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Journal of Virology, April 2006, p. 3567-3581, Vol. 80, No. 7
0022-538X/06/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JVI.80.7.3567-3581.2006
Copyright © 2006, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Department of Microbiology and Molecular Genetics, School of Medicine, University of California, Irvine, California 92697-4025
Received 22 September 2005/ Accepted 13 January 2006
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ICP27 has also been shown to stimulate expression of some early genes and transcription of some late viral genes (23, 61). Furthermore, ICP27 has been shown to associate with cellular RNA polymerase II (RNAP II) holoenzyme, and this interaction was found to be independent of DNA and RNA (66). A number of cellular proteins that are involved in RNA processing, including 5' capping, splicing, and 3' cleavage and polyadenylation, have been found to bind to the C-terminal domain (CTD) of RNAP II, which acts as a platform to bring these factors to sites on the nascent transcript where their action is needed (for review, see references 3 and 21). Therefore, in this study we first asked if ICP27 interacted directly with the RNAP II CTD, in accord with its posttranscriptional activities.
Some cellular RNA processing factors that associate with the RNAP II CTD interact predominantly with a specific phosphorylated form of the CTD, whereas others do not show a marked preference when binding (2, 7, 24, 28). The RNAP II CTD in all eukaryotes is highly conserved and consists of tandem repeats of a heptapeptide, YSPTSPS, which is repeated 52 times in humans. The CTD is reversibly phosphorylated on serine-2 and serine-5 in the heptapeptide repeat (9). Unphosphorylated RNAP II is recruited to the promoter, where a preinitiation complex forms. At initiation of transcription, serine-5 is phosphorylated primarily by cdk7, which is associated with general transcription factor TFIIH (9, 28). Thus, RNAP II found at the promoters of genes is mostly phosphorylated on serine-5 (for review, see reference 26). This form is also referred to as hypophosphorylated or RNAP IIA. During elongation, another kinase, P-TEFb, which consists of the cyclin-dependent kinase cdk9 and one of several cyclin T isoforms, phosphorylates serine-2 (for review, see reference 43). The elongating form of RNAP II is hyperphosphorylated and is called the RNAP IIO form, which has a slower migration (63). In HSV-1-infected cells, an intermediately phosphorylated form has been found beginning around 5 h after infection (48). HSV-1 protein ICP22 and kinase UL13 have been shown to mediate the phosphorylation of RNAP II, resulting in the RNAP IIi form (31, 47). Further, it has been shown that ICP22 interacts with cdk9 in a complex and that the HSV-1 kinase Us3 may also be involved in the intermediate phosphorylation of RNAP II (14). The exact nature of the modifications and the role of the RNAP IIi form during viral transcription have not been elucidated.
It was reported recently that in addition to the modification of RNAP II to the IIi form, HSV-1 infection leads to a loss of serine-2 phosphorylation (17). In this study, a small subfraction remained and was found to colocalize with splicing speckles, leading the authors to postulate that reduced serine-2 phosphorylation and its relocation to nuclear speckles may be demonstrative of the inhibition of cellular gene transcription, which was previously shown to occur on several cellular genes during HSV-1 infection (58). To determine with which phosphorylated forms of the CTD ICP27 associates, we used monoclