated in medium containing 1% fetal calf serum, which allowed the growth of cells to confluence, followed by a cessation of division as assessed by cell counting up to 10 days postplating (data not shown). Cells and supernatants were collected at various times postinfection and frozen at 80°C. Samples were then subjected to two cycles of freezing and thawing, and virus was then quantitated by plaque assay (sensitivity, 50 PFU/ml). Organs for which virus titers were to be determined were thawed and homogenized by mechanical disruption with four 1-min pulses in the presence of 1.0-mm zirconia/silica beads (Biospec Products) in a Mini-Beadbeater-8 (Biospec Products). Samples were then diluted in cMEM and plated onto NIH 3T12 cells. Infections were allowed to adsorb at 37°C for 1 h with occasional agitation and overlaid with complete medium containing 20 g/liter methylcellulose (Sigma). Plaques were visualized 6 to 7 days postinoculation by staining with neutral red (Sigma) overnight.
Infections of mice and organ harvests. Female C57BL/6J mice (Jackson Laboratory, Bar Harbor, Maine) were used at between 8 and 12 weeks of age. Mice were placed under isofluorane anesthesia prior to both infection and sacrifice. Intranasal inoculations were performed with 103 PFU of the indicated virus in a volume of 20 µl of complete medium. Intraperitoneal inoculations were performed by injection with 103 PFU in a volume of 0.5 ml of complete medium. Upon sacrifice, spleens and lungs were harvested by sterile dissection. Organs for determinations of titers were placed in 1 ml complete medium and frozen at 80°C. Spleens for latency analysis were weighed and then placed into complete medium, homogenized, and filtered, and erythrocytes were removed by ammonium chloride lysis. Resident peritoneal exudate cells (PECs) were harvested by peritoneal lavage with 10 ml of incomplete medium. For analysis of acute infection, each animal was analyzed independently. For analysis of latency parameters, pooled splenocytes or PECs from four to five infected mice were used for each independent experiment.
LD ex vivo reactivation analyses. The frequency of cells capable of reactivation from latency was determined by limiting-dilution (LD) analysis as previously described (12, 65, 70, 76-78). Briefly, PECs and splenocytes were harvested from infected mice at the times indicated, and single-cell suspensions were generated. Erythrocytes were removed from spleen samples by ammonium chloride lysis. Cells were resuspended in cMEM and plated in serial twofold dilutions, starting at 105 cells per well, onto MEF monolayers in 96-well tissue culture plates. Twenty-four wells were plated per dilution, with a total of 12 dilutions per sample per experiment. Wells were microscopically scored for cytopathic effect 21 days postplating, after which samples were replated to confirm reactivation of infectious virus. To detect preformed infectious virus, parallel samples were resuspended in hypotonic medium and subjected to mechanical disruption in the presence of 0.5-mm-diameter silica beads. Disruption was carried out by four 1-min pulses in a Mini-Beadbeater-8 and was previously shown to kill >99% of cells, with no significant effect on titers of preformed virus (76). Ex vivo stimulation of splenocytes with anti-CD40 and anti-immunoglobulin G (IgG)/IgM antibodies was performed as previously described (47).
Statistical methods. All data were analyzed using GraphPad Prism software (GraphPad Software). Titer, spleen weight, and spleen cell number data were statistically analyzed with the nonparametric Mann-Whitney test. Frequencies of reactivation and viral-genome-positive cells were obtained from the cell number at which 63% of wells scored positive for either reactivating virus or the presence of the viral genome based on Poisson distribution; data were subjected to nonlinear regression analysis to obtain the single-cell frequency for each limiting-dilution analysis.
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HV68 v-cyclin open reading frame
(ORF), by either a large insertion or the introduction of a premature
in-frame translation termination codon, severely attenuates the ability
of recombinant viruses to reactivate efficiently from latency
(25,
70). To determine the
contribution of v-cyclin-CDK interactions and thus the
contribution of cell cycle regulation by v-cyclin to this process,
specific loss-of-function mutations previously characterized in vitro
by our laboratory (66)
were introduced into the v-cyclin locus using the
HV68 genome
cloned as a BAC and utilizing methodologies and strategies described
previously
(1-3,
11,
44,
50,
60,
70). In addition to these
loss-of-function mutants, we regenerated the O72.Stop mutation,
previously described by our laboratory
(70), to control for any
phenotypic discrepancies between BAC-derived mutants and those
previously generated by homologous recombination in mammalian cells.
Each mutant was generated by the "rescue" of the
v-cycKAN BAC as described in Materials and Methods to yield a v-cyclin
allele containing either the O72.Stop, K104E, or E133V mutation
(v-cyc[STOP], v-cyc[K104], and
v-cyc[E133V], respectively). Multiple recombinants from
independent bacterial matings were identified by Kan sensitivity and
screened by PCR and Southern blot analysis to confirm proper
recombination. Each isolate was then rescued to the wild-type sequence
by allelic exchange. For each mutant, specific isolates and
corresponding marker rescues were selected at random from the panel of
confirmed isolates, and DNA was prepared for further analysis and viral
stock generation.
The structures of all mutant and marker rescue
HV68-BACs were confirmed by Southern blot analysis on EcoRI-
and BamHI-digested DNA (Fig.
1). As expected, the ORF72 region probe hybridized to 10.8-, 5.2-, and
0.9-kb EcoRI fragments of all DNAs analyzed except v-cycKAN, which
hybridized to 10.8-kb and 6.5-kb EcoRI fragments, indicating the
insertion-deletion caused by the addition of the Kan cassette.
Similarly, the probe hybridized a 6.2-kb BamHI fragment of v-cycKAN,
while the remaining DNAs hybridized only a 5.2-kb BamHI fragment. To
confirm the specific mutations introduced into each individual mutant,
separate Southern blots were performed with DNAs digested with HpaI
(STOP), NgoMIV (K104E), or SpeI (E133V). As expected, digestion with
each enzyme yielded hybridization patterns indicating the introduction
of the unique diagnostic restriction enzyme sites and linked mutations
and the absence of this pattern in marker rescue isolates. DNAs were
then transfected into Cre-recombinase-expressing Vero cells for
Cre-mediated excision of BAC sequences, followed by the generation of
viral stocks as described in Materials and Methods. Wild-type
HV68-BAC DNA was used to generate the wild-type control virus
used in these studies.
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FIG. 1. Genomic
structures of mutant viruses. (A) Schematic representation of
HV68 region encoding v-cyclin (ORF72) and surrounding genes
from bp 101654 to bp 105377, based on the HV68
WUMS clone sequence
(73). The ORF72 region
probe is depicted above the wild-type (Wt) HV68 schematic and
includes bp 101654 to bp 104035. The restriction enzyme sites shown
were used for the generation of genomic clones or probes, mutagenesis,
or diagnostics and are represented as follows: B, BamHI; Bs, BsrGI; D3,
HinDIII; E, EcoRI; H, HpaI; N, NgoMIV; Nc, NcoI; Ns, NsiI; S, SpeI. (B
and C) Southern blot analysis of wild-type (WT), mutant, and marker
rescue viruses. BAC DNAs were purified, digested with the indicated
restriction enzyme, electrophoresed, blotted, and hybridized with the
ORF72 region probe described above. Panels labeled BamHI and EcoRI
represent general diagnostic Southern analyses for all recombinants,
while those labeled NgoMIV, HpaI, and SpeI are diagnostic Southern
blots for the specific mutants v-cyc[K104E],
v-cyc[STOP], and v-cyc[E133V], respectively. MW
STD, molecular weight
standard.
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FIG. 2. v-Cyclin
protein expression and function. (A) Immunoblot analysis of
v-cyclin protein expression. NIH 3T12 fibroblasts were
lytically infected with wild-type HV68 (WT),
v-cyc[STOP], v-cyc[STOPMR],v-cyc[K104E], v-cyc[K104MR],
v-cyc[E133V], or v-cyc[E133MR] or were mock
infected. Cell lysates were collected at 24 h postinfection
and subjected to SDS-PAGE and Western analysis. Blots were sequentially
probed with rabbit polyclonal anti-v-cyclin antiserum (top panel),
chicken polyclonal anti-ORF59 (middle panel), and mouse
anti-ß-actin (bottom panel). (B) Protein stability of
mutant v-cyclin alleles. NIH 3T12 fibroblasts were lytically infected
with v-cyc[K104E], v-cyc[K104MR],
v-cyc[E133V], or v-cyc[E133MR]. Twenty-four hours
postinfection, 50 mg/ml cycloheximide (CHX) (+) or vehicle
control () was added to each well, and cell lysates were
collected at the indicated times, in hours, posttreatment. Equivalent
protein amounts were subjected to SDS-PAGE and Western analysis. Blots
were probed sequentially with rabbit polyclonal anti-v-cyclin antiserum
(left panels) or mouse anti-ß-actin (right panels).
(C) v-Cyclin mutants do not activate CDK2 activity during
infection. Contact-inhibited, serum-starved NIH 3T3 fibroblasts were
infected with wild-type HV68, v-cyc[STOP],
v-cyc[K104E], or v-cyc[E133V] or were mock
infected in low-serum medium. Cell lysates were collected 24
h postinfection and subjected to immunoprecipitation with rabbit
polyclonal anti-CDK2 directly conjugated to agarose beads. Uninfected,
actively dividing NIH 3T12 fibroblasts were similarly processed as a
positive control. Immunoprecipitates were used as active enzymes for in
vitro kinase assays with glutathione S-transferase-pRb
as an exogenous substrate. Reactions were
terminated by the addition of loading buffer and boiling followed by
SDS-PAGE and autoradiography. Analysis (top panel) was performed with
ImageQuant software, with data normalized to mock infection. Also shown
(bottom panel) is a representative experiment (one of two independent
analyses).
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In addition to
expression, it was necessary to confirm that the K104E and E133V
mutations were, in fact, loss-of-function mutants during an infection.
To show that the v-cyclin proteins expressed by v-cyc[K104E]
and v-cyc[E133V] viruses do not bind and activate CDK2,
contact-inhibited, serum-starved NIH 3T3 fibroblasts were infected, and
cell lysates were made at 24 h postinfection. Equivalent
amounts of cell extracts were subjected to immunoprecipitation with
anti-CDK2-agarose beads, and the precipitates were analyzed in
an in vitro kinase assay utilizing GST-pRb as an exogenous
substrate. An equivalent amount of protein from uninfected, actively
dividing NIH 3T3 cells was used as a positive control for CDK2 kinase
activity. As shown in Fig.
2C, wild-type
HV68 was able to induce a nearly threefold increase in
relative kinase activity compared to uninfected cells, whereas
v-cyc[STOP], v-cyc[K104E], and
v-cyc[E133V] exhibited no significant increase in kinase
activity above the background level, indicating that these v-cyclin
mutants do not activate CDK2 during infection. This result confirms and
extends our previous in vitro analyses of the v-cyclin CDK-binding
mutants
(66).
v-Cyclin interaction with cellular CDKs is not required for viral replication in vitro but is required for acute replication in the lungs in vivo following low-dose intranasal inoculation. Although previous studies have shown no in vitro growth defect of v-cyclin-null viruses (25, 70), we sought to confirm this finding and extend it to the viruses harboring v-cyclin mutants that are unable to bind or activate cellular CDKs. Single-step (MOI = 10) and multistep (MOI = 0.01) infections of NIH 3T12 fibroblasts demonstrated that, as expected, there was no discernible kinetic defect in virus replication for the v-cyc[STOP], v-cyc[K104E], or v-cyc[E133V] mutant, and all reached titers comparable to those of the wild-type virus (Fig. 3A and B). Similar results were obtained in contact-inhibited, serum-starved LA-4 lung epithelial cells (Fig. 3C) (discussed below) as well as in NIH 3T3 fibroblasts and quiescent MEFs (data not shown).
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FIG. 3. Growth
of v-cyclin mutants is similar to that of wild-type (WT) HV68
in vitro. NIH 3T12 fibroblasts were infected with 10 PFU (A)
or 0.01 PFU (B) per cell of wild-type HV68 (closed
diamonds), v-cyc[STOP] (closed squares),
v-cyc[STOPMR] (open squares), v-cyc[K104E]
(closed circles), v-cyc[K104MR] (open circles),
v-cyc[E133V] (closed triangles), or v-cyc[E133MR]
(open triangles). Inocula were removed, and samples were washed with
PBS and repleted with fresh medium 1 h postinfection for
determinations of single-step growth (A) or left for
multistep growth analysis (B). Samples were harvested at the indicated
times, and viral titers were determined by plaque assay. (C)
Growth of wild-type HV68 and v-cyclin mutants in lung
epithelial cells in vitro. LA-4 lung epithelial cells were plated in
low-serum medium, allowed to grow to contact inhibition, and rested for
72 h. Cells were then infected with 0.05 PFU
wild-type HV68 (closed diamonds),
v-cyc[STOP] (closed squares),
v-cyc[K104E] (closed circles), or v-cyc[E133V]
(closed triangles) per cell in low-serum medium. Samples were
harvested at
the indicated times, and viral titers were determined by plaque assay.
All data (A to C) are representative of two independent experiments,
with titers of each sample determined in
duplicate.
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HV68 v-cyclin during acute infection in vivo yielded
conflicting results (25,
70). We have previously
shown that v-cyclin function is dispensable for acute virus replication
in the liver, lungs, and spleen of C57BL/6 mice following high-dose (1
x 106 PFU) intraperitoneal inoculation
(70). However, another
group (25), using the
same dose and route of infection, observed a replication defect in
multiple tissues in BALB/c mice. We sought to clarify and extend these
findings by analyzing the replication of v-cyc[STOP],
v-cyc[K104E], and v-cyc[E133V] during the acute
phase of virus infection following intranasal or intraperitoneal
inoculation. Initially, C57BL/6 mice were infected with 1,000 PFU of
the indicated virus via intranasal inoculation, and acute replication
in the lung was assessed. Notably, viruses expressing mutant v-cyclin
alleles displayed a severe, but not absolute, defect in acute
replication at multiple times postinfection (Fig.
4A and
B). Importantly, the titers of all diluted
viral inocula were redetermined by plaque assay to ensure proper dosage
(data not shown). Statistical analyses revealed that differences
between each mutant virus and their specific marker rescue viruses were
significant (P values of <0.05, as indicated in
figures). In addition, a comparison of the respective marker rescue
virus replication to wild-type virus replication demonstrated that
there were no statistically significant differences. These results
indicate that v-cyclin and, specifically, binding and activation of
CDKs by v-cyclin are required for efficient replication in the lungs of
infected mice following intranasal inoculation. However, this
replication defect was not evident following high-dose (1 x
106 PFU) intranasal inoculation with v-cyc[STOP]
or v-cyc[K104E] (data not shown), indicating that the
dependence on v-cyclin function for acute virus replication in the
lungs is dependent on dose.
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FIG. 4. v-Cyclin
interaction with CDKs is required for acute replication in the lung
following intranasal (IN) inoculation. C57BL/6 mice were infected with
1,000 PFU of wild-type (WT) HV68 (closed diamonds),
v-cyc[STOP] (closed squares), v-cyc[STOPMR] (open
squares), v-cyc[K104E] (closed circles)
v-cyc[K104MR] (open circles), v-cyc[E133V]
(closed triangles), or v-cyc[E133MR] (open triangles) via
intranasal inoculation. Lungs were harvested at 4 (A) and 9
(B) days postinfection, and titers were determined by plaque
assay. Data shown are compiled from two to three independent
experiments with four to five mice each. Solid bars represent the means
of each group, and the dashed line indicates the limit of detection of
the assay (50 PFU/organ). Statistically significant differences
(P < 0.05), as determined by nonparametric
Mann-Whitney analysis, are
indicated.
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FIG. 5. v-Cyclin
interaction with CDKs is dispensable for acute replication in the
spleen following intraperitoneal (IP) inoculation. C57BL/6 mice were
infected with 1,000 PFU of wild-type (WT) HV68 (closed
diamonds), v-cyc[STOP] (closed squares),
v-cyc[STOPMR] (open squares), v-cyc[K104E]
(closed circles), v-cyc[K104MR] (open circles),
v-cyc[E133V] (closed triangles), or v-cyc[E133MR]
(open triangles) via intraperitoneal injection. Spleens were harvested
at 4 (A) and 9 (B) days postinfection, and lytic
titers were determined by plaque assay. Data shown are compiled from
two to three independent experiments with five mice each. Solid bars
represent the means of each group, and the dashed line indicates the
limit of detection of the assay (50 PFU/organ). Statistically
significant differences (P < 0.05) as determined by
nonparametric Mann-Whitney analysis are
indicated.
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v-Cyclin mutant viruses do not exhibit splenomegaly in immunocompetent mice.
Inoculation of immunocompetent mice
with
HV68 results in a pronounced, transient splenomegaly
characterized by an enlargement of the spleen and elevated numbers of
lymphocytes within the spleen. Although this response to infection is
not well understood, it has been shown to be CD4-T-cell dependent
(67). At day 16 after
intranasal infection, we noted a striking difference in the sizes of
spleens infected with wild-type or marker rescue control viruses
compared to those of spleens infected with the mutant v-cyclin viruses
(Fig.
6). Determination of spleen weights revealed a significant difference in
spleen weight in mice infected with v-cyc[STOP],
v-cyc[K104E], or v-cyc[E133V] compared to that of
mice infected with marker rescue controls (Fig.
6A). Cell numbers per
spleen were determined (in triplicate) from pools of five spleens
following disruption and red blood cell lysis. Similar to spleen
weights, the number of cells/spleen was lower in mice infected with
v-cyc[STOP], v-cyc[K104E], or
v-cyc[E133V] than in mice infected with the marker rescue
controls and wild-type virus (Fig.
6B). These data
demonstrate that the development of splenomegaly following low-dose
intranasal infection with v-cyclin mutant viruses is impaired and
correlate with diminished acute virus replication in the lungs at
earlier times postinfection.
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FIG. 6. v-Cyclin
mutant viruses do not induce splenomegaly by 16 days after intranasal
infection. (A) Spleen weights of C57BL/6 mice 16 days after
intranasal infection with 1,000 PFU of wild-type (WT) HV68
(n = 8), v-cyc[STOP] (n =
15), v-cyc[STOPMR] (n = 15),
v-cyc[K104E] (n = 10),
v-cyc[K104MR] (n = 10),
v-cyc[E133V] (n = 13), or
v-cyc[E133MR] (n = 14). Statistically
significant differences (P < 0.05), as determined by
nonparametric Mann-Whitney analysis, are indicated. SPL, splenocytes.
(B) Cell number in spleens of infected mice. Pooled samples
of three to five spleens were analyzed for cell number per spleen
following organ disruption and erythrocyte lysis. Data represent two to
three independent experiments. Error bars represent the standard errors
of the
means.
|
HV68 v-cyclin.
Previous studies have not addressed a
role for v-cyclin in the establishment of, and reactivation from,
latency following intranasal inoculation. Here, we have shown a
dose-dependent replication defect of v-cyclin mutant viruses (Fig.
4) that correlates with
differences in splenomegaly (Fig.
6) following inoculation
via this route. To determine the capacity of v-cyclin mutant viruses to
reactivate 16 days after intranasal infection, splenocytes were
analyzed by employing a limiting-dilution reactivation assay. Figure
7 depicts the frequency of splenocytes 16 days postinfection (1,000 PFU
via intranasal inoculation) that spontaneously reactivate virus upon
explant into tissue culture. As expected, wild-type
HV68
(
1 in 2,000), v-cyc[STOPMR] (
1 in 2,000),
v-cyc[K104MR] (
1 in 4,000), and
v-cyc[E133MR] (
1 in 1,800) all exhibited similar
reactivation frequencies. The frequency of reactivation for
v-cyc[E133V] (
1 in 7,400) was approximately
fourfold lower than that for the control viruses, while
v-cyc[STOP] (
1 in 85,000) and
v-cyc[K104E] (
1 in 80,000) exhibited severe defects
in virus reactivation (ca. 40-fold reduced frequency of cells
reactivating virus). The discrepancy between the results obtained with
the v-cyc[E133V] and those obtained with the
v-cyc[K104E] mutant are discussed below (see
Discussion).
![]() View larger version (46K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 7. Analysis
of splenocyte reactivation following intranasal infection provides
evidence for a CDK-independent function(s) of the HV68
v-cyclin. C57BL/6 mice were infected with 1,000 PFU of (A)
v-cyc[STOP], (B) v-cyc[K104E],
(C) v-cyc[E133V], or the corresponding marker
rescue virus via intranasal (IN) inoculation. Sixteen days
postinfection, splenocytes (SPL) were harvested, made into single-cell
suspensions, and subjected to twofold limiting dilutions on MEF
indicator monolayers for determinations of the ex vivo frequencies of
cells reactivating from latency. Mechanically disrupted cells were
plated in parallel. Curve fit lines were derived by nonlinear
regression analysis, and symbols represent means and standard errors of
the means (error bars) of data from individual experiments as
indicated. The dashed line (63%) represents the value used to calculate
the frequency of reactivating cells as indicated by a Poisson
distribution. Data represent three independent experiments, with each
experiment containing cells pooled from four to five mice.
(D) Graphical representation of preformed infectious virus
from limiting-dilution assays (A to C). WT, wild type; CPE, cytopathic
effect. Bars for each sample represent twofold dilutions of
mechanically disrupted
splenocytes.
|
HV68 (76,
77), coupled with a very
conservative estimate of 1 PFU per productively infected cell
(65), the presence of
preformed infectious virus in splenocytes of mice infected with
wild-type
HV68 corresponds to productive infection in at most
1 in 420,000 cells. Infections with v-cyc[STOPMR],
v-cyc[K104MR], and v-cyc[E133MR] all yielded
similar levels of preformed infectious virus (at most 1 in 470,000, 1
in 525,000, and 1 in 170,000 infected cells producing virus,
respectively). Importantly, these conservative estimates demonstrate
that the frequency of cells that were productively infected did not
contribute significantly to the measurements of the frequency of cells
reactivating virus in these analyses. Extrapolating the best-fit curve
of the nonlinear regression analyses indicates that v-cyclin
CDK-binding mutant viruses displayed slightly lower levels of preformed
infectious virus than wild-type or marker rescue control viruses (Fig.
7D). However, there were
nearly undetectable levels of preformed infectious virus present in
v-cyc[STOP] mutant-infected spleens, which was strikingly
different than what was observed with the CDK-binding mutants
(v-cyc[K104E], 1 in 1.9 x 106;
v-cyc[E133V], 1 in 9 x 105; and
v-cyc[STOP], 1 in 3 x 107). It is notable
that the v-cyc[STOP] mutant, which is highly compromised for
virus reactivation, is also highly compromised for the presence of
preformed infectious virus in the spleen at day 16 compared to either
wild-type virus or the CDK-binding mutant viruses (Fig.
7D), even though the
CDK-binding mutant viruses exhibited a nearly identical defect in acute
virus replication in the lungs (Fig.
4). Thus, there may be a
role for virus reactivation in the ongoing virus replication detected
in the spleen at day 16 postinfection following low-dose intranasal
inoculation. While the levels of preformed infectious virus do not significantly influence the results of ex vivo reactivation analyses (Fig. 7), they severely interfered with determining the frequency of splenocytes harboring viral genomes as determined by LD-PCR analysis. Notably, attempts to remove cell-surface-associated virus by treating splenocytes with acid and/or trypsin, followed by washing input cells, prior to LD-PCR analysis did not remedy this problem (data not shown). Only splenocytes recovered from v-cyc[STOP]-infected mice, which had nearly undetectable levels of preformed infectious virus, yielded reliable LD-PCR results (ca. 1 in 1,000 viral-genome-positive cells) (data not shown). Based on historical data, the frequency of splenocytes harboring v-cyc[STOP] at day 16 postinfection was ca. three- to fivefold lower than that routinely observed with wild-type virus infection at day 16 postinfection by this route and dose (18, 46, 79), indicating a minor defect in the establishment of viral latency that does not account for the observed severe defect in virus reactivation (Fig. 7 and Table 1).
|
View this table: [in a new window] |
TABLE 1. Summary
of acute virus replication and reactivation from
latency
|
![]() View larger version (24K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 8. Reactivation
from latently infected splenocytes and PECs does not require
v-cyclin-CDK interactions following intraperitoneal
inoculation. C57BL/6 mice were infected with 1,000 PFU of wild-type
(WT) HV68, v-cyc[STOP], v-cyc[STOPMR],
v-cyc[K104E], v-cyc[K104MR],
v-cyc[E133V], or v-cyc[E133MR] via
intraperitoneal (IP) injection. (A and B) Forty-two days postinfection,
splenocytes (SPL) were harvested and subjected to twofold limiting
dilutions on MEF indicator monolayers for determinations of the ex vivo
frequency of cells reactivating from latency in the absence
(A) or presence (B) of anti-IgG/IgM and anti-CD40
stimulation. Mechanically disrupted cells were plated in parallel, and
preformed infectious virus was undetected in all cases (data not
shown). C57BL/6 mice were infected with 1,000 PFU of wild-type
HV68 (closed diamonds), v-cyc[STOP] (closed
squares), v-cyc[K104E] (closed circles), and
v-cyc[E133V] (closed triangles) via intraperitoneal
injection. Data represent three to four independent experiments,
with each
experiment containing cells pooled from four to five mice. (C)
Forty-two days postinfection, PECs were harvested and subjected to
twofold limiting dilutions on MEF indicator monolayers for
determinations of the ex vivo frequency of cells reactivating from
latency. Mechanically disrupted cells were plated in parallel, and
preformed infectious virus was undetected in all cases (data not
shown). Curve fit lines were derived by nonlinear regression analysis,
and symbols represent means and standard errors of the means (error
bars) of data from individual experiments as indicated. The dashed line
(63%) represents the value used to calculate the frequency of
reactivating cells as indicated by a Poisson distribution. Data
represent independent experiments (wild-type HV68, n
= 6; v-cyc[STOP], n = 4;
v-cyc[K104E], n = 6;
v-cyc[E133V], n = 4), with each experiment
containing cells pooled from four to five mice. CPE, cytopathic
effect.
|
1 in 120,000) compared to wild-type
HV68 (
1 in 9,500), consistent with previous
findings
(25,
70). However, there was
little or no effect on the frequency of PECs
reactivating virus from mice infected with either
CDK-binding-deficient mutant viruses (v-cyc[K104E],
1 in 14,700; v-cyc[E133V],
1 in 13,800).
Taken together, these data suggest that while v-cyclin expression plays
a critical role in virus reactivation, the ability of v-cyclin to bind
and activate CDKs is largely dispensable for efficient reactivation
from latency. |
|
|---|
HV68 is required
for efficient reactivation from latency
(25,
70), is required for the
maintenance of latency in the absence of B cells
(69), and serves as a
potent oncogene in transgenic mice
(68). In this report, we
demonstrate that the CDK-dependent functions of the
HV68
v-cyclin are critical for acute replication in the lungs of infected
mice following intranasal inoculation (Fig.
4) but are largely
dispensable for reactivation from latency (Fig.
7 and
8).
It is
interesting that the K104E mutation generated here is analogous to the
mutations previously used in numerous studies of cellular and viral
cyclins (15,
20,
24,
35,
36,
52,
66). Generally, these
mutants are utilized as loss-of-function mutants or to elucidate
CDK-independent functions. However, none of these mutants, including
the
HV68 v-cyclin, have been studied in the context of an
ongoing viral infection, when the protein synthesis, processing, and
degradation machinery of the cell is likely usurped by the virus. The
K104E mutation comprises a lysine-to-glutamate substitution at a highly
conserved residue within the cyclin box, the region of cyclins critical
for CDK engagement (37).
Structural determination of the
HV68 v-cyclin
(9) indicates that this
residue participates in protein-protein interactions between v-cyclin
and CDK2 by forming several hydrogen bonds between the two proteins but
that it also forms an intramolecular salt bridge with the glutamate at
amino acid 133 (E133) within the CDK-interacting surface of the
protein. Although both K104E and E133V mutations disrupt the salt
bridge between residues 104 and 133, our analyses demonstrate that a
substitution of a negatively charged residue for K104 is more
deleterious to the stability of the protein during infection than the
substitution of a valine for E133 (Fig.
2B). Notably, infection of
contact-inhibited, growth-arrested fibroblasts with
v-cyc[K104E] or v-cyc[E133V] demonstrated a
failure to activate CDK2 kinase activity above background levels (Fig.
2C), consistent with our
previous demonstration that these mutant v-cyclins fail to bind either
CDK2 or CDC2/CDK1
(66).
CDK-dependent v-cyclin function during acute virus replication.
We show here that efficient acute
replication in the lungs requires CDK-dependent functions of the
HV68 v-cyclin following low-dose intranasal inoculation (Fig.
4). Previous analyses of
v-cyclin-deficient viruses yielded conflicting results with respect to
the role of v-cyclin in acute virus replication. Hoge and colleagues
(25) previously concluded
that v-cyclin is required for acute replication in the spleen following
intraperitoneal inoculation and is necessary for efficient replication
in multiple tissues, with the latter being based on a competition assay
with wild-type
HV68 in severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID)
mice. However, we have previously shown that acute replication of
v-cyclin-deficient virus is comparable to that of wild-type virus in
liver, spleen, and lungs following high-dose (1 x
106 PFU) intraperitoneal inoculation of immunocompetent mice
(70). In addition, the
latter studies also demonstrated that the kinetics of lethality, at
multiple doses, in SCID mice were identical for v-cyc[STOP]
and wild-type virus following intraperitoneal inoculation
(70). Based on our recent
results, we think it is likely that the absence of a replication defect
of v-cyclin null virus in our previous studies was the result of
employing a high inoculating dose of virus, which masked a replication
defect. Indeed, we also failed to observe a replication defect in the
lungs following intranasal infection or spleens following
intraperitoneal infection with v-cyc[STOP] or
v-cyc[K104E] at high doses (1 x 106 PFU)
(data not shown). However, this makes reconciling the findings of Hoge
et al. (25) problematic,
since those studies also used a high inoculating dose of virus (1
x 106 PFU).
Several experimental differences
between the studies of Hoge et al.
(25) and those of van Dyk
et al. (70) may have
contributed to the reported discrepancy with regard to the role of
v-cyclin in acute virus replication. First, the studies of Hoge et al.
(25) were carried using
4- to 6-week-old BALB/c mice, while the studies of van Dyk et al.
(70) were carried out
using 7- to 10-week-old C57BL/6 mice. Thus, both mouse age and strain
may impact acute
HV68 replication. Second, the mutation
strategies used by Hoge et al.
(25) and van Dyk et al.
(70) to ablate v-cyclin
expression differed in important ways. Hoge and colleagues
(25) inserted a
ß-galactosidase expression cassette between the EcoRI sites
within and downstream of the v-cyclin open reading frame, an
insertion/deletion that not only disrupted the v-cyclin ORF but also
deleted 208 bp downstream of the v-cyclin ORF and placed the expression
cassette in the opposite orientation of the v-cyclin gene. The latter
gives rise to transcripts that are antisense to the adjacent ORF73
(encoding the LANA homologue of
HV68). This is notable since
we have recently reported the existence of ORF72 (v-cyclin) and ORF73
(LANA homologue) transcripts that are generated from a shared promoter
distal to both ORFs (4).
As such, the mutation generated previously by Hoge et al.
(25) may alter the
polyadenylation of the ORF73 (LANA) transcript, interfere with
transcription of ORF73 via an antisense mechanism, and/or affect the
splicing of transcripts generated in this region of the viral genome.
Finally, the insertion/deletion introduced by Hoge et al.
(25) may have impacted
the function of the adjacent lytic origin of replication (OriLyt). The
region of the
HV68 genome from bp 100723 to 101974 has been
defined as containing the minimal cis elements required for
OriLyt-directed plasmid replication, although near-maximal levels of
replication were achieved by the inclusion of sequences from bp 100723
to 103120 (17). While the
insertion engineered by Hoge and colleagues does not disrupt the
minimal sequence, use of the EcoRI site at bp 102216 places the
cassette within 250 bp of the minimal origin and well within
the sequences required for maximal replication. In summary,
the deletion introduced by Hoge and colleagues ablates the v-cyclin
poly(A) site and sequences proximal to OriLyt and as such may have
phenotypic consequences beyond that of deleting the v-cyclin gene. The
v-cyclin mutant used by van Dyk et al.
