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Journal of Virology, March 2006, p. 2170-2182, Vol. 80, No. 5
0022-538X/06/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JVI.80.5.2170-2182.2006
Copyright © 2006, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Division of Infectious Diseases, School of Public Health, 140 Warren Hall, University of California, Berkeley, California 94720-7360
Received 23 August 2005/ Accepted 8 December 2005
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The flaviviruses contain a capped, positive-sense RNA genome that is translated as a single polyprotein, which is cleaved co- and posttranslationally by host and viral proteases to yield three structural and seven nonstructural proteins (30). During cap-dependent translation, initiation occurs when the cap-binding complex eukaryotic initiation factor 4F (eIF4F) and cofactor eIF4B bind the 5' cap structure. Recruitment of the 43S preinitiation complex by eIF4F leads to formation of the 48S complex, which scans the 5' untranslated region (UTR), unwinding the secondary structure until it locates a start codon (45). Extensive secondary structure in the 5' UTR can impede the scanning complex from reaching the start codon (35). A portion of the time, the initiation machinery recognizes the first start codon it reaches, usually AUG. However, the efficiency of a given start codon is dependent upon the sequences immediately upstream and downstream of the start codon, known as the Kozak consensus sequence in vertebrates: gccRccAUGG (uppercase letters indicate functionally important positions, and boldface letters indicate the start codon) (31). Functionally, the most important positions have been demonstrated to be the 3 and +4 positions relative to the A of AUG (33, 36). Ninety-seven percent of vertebrate mRNAs have a purine residue at the 3 position (32), and a purine at the 3 site and a guanine at the +4 site can dramatically increase recognition of a start codon in vitro and in cells (33, 36).
The start codon of the flavivirus polyprotein is located at the beginning of the capsid protein (C), the dimeric alpha-helical protein component of the viral nucleocapsid (30). The solution structure of DENV C suggests that the highly basic carboxy terminus both forms a dimerization domain and interacts with the viral RNA (40). The N terminus is disordered in solution, but given that it is also highly positively charged, it has been proposed that it may interact with the viral RNA and form a regular structure upon RNA binding (24). The N termini of the flavivirus capsid proteins are not well conserved, but the overall positive charge and protein length are maintained (4), suggesting that the amino-terminal residues are important in the viral life cycle. Despite this, we have noted that the start codons of DENV1 to -3 and many of the mosquito-borne flaviviruses are in a poor initiation context, predicting that N-terminally truncated capsid products would be produced by leaky scanning. Nevertheless, sequencing of the capsid protein supports the first AUG as the start codon that is utilized (4).
It has been reported that introducing RNA secondary structure downstream of a start codon in a poor initiation context can enhance recognition of the suboptimal codon (33, 34). The optimal distance from the start codon for a hairpin to direct initiation is 12 to 15 nucleotides (nt), which corresponds to the footprint of a ribosome paused over a start codon (37). It is believed that the scanning initiation machinery pauses at the structural element in order to unwind it, allowing the ribosome to remain in contact with an AUG in a poor initiation context (34, 37, 51).
Given the lack of a strong initiation context among many of the mosquito-borne flaviviruses, we hypothesized that secondary structure present downstream of the start codon could be responsible for the high efficiency of initiation from the first AUG. Here, we describe a mechanism for translation initiation codon selection by DENV2 involving a phylogenetically conserved RNA secondary-structure element in the capsid coding region that likely also plays a role in another step of the viral life cycle.
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G values reflect efn2 refinement (the mfold free-energy computation incorporating coaxial stacking and the Jacobson-Stockmeyer theory for multibranched loops) (41, 62). For phylogenetic consensus structure prediction, sequences were first aligned with ClustalX 1.8 (52) software and then processed by the RNAalifold module of the Vienna RNA Package (21). Construction of DNA constructs. The C-FLAG constructs were generated by splicing by overlap extension-PCR (SOE-PCR) by amplifying the T7 promoter, 5'UTR, and first 270 nt of the capsid gene from the infectious clone (IC) of DENV2 strain 16681 (pD2/IC-30P, hereafter referred to as pD2/IC; a gift of R. Kinney, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Fort Collins, CO) and fusing the product to a 3XFLAG epitope and the 3' UTR of DENV2 16681. The 3XFLAG region was formed by overlapping primers using the sequence from p3xFLAG-CMV-10 (Sigma, St. Louis, MO) without the initiation codon and with a terminal stop codon (TAG). Mutations were introduced by SOE-PCR or by QuickChange site-directed mutagenesis (Stratagene, La Jolla, CA). SOE-PCR products were digested with SacI and XbaI and ligated into pUC19 (New England Biolabs, Beverly, MA). Infectious-clone variants containing mutations in the 5' UTR or C coding region were generated by amplifying the T7 promoter and the first 1,391 nt of the transcribed region of pD2/IC and introducing mutations by SOE-PCR or QuickChange. The resulting products were then digested with SacI and SphI and ligated into SacI/SphI-digested pD2/IC. IC variants containing mutations in the 3' UTR were generated by amplifying the NS5 coding region and 3' UTR of pD2/IC and introducing mutations by SOE-PCR. The resulting PCR products were digested with AvrII and XbaI and ligated into AvrII/XbaI-digested pD2/IC. Primer sequences are available upon request.
In vitro transcription. C-FLAG RNAs were generated via in vitro transcription by incubating XbaI-linearized DNA with 5 mM each GTP, CTP, and UTP; 0.36 mM ATP; 1.8 mM 7mG(5')ppp(5')A cap analog (New England Biolabs, Beverly, MA); 40 mM Tris-Cl, pH 7.9; 2.5 mM spermidine; 26 mM MgCl2; 0.01% Triton X-100; 10 mM dithiothreitol; 4 units/ml inorganic pyrophosphatase; 320 units/ml Superasein (Ambion, Austin, TX); and 6.4 µl/ml T7 polymerase (a gift of K. Collins, University of California, Berkeley) for 2 h at 37°C. Eighty units/ml of DNase RQ-1 (Promega, Madison, WI) was added, and the reaction mixtures were incubated at 37°C for an additional 15 min. Free nucleotides were removed by gel filtration chromatography on a Micro Bio-Spin P-30 Tris column (Bio-Rad Laboratories, Hercules, CA). Infectious-clone RNAs were generated by in vitro transcription with the RiboMax Large Scale RNA Production System (T7) (Promega) with the following modifications to the manufacturer's protocol: 5 mM each GTP, CTP, and UTP; 1 mM ATP; and 5 mM 7mG(5')ppp(5')A cap analog incubated for 4 h at 30°C with the addition of 2 mM ATP after 30 min. All DNA templates were generated by digestion with XbaI and were gel purified using the QIAquick Gel Extraction kit (QIAGEN, Valencia, CA).
Cell culture. Baby hamster kidney cells (BHK-21 clone 15) were grown in minimal essential medium-alpha (Gibco, Carlsbad, CA) with 100 units/ml penicillin, 100 µg/ml streptomycin, 10 mM HEPES, pH 7.5, and 5% fetal bovine serum (FBS) (HyClone, Logan, UT) at 37°C in 5% CO2. Human hepatoma (Hep3B) cells were grown in Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium (Gibco) with penicillin, streptomycin, HEPES, and 10% FBS at 37°C in 5% CO2. Aedes albopictus (C6/36) cells were grown in Leibovitz's L-15 medium (Gibco) with penicillin, streptomycin, HEPES, and 10% FBS (C-FLAG transfections) or 5% FBS (pD2/IC transfections) at 28°C.
RNA transfection. Hep3B cells were seeded in 24-well plates, grown to 70% confluence, and transfected with 1 µg C-FLAG RNA using Lipofectamine 2000 (Invitrogen), followed by a 4-h incubation at 37°C in 5% CO2. C6/36 cells were transfected with 1 µg C-FLAG RNA with TransMessenger Transfection Reagent (QIAGEN) and incubated for 3 h at 28°C. Transfected C6/36 cells were washed in 1 ml L-15 medium and incubated for an additional 21 h at 28°C. All cells were lysed in 50 µl lysis buffer (125 mM NaCl, 50 mM Tris-Cl, pH 8.0, 10% glycerol, and 1% NP-40), and the lysate was clarified by centrifugation. For transfections with infectious-clone RNA, Hep3B and C6/36 cells were seeded in 24-well plates, grown to 50% confluence, and transfected as described above but were washed three times in 1 ml culture medium at 2 h posttransfection and then incubated for a total of 72 h. The supernatants were collected, and the viral titer was assessed by plaque assay. Cellular RNA was harvested from a duplicate well at 2 h posttransfection using the RNEasy Mini kit (QIAGEN), and the transfection efficiency was determined by quantitative reverse transcription (qRT)-PCR.
Quantitative RT-PCR. To control for the transfection efficiency of viral RNAs, a duplicate well was transfected and cells were harvested after 2 h, at which time DENV2 RNAs had not undergone replication (11, 13). Intracellular RNA was extracted with the RNEasy Mini Kit (QIAGEN). qRT-PCR of viral RNA from transfected cells was performed on an Applied Biosystems 7300 using LUX Fluorogenic Primers and the Superscript III Platinum One-Step Quantitative RT-PCR system (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA). Anti-DENV2 NS1 primers were labeled with 6-carboxy-fluorescein, and anti-ß-actin primers were labeled with 6-carboxy-4',5'-dichloro-2',7'-dimethoxyfluorescein. Primer sequences are available upon request.
Immunoblotting. Cell lysates were separated by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis on a 14% acrylamide gel and transferred to 0.2 µm Protran nitrocellulose (Schleicher & Schuell BioScience, Keene, NH). The immunoblots were incubated with anti-FLAG M2 monoclonal antibody (Sigma) at a dilution of 1/20,000, followed by incubation with horseradish peroxidase-conjugated goat anti-mouse immunoglobulin (Jackson Immunoresearch, West Grove, PA) at a dilution of 1/40,000. The immunoblots were imaged on a Chemi-Doc EQ system (Bio-Rad), and band quantitation was conducted with QuantityOne software (Bio-Rad). The maximum linear range detectable in this system was determined to be 32-fold by serial dilution.
Plaque assay. Plaque assays for virus titration were conducted as described previously (12). Briefly, BHK-21 monolayers were grown to 70% confluence in 12-well plates and incubated with serially diluted transfection supernatants for 2 h at 37°C in 5% CO2. The wells were subsequently overlaid with minimal essential medium-Eagle's medium (Sigma), 1% SeaPlaque low-melting-point agarose (Cambrex, Rockland, ME), and 5% FBS; incubated for 5 days; and fixed with 4% formaldehyde. The wells were stained with 0.1% crystal violet in 20% ethanol, and PFU per ml were calculated.
Viral cDNA sequencing. A C6/36 cell monolayer was infected with plaque-positive supernatant from pD2/IC-AUG1mut-transfected C6/36 cells and incubated for 10 days, at which point the viral titer was detectable by plaque assay. Viral RNA was extracted from the supernatant using the QIAamp Viral RNA Mini kit (QIAGEN) and amplified by RT-PCR using the Superscript III Platinum One-Step RT-PCR system (Invitrogen). The RT-PCR product was extracted using the QIAquick PCR Cleanup kit (QIAGEN) and submitted for sequencing at the University of California, Berkeley, DNA Sequencing Facility (Berkeley, CA).
Statistical analysis. Calculations of the mean and standard deviation (SD) were performed by Microsoft Excel 2004 for Macintosh (Microsoft Corporation, Redmond, WA). A statistically significant difference was defined as a P value of <0.05 by Student's t test, which was performed in Microsoft Excel.
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FIG. 1. Translation of DENV2 capsid initiates from multiple AUGs. RNAs consisting of the DENV2 5' UTR, the first 270 nt of the capsid gene, a 3XFLAG epitope, and the DENV2 3' UTR (C-FLAG) were transfected into Hep3B and C6/36 cells. (A) Schematic diagram of C-FLAG RNA constructs. (B) Anti-FLAG immunoblot of C-FLAG-transfected Hep3B cells at 4 h posttransfection. (C) Anti-FLAG blot of transfected C6/36 cells at 24 h posttransfection. (D) Anti-FLAG immunoblot of Hep3B cells treated with 10 µg/ml cycloheximide (CHX) at 3 h posttransfection, incubated for 30 min, and lysed at the time indicated. The efficiency of codon usage is expressed as a ratio of the higher-molecular-weight C-FLAG isoform (1st AUG) to the lower-molecular-weight isoform (2nd AUG), and the mean ratio and SD were calculated from four experiments. (E) Anti-FLAG immunoblot of C6/36 cells treated as in panel D with the addition of CHX at 18 h posttransfection. The graph is as in panel D; the mean ratio and SD were calculated from five experiments. , no RNA transfection (control).
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A conserved hairpin structure is predicted in the capsid gene coding region. To determine whether downstream secondary structure might be responsible for the efficiency of first start codon usage in translation of C-FLAG, the structure of the first 150 nt of DENV2 was predicted using mfold (41, 62). A hairpin element (cHP) was predicted to form 14 nt downstream of the start codon in the C coding region of DENV2 (Fig. 2A). This cHP structure is maintained when small segments, as well as the full-length virus, are folded and is present in the majority of computed structures (data not shown).
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FIG. 2. A conserved hairpin element is predicted among mosquito- and tick-borne flaviviruses. (A) The RNA secondary structure of the first 150 nt of DENV2 was predicted by mfold; the start codon is circled, and the cHP is indicated by a bracket. (B) Alignment of start codons and the first in-frame AUG of mosquito-borne flaviruses, with predicted cHP stem regions outlined by rectangles. The 3 and +4 positions are indicated in gray letters. Viruses with a poor initiation context are indicated by asterisks. 5' CS regions are indicated by solid arrows. The DENV2 5' UAR region is indicated by a dashed arrow. (C) Phylogenetic consensus structure based on aligned sequences of DENV1, DENV2, DENV3, and DENV4 as computed by RNAalifold, with the start codon circled and the cHP indicated with a bracket. Covariant residues are circled. (D) Phylogenetic consensus structure of the mosquito-borne Japanese encephalitis serogroup viruses, WNV, Kunjin virus, JEV, St. Louis encephalitis virus, and Murray valley encephalitis virus, as in panel C. (E) Phylogenetic consensus structure of the tick-borne viruses: tick-borne encephalitis, Omsk hemorrhagic fever, Kyasanur Forest disease, and Powassan viruses, as in panel C.
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The conservation of the cHP among flaviviruses was further confirmed by phylogenetic secondary-structure analysis using RNAalifold (21). Among the dengue viruses and among flaviviruses of the Japanese encephalitis virus serogroup, the cHP was maintained by covariation to preserve the overall secondary structure despite changes to the primary sequence (Fig. 2C and D). It is noteworthy that the reported predicted structures of the 5' UTRs of the mosquito-borne viruses are also maintained by covariation. In addition, among the tick-borne flaviviruses analyzed, the cHP was also maintained at approximately the same position relative to the 5' end (Fig. 2E). However, similar to YFV, the cHP of the tick-borne flaviviruses contains the start codon, which is in a strong initiation context (Fig. 2E and data not shown).
The DENV2 cHP directs start codon selection.
Given the position of the predicted cHP relative to the initiation site and the apparent conservation of the structure in the viruses examined, we sought to determine the role of the DENV2 cHP in translation initiation from the first start codon. If the cHP were directing initiation by causing the scanning translation machinery to stall, then disruption of the cHP would be predicted to increase initiation from the downstream AUG and stabilization of the cHP should increase initiation from the first start codon. To test the function of the cHP, mutations were introduced into C-FLAG constructs that were predicted to disrupt or further stabilize the cHP as computed by mfold. Two disrupted hairpins were constructed, with free energies of 3.4 kcal/mol (HP3.4) and +0.2 kcal/mol (HP0.2) when folded independently (Fig. 3A). RNAs were transfected into Hep3B and C6/36 cells, and translation products were analyzed by immunoblotting. Mutations that were predicted to disrupt the cHP decreased initiation from the first AUG in both Hep3B and C6/36 cells. In Hep3B cells, the ratio of the higher-molecular-weight to the lower-molecular-weight C-FLAG isoform decreased 61% in the HP3.4 and 68% in the HP0.2 constructs compared to the wt cHP (Fig. 3B). Similarly, in C6/36 cells, the ratio of the full-length C-FLAG to the truncated product decreased 89% in the HP3.4 and 93% in the HP0.2 constructs in comparison to the wt (Fig. 3C). Conversely, increasing the
G of the hairpin to 11.9 kcal/mol (HP11.9) enhanced initiation from the first start codon nearly threefold in Hep3B cells and at least 2.4-fold in C6/36 cells over the wt cHP (Fig. 3B and C, respectively). Thus, the cHP directs first-AUG selection proportional to its stability.
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FIG. 3. The DENV2 cHP regulates translation initiation site selection. (A) Schematic diagram of constructs used to test different HP free energies. (B) Anti-FLAG immunoblot of C-FLAG-transfected Hep3B cells at 4 h posttransfection. The efficiency of codon usage is expressed as a ratio of the higher-molecular-weight C-FLAG isoform (1st AUG) to the lower-molecular-weight isoform (2nd AUG). The error bars indicate SDs; the data are derived from four experiments. (C) Anti-FLAG immunoblot of transfected C6/36 cells at 24 h posttransfection as in panel B. The graph is as in panel B; the data represent the averages of three experiments. The ratio of 32 reflects the maximum difference detectable by immunoblotting under the conditions described. *, P < 0.001 relative to wt.
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FIG. 4. Comparison of first start codon selection by DENV2 cHP to selection by improved start codon context. (A) Schematic diagram of constructs used to test the efficiency of first start codon selection by the cHP or by initiation context. (B) Anti-FLAG immunoblot of C-FLAG-transfected Hep3B cells at 4 h posttransfection. The efficiency of codon usage is expressed as a ratio of the higher-molecular-weight C-FLAG isoform (1st AUG) to the lower-molecular-weight isoform (2nd AUG). The error bars indicate SDs; the data are derived from five experiments. (C) Anti-FLAG immunoblot of transfected C6/36 cells at 24 h posttransfection as in panel B. The graph is as in panel B; the data represent the averages of four experiments. *, P < 0.05 relative to wt; **, P < 0.01 relative to 3G/HPmut.
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G (HPhet) (Fig. 5A). In both Hep3B and C6/36 cells, the change of cHP sequence did not decrease its ability to direct start site selection (Fig. 5D and E). Initiation from the first AUG in the HPhet construct increased 1.7-fold in Hep3B cells and at least 2.4-fold in C6/36 cells, consistent with its greater free energy (9.7 kcal/mol versus 8.2 kcal/mol, respectively) (Fig. 5A). Overall, the position dependence and sequence independence of the cHP support the model of ribosome stalling in cHP-mediated start codon selection.
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FIG. 5. The DENV2 cHP directs start codon selection via a position-dependent, sequence-independent mechanism. (A) Schematic diagrams of constructs used to test the position and sequence dependence of the DENV2 cHP in regulating start site selection. (B) Anti-FLAG immunoblot of C-FLAG-transfected Hep3B cells at 4 h posttransfection. The efficiency of codon usage is expressed as a ratio of the higher-molecular-weight C-FLAG isoform (1st AUG) to the lower-molecular-weight isoform (2nd AUG). The error bars indicate SDs; the data are derived from three experiments. (C) Anti-FLAG immunoblot of transfected C6/36 cells at 24 h posttransfection as in panel B. The graph is as in panel B; the data represent the averages of three experiments. (D) Anti-FLAG immunoblot of transfected Hep3B cells at 4 h posttransfection as in panel B. The mean ratio and SD are calculated from four experiments. (E) Anti-FLAG immunoblot of transfected C6/36 cells at 24 h posttransfection as in panel B. The table is as in panel D; the data represent the averages of four experiments. The ratio of 32 reflects the maximum difference detectable by immunoblotting under the conditions described. *, P < 0.01 relative to wt.
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FIG. 6. 5'-3' cyclization is not required for cHP-mediated start codon selection. (A) Schematic diagram of constructs used to test the impact of potential 5'-3' cyclization on initiation site selection. (B) Anti-FLAG immunoblot of C-FLAG-transfected Hep3B cells at 4 h posttransfection. The efficiency of codon usage is expressed as a ratio of the higher-molecular-weight C-FLAG isoform (1st AUG) to the lower-molecular-weight isoform (2nd AUG). The data are derived from three experiments. (C) Anti-FLAG immunoblot of transfected C6/36 cells at 24 h posttransfection as in panel B. The table is as in panel B; the data represent the averages of three experiments.
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FIG. 7. The cHP is required for efficient DENV2 replication. In vitro-transcribed IC RNAs were transfected into Hep3B and C6/36 cell monolayers, and viral replication was assessed after 72 h by plaque assay. The titers were normalized to transfection efficiency as determined by qRT-PCR at 2 h posttransfection. (A) Schematics of IC variants utilized to study the role of the cHP and of the nucleotides that make up the DENV2 initiation context. (B) Viral titers are expressed as PFU per ml from IC-transfected Hep3B cells. One log unit reflects the limit of detection of a standard plaque assay. The error bars indicate SD; the data are derived from at least four experiments. (C) Viral titers from IC-transfected C6/36 cells. The graph is as in panel B; the data are derived from at least four experiments. (D) Viral titers from IC-transfected Hep3B cells. The graph is as in panel B; the data are derived from at least four experiments. (E) Viral titers from IC-transfected C6/36 cells. The graph is as in panel B; the data are derived from at least three experiments. , not detectable.
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Both the first and second DENV2 capsid AUGs are required for viral replication. The results of C-FLAG translation experiments indicate that the DENV2 capsid protein is translated from multiple start codons, producing full-length and shorter C isoforms. To determine whether both of the first two AUGs are required for the DENV2 viral life cycle, the first and second AUGs were mutated (pD2/IC-AUG1mut and pD2/IC-AUG2mut, respectively) (Fig. 8A). Hep3B and C6/36 cells were transfected with viral RNA, and replication was assessed by plaque assay. Mutation of the first AUG decreased viral replication in Hep3B cells by greater than 2.5 log units to levels below the limit of detection (Fig. 8B). In C6/36 cells, however, lower levels of viral replication from the AUG1mut variant were detected in three of five experiments. In the three experiments where a low level of viral replication was observed, the difference between wt and AUG1mut was approximately 1.4 log units (Fig. 8C). Surprisingly, sequencing of the progeny virus yielded the input GUG mutation of the first start codon. Mutation of the second AUG resulted in a decrease in viral titers of greater than 2.5 log units in Hep3B cells and 4 log units in C6/36 cells to undetectable levels (Fig. 8B and D, respectively). Similar to the 3G mutation, mutation of AUG2 resulted in a disruption of the cyclization of the genome that occurs through the 5' and 3' CS domains (9, 19, 26, 47, 61). To determine whether the defective replication of pD2/IC-AUG2mut was the result of disrupted cyclization, a compensatory mutation was made in the 3' CS domain to restore basepairing (Fig. 8A). The single 3'CScomp modification alone (pD2/IC-3'CScomp) resulted in a lack of detectable viral replication in C6/36 cells (Fig. 8D). The variant combining both mutations (pD2/IC-AUG2mut/3'CScomp) did replicate, albeit at lower levels than the wt, in C6/36 cells (a decrease of 2.4 log units) (Fig. 8D). Similar results were obtained in Hep3B cells (data not shown). The decreased viral titers produced by the AUG1mut and AUG2mut pD2/IC variants, therefore, confirm the importance of the first and second AUGs in the viral life cycle.
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FIG. 8. Both the first and second AUGs of capsid play a role in the viral life cycle. In vitro-transcribed IC RNAs were transfected into Hep3B and C6/36 cell monolayers, and viral replication was assessed at 72 h by plaque assay. The titers were normalized to transfection efficiency as determined by qRT-PCR at 2 h posttransfection. (A) Schematic of IC variants utilized to study the roles of the first two AUGs in the capsid coding region. (B) Viral titers expressed as PFU/ml from IC-transfected Hep3B cells. One log unit reflects the limit of detection of a standard plaque assay. The error bars indicate SDs; the data are derived from at least three experiments. (C) Viral titers from IC-transfected C6/36 cells. The graph is as in panel B; the data are derived from at least five experiments. AUG1mut (), not detectable in two of five experiments; AUG1mut (+), titerable virus detected in three of five experiments. (D) Viral titers from IC-transfected C6/36 cells. The graph is as in panel B; the data are derived from at least three experiments. , not detectable.
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cis-acting elements are frequently found in the UTRs of cellular and viral messages. Less common is the identification of regulatory elements located in the coding regions. However, it is likely that the coding region influences the secondary structure of the UTRs and that coding regions may also contain regulatory cis elements, as has been demonstrated in several viruses (15, 16, 18, 38). While structures in the untranslated regions of flaviviruses have been shown to regulate translation and viral RNA synthesis (1, 22, 44, 53, 60), no specific coding-region structures have been identified that regulate translation, replication, or encapsidation, with the exception of the 5' CS, which forms a long-range interaction with the 3' UTR (9, 19, 26, 47, 61). It is clear from studies in which subgenomic Kunjin virus replicons were complemented in trans with viral proteins that certain regions of flavivirus genomes are required to be present in cis for viral replication and assembly (27, 28, 39). Whether this reflects a requirement for regulatory RNA elements contained within the viral protein coding regions remains to be elucidated.