(70) to analyze acute
virus replication also contained an inserted ß-galactosidase
expression cassette. However, in contrast to the v-cyclin mutant
described previously by Hoge et al.
(25), this insertion was
completely contained within the v-cyclin gene, and the expression
cassette was oriented in the same direction as the v-cyclin
gene.
Notwithstanding the differences in the role of v-cyclin in acute virus replication following high-dose intraperitoneal inoculation discussed above, our current analyses of v-cyc[STOP], v-cyc[K104E], and v-cyc[E133V] viruses described here, utilizing a lower inoculating dose (1,000 PFU) and alternate route of administration (intranasal inoculation), conclusively demonstrate that a CDK-dependent mechanism(s) of v-cyclin is required for efficient acute virus replication in the lungs of mice (Fig. 4). However, this requirement for v-cyclin function was not required for acute virus replication in the spleens of mice infected at the same dose administered via intraperitoneal inoculation (Fig. 5).
The v-cyclin
mutant viruses are not the only
HV68 mutants that replicate
normally in tissue culture, but they exhibit altered replication in
vivo under some experimental conditions. A significant difference in
HV68 growth in vitro and in vivo has been previously reported
for a
HV68 mutant lacking ORF21, the thymidine kinase gene
(13). While there is no
indication that thymidine kinase and v-cyclin participate in a shared
signaling pathway, they are both postulated to be necessary for viral
replication in quiescent, nondividing cells. Both are defective for
replication in the lungs of infected mice following intranasal
inoculation but exhibit normal growth in vitro, even when infecting
quiescent fibroblasts or late-passage MEFs. This result is strikingly
different from those obtained for infections performed with recombinant
viruses defective for essential
HV68 genes (e.g., ORF50
[45,
50], ORF31
[19,
30], and ORF45
[28,
29]), which display
severe growth attenuation in vitro and in vivo and require
trans complementation for lytic growth. Thus, genes carried by
HV68 that manipulate cellular processes benefiting the virus
may often be required only in specific cell types and/or during
specific stages of infection in vivo.
A further complication in
attempting to recapitulate cellular conditions in vitro for monitoring
virus growth in quiescent cells has been brought into focus by recent
studies on the nature of cellular quiescence, which indicate that
analyses of virus replication in growth-arrested fibroblast and tumor
cell lines may be naïve. By analyzing the transcriptional profile
of fibroblasts forced into quiescence by three different methods,
Coller and colleagues
(14) previously
demonstrated a minimal genetic program of quiescence comprised of a
subset of genes similarly up- or down-regulated by each treatment. A
major feature of this program is the enforced nondividing state of the
cells, which ensures both the reversibility of cell cycle arrest and,
perhaps more importantly, the suppression of terminal differentiation.
To date, we have repeatedly failed to recapitulate the replication
defect observed in vivo in growth arrested fibroblast and epithelial
cell lines, indicating a disconnect between viral replication in the
lungs of infected mice and in cells arrested in culture. Indeed, as
shown here, there was no defect in the growth of
HV68 v-cyclin
mutants in quiescent murine lung epithelial cells in vitro (Fig.
3C and
4). A major difference my
lie in the differentiation state of these cells and the role that
differentiation my play in dictating/determining the cellular
requirements for viral replication. As discussed previously by Coleman
and colleagues (13),
infection via intranasal inoculation exposes
HV68 to
superficial surfaces of the lung only and, thus, the most
differentiated epithelial layer, where the most stringent genetic and
biochemical requirements for viral replication are likely necessary.
This hypothesis is supported by evidence that high-dose inoculation
with v-cyclin-deficient/defective viruses reveals no defect in lung
replication, conditions which may lead to more infected cells as well
as a broader spectrum of cell types infected. Furthermore, LA-4 lung
epithelial cells, a tumor cell line isolated from a urethane-induced
lung adenoma, even when subjected to contact inhibition and serum
starvation, two potent inducers of quiescence, are capable of
reentering the cell cycle, since their transformation likely blocks
terminal differentiation. This capacity to reenter the cell cycle may
allow the replication of v-cyclin-deficient/defective viruses in these
cells in vitro by complementation with cellular cyclins, whereas these
viruses are unable to efficiently replicate in healthy, noncycling,
terminally differentiated lung epithelial cells in vivo, where it is
likely that there is a complete absence of a CDK-dependent v-cyclin
function(s) required to prepare a cellular environment for viral
replication. It has been demonstrated that human cytomegalovirus
permissiveness in some cell types is dependent on terminal
differentiation, and in differentiated cells, the virus is able to
drive cell cycle progression from G0 by the manipulation of
cell cycle regulators in an immediate-early 1
(IE-1)-dependent manner
(56,
57,
61). Taken together,
these data suggest that herpesviruses have developed strategies for
detecting differences or changes in the cellular differentiation state
and likely have differential genetic requirements for replication in,
maintenance of, or reactivation from latency in cells of various
differentiation states. Thus, we speculate that the requirement for
CDK-dependent v-cyclin functions during acute in vivo replication may
be dependent on the differentiation status, in addition to the type, of
infected cells. Further work will be necessary to determine the role of
differentiation in the genetic requirements for
HV68
replication.