From studies involving C-FLAG fusion constructs, we have shown that the cHP modulates start codon selection in two cell types that represent the natural life cycle of the dengue viruses. Consistent with this model, the cHP enhances initiation site selection proportional to its free energy and exhibits sequence independence and position dependence in its modulation of translation initiation. Interestingly, usage of the first AUG when the hairpin was relocated upstream was less than that observed for the construct in which the cHP was simply disrupted. This may be the result of the first AUG being obscured by the new structure created 2 nt downstream of the start codon. Shifting the hairpin downstream from the wt position also decreased recognition of the first AUG. In both Hep3B and C6/36 cells, usage of the first start codon was greater than that observed for the construct with a disrupted cHP (HPmut) (Fig. 4). Although the maximum effect of enhancement has been reported to occur when a hairpin structure is located 14 nucleotides from the first AUG (34), the increased stability of the hairpin shifted downstream compared to the wt (13.0 kcal/mol versus 8.2 kcal/mol) may contribute to its ability to influence start site selection. In both cases, the creation of a hairpin at another location might have altered the overall structure of the 5' end in a way that influenced start site recognition, though in each case, changes to the mfold-predicted structure were minimal.
It is notable that the degree to which the cHP and mutant hairpins direct start codon selection is greater in C6/36 than in Hep3B cells. There are two possible explanations for this observation. First, the temperature at which C6/36 cells are grown is substantially lower than that for Hep3B cells (28°C versus 37°C). Free-energy calculations by mfold predict that this decrease in temperature will correspond to an increase in stability of the cHP by 1.5 kcal/mol. Alternatively, this may be the result of real differences between species. The mechanism by which ribosomes recognize start codons has been mapped not only to basepairing with the initiator tRNA-Met anticodon, but also to initiation factors, such as eIF1 and eIF1a, which dissociate improperly formed initiation complexes (48, 49); to eIF2, which may participate in proper anticodon presentation (10, 20, 51); and to general RNA binding proteins (42). In addition, start codon selection in cell-free translation systems has been shown to be dependent on the concentration of the RNA template (10), which has also been observed for the C-FLAG constructs (K. Clyde and E. Harris, unpublished observations). These findings support the assertion that the levels of individual translation factors influence start codon selection independently of the initiation context. It is therefore possible that the difference in efficiency seen between human and mosquito cells results from the differential expression or regulation of translation factors that modulate start codon recognition.
Attempts to compensate for the poor initiation context of the DENV2 start codon by altering the start codon context (3G and +4G) in the infectious clone yielded viral variants that did not produce detectable titers. The 3 site in DENV2 lies within a 17-nt region that is conserved in all four DENV serotypes. It is not surprising that a mutation at this site caused a defect in viral replication. Moreover, in DENV4, a deletion in this motif was lethal to virus replication (6). It has been shown recently that this region, in addition to the CS, participates in circularization of the DENV genome (2). Mutation of the 3 site, in conjunction with two other substitutions by Alvarez et al. (2), decreased viral titers below the level of detection, and compensatory mutations to restore basepairing only partially rescued viral replication. It is not surprising, then, that the 3G variant of pD2/IC exhibits a defect in viral replication even in the context of a compensatory mutation in the 3' UAR, confirming its role in viral replication beyond cyclization. In addition to the 3 site, the +4 site is also required for efficient viral replication. As this position is part of the coding region, this may reflect a preference at the amino acid level. These observations form a compelling argument for the evolution of the cHP as a mechanism for start site selection to overcome constraints on the nucleotides immediately upstream and downstream of the start codon.
Viral nucleocapsid proteins are linked to diverse functions in the viral life cycle in addition to assembly (3, 7, 8, 25, 43, 46, 54, 59). A number of groups have reported that the flavivirus C protein localizes to the nuclei of infected cells (5, 46, 55, 56), and DENV C specifically interacts with hnRNP K and can reverse its repression of transcription (8). In JEV, nuclear translocation of C has been implicated in viral replication in cell culture and in neurotropism in mice (46). However, we know of no studies that have reported the requirement for expression of C from the first and second initiation codons. Here, we have shown that the full-length C isoform is required for efficient viral replication in human cells. Viral variants that are unable to express C from the second in-frame start codon were also replication deficient, and a compensatory mutation to restore basepairing with the 3' CS only partially rescued replication. This may reflect the requirement of the virus to produce the N-terminally truncated C product, perhaps for a purpose other than assembly. If the requirement for the second AUG were entirely based on RNA sequence and a requirement for cyclization, then the second AUG would not necessarily be maintained in frame with respect to the first start codon, and we would expect to see sequence covariation at this site. However, this downstream, in-frame AUG is maintained in all the mosquito-borne flaviviruses analyzed (Fig. 2). We cannot rule out the possibility that the replication defect reflects a requirement for a Met residue at that position in C, although no functional motifs in DENV2 C were predicted to require this Met residue (Clyde and Harris, unpublished), with the exception of a bipartite nuclear targeting sequence that was found not to be involved in nuclear localization of DENV C (55). Somewhat surprising was the production of a low level of virus that lacks the first start codon in C6/36 cells (Fig. 8C). This may reflect a small amount of translation of C protein from a non-AUG codon that was not detectable in the C-FLAG constructs. It is also possible that a low level of revertant genome acted as a helper virus in packaging the AUG1mut variant; perhaps the lack of a first start codon confers upon the viral genome a selective advantage at another step in the viral life cycle prior to packaging. Alternatively, the viral life cycle may not absolutely require the full-length C protein. Overall, given the conservation of the first AUG and a second in-frame AUG among the mosquito-borne flaviviruses, it is not surprising that mutation of either would be unfavorable to viral replication.
The conservation of the cHP among all flaviviruses, regardless of the location of the start codon and of its context, suggests that it may play a role in the viral life cycle in addition to directing translation initiation from the first AUG. A dual role for such a structural element has also been described for hepatitis B virus (23). Using the infectious clone of DENV2 strain 16681, we showed that the cHP is required for viral replication in human and mosquito cells. A possible explanation for the decreased replication seen in the pD2/IC variant containing a disrupted cHP is the reduced level of full-length C protein that is produced. Alternatively, the truncated C isomer may inhibit nucleocapsid formation by acting as a dominant negative. However, given that the difference in level between full-length and truncated C was approximately 2.5-fold in Hep3B cells and slightly greater than 9-fold in C6/36 cells, either scenario would be unlikely to account entirely for the decrease in titer of 2.5 and 4 log units, respectively. This implicates the DENV2 cHP as a structural element involved at other stages of the viral life cycle, such as the regulation of translation, RNA synthesis, or viral assembly. A similar coding-region element has been shown to confer enhanced translation in Sindbis virus (15, 16), although we observed no pronounced differences in translation efficiency among the DENV2 C-FLAG constructs. RNA structures are also responsible for packaging of the viral genome in a number of RNA viruses (14, 17, 38, 50, 57). Therefore, it is possible that the cHP forms part of a flavivirus encapsidation signal. Finally, it has been shown that the beginning of the C coding region is required for flavivirus RNA synthesis in subgenomic RNA and reporter replicon systems (29, 60, 61). In addition, both the 5' end of the WNV genome and the 3' UTR are required for negative-strand synthesis, whereas only the 5' end is necessary for positive-strand synthesis in vitro (47). Thus, it is possible that RNA sequences or structures act as replication signals or stabilize the replication machinery at the 3' end of the negative strand. The cHP, therefore, may contribute to positive-strand (or both positive- and negative-strand) synthesis signals. We are in the process of determining which steps of the viral life cycle are regulated by the cHP.
RNA sequence and structural elements, primarily in the untranslated regions of the genome, have been linked to diverse processes in the flavivirus life cycle. Here, we have identified a conserved structure in the coding region of DENV2 that directs start site selection and is required for efficient viral replication in cell culture. Whereas the cHP is positioned to play a role in translation start site selection in most of the mosquito-borne flaviviruses, it is not situated to do so in the tick-borne viruses, although the structure is maintained by sequence covariation. This supports a role for the cHP at a step in the viral life cycle beyond enhanced first-AUG usage. Understanding of the specific cis elements that are utilized during viral replication will serve to broaden our knowledge of the basic biology of flaviviruses and will better inform design of vaccines and antiviral therapies.
Funding for this research was provided by NIH grant AI052324 and the Pew Charitable Trusts grant 26175C (E.H.), as well as by the Berkeley Fellowship for Graduate Study and the Zimmer Family Foundation scholarship program (K.C.).
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