CDK-independent function(s) of v-cyclin in virus reactivation from latency. Analysis of the early establishment of splenic latency was complicated by the presence of relatively high levels of preformed infectious virus at day 16 after low-dose intranasal infection. In mechanically disrupted samples, wild-type and marker rescue viruses showed significantly higher levels of preformed infectious virus than v-cyc[STOP], while v-cyc[K104E] and v-cyc[E133V] displayed intermediate phenotypes (Fig. 7). Since this is not likely due to a defect in viral replication in the spleen (Fig. 5), and the phenotype does not segregate with CDK binding and activation, it is possible that analysis at this time point reveals a transitional phase in splenic infection when wild-type and marker rescue viruses are achieving peak infection and when v-cyclin-deficient viruses are initiating only splenic infection due to diminished acute replication in the lungs. An alternative explanation is that preformed infectious virus at this time arose from recently reactivated virus and contributes to the amplification of latency in the spleen prior to full immune control of the infection. Reactivation from intact samples (Fig. 6) shows that despite detectable levels of preformed virus (which do not appreciably influence reactivation numbers) (see Results), v-cyc[E133V] reactivates similarly to its marker rescue virus, while v-cyc[K104E] demonstrated the same defect in reactivation from latency seen with v-cyc[STOP]. This result was striking for two reasons: (i) v-cyc[E133V] yielded a different result than v-cyc[K104E], and (ii) v-cyc[E133V] reactivation was roughly comparable to that observed with wild-type and marker rescue virus controls. With respect to the first point, it seems likely that the observed differences in reactivation frequency between v-cyc[K104E] and v-cyc[E133V] are due largely to the instability of the v-cyc[K104E] mutant, as demonstrated in Fig. 3. Indeed, in this analysis, the v-cyc[K104E] mutant appears to behave like the v-cyclin null virus mutant (v-cyc[STOP]). However, analysis of PEC latency following intraperitoneal inoculation demonstrated that the v-cyc[K104E] mutant is functional in some settings. With respect to the second point, the ability of the v-cyc[E133V] mutant to reactivate from latency at levels comparable to those of the wild-type and marker rescue viruses provides evidence of a CDK-independent function(s) of the v-cyclin playing a role in virus reactivation from splenocytes. Further support for a CDK-independent function(s) of the v-cyclin in viral reactivation came from the analysis of reactivation from latently infected PECs at day 42 postinfection following low-dose intraperitoneal inoculation (Fig. 8C). In this case, both the cyc[K104E] and v-cyc[E133V] mutants were nearly indistinguishable from wild-type virus.
The finding that
the regulation of virus reactivation is dependent largely on a
CDK-independent function of the
HV68 v-cyclin provides new
insight into the function of v-cyclins and the mechanisms required for
reactivation. Previously, we and others showed that stimulating
proliferation of infected splenocytes postexplant with
lipopolysaccharide (25)
or anti-CD40-IgG/IgM (47)
does not fully complement the reactivation defect of v-cyclin-deficient
viruses, suggesting that cell cycle induction is insufficient to
overcome the defect in virus reactivation observed with v-cyclin null
virus. Here, we demonstrate that the regulation of reactivation by
v-cyclin is a CDK-independent event, as mutant v-cyclin viruses
defective for CDK binding (and presumably cell cycle activation) remain
reactivation competent at levels similar to those of wild-type- or
marker rescue-infected PECs and splenocytes (Fig.
7 and
8). These results strongly
support the existence of a CDK-independent function(s) of v-cyclin,
which plays a critical role in virus reactivation from
latency.
Based on a growing body of evidence, significant
precedence for such a role is clear, as cellular D-, E-, and A-type
cyclins have been linked to transcriptional regulation
(6,
15,
20). Of particular note,
cyclin D1 has been shown to act as a transcriptional repressor of
Myb-like proteins (22,
26), p300
(21), MyoD
(58,
59), DMP1
(27), STAT3
(7,
8), SP1
(53), thyroid
(39) and androgen
(33) receptors, and
peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma
(75). It has also been
implicated as an activator of the estrogen receptor
(48,
80) and a cofactor for
P/CAF, NcoA, AIB-1, GRIP-1, histone deacetylase 3, and TAF(II)250
(reviewed in reference
15). Generally, these
functions are independent of CDKs, as shown by use of a cyclin D1 K114E
mutant (analogous to the v-cyclin K104E mutation), kinase-defective
CDKs, or cellular CDK inhibitors. Cyclin D3 is implicated in the
modulation of hATF5 in a CDK-independent manner
(40) and the vitamin D
receptor in a CDK-competitive manner
(31). With respect to
viral cyclin functions, the KSHV v-cyclin directly represses STAT3
transcriptional activity to overcome growth inhibition caused by
oncostatin-M in transiently and stably transfected cells
(16,
41). In addition, we have
preliminary data indicating that the
HV68 v-cyclin can
modulate the activation of reporter constructs that are responsive to
specific cellular and viral transcription factors in a CDK-independent
manner (our unpublished observations). Finally, a recent study has
shown that knock-in mice harboring a cyclin D1 mutant defective in
activating CDK4 and CDK6 kinase activity still retain functions
necessary for several cyclin D1-dependent compartments, including
mammary gland development
(36). However, these mice
are resistant to transformation by exogenous oncogenes, as are cyclin
D1-deficient mice (36).
The latter analyses provide compelling evidence for the existence of
critical CDK-independent functions of at least some cellular
cyclins.
In summary, there appear to be strong parallels between
the function of
HV68 v-cyclin and both cellular cyclin D1 and
KSHV v-cyclin. Further analyses are necessary to characterize the
CDK-independent functions of this v-cyclin and the role that they play
in virus reactivation.
Published ahead of print on 27 September 2006. ![]()
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expression and transactivation. Mol. Cell. Biol.
23:6159-6173.This article has been cited by other articles:
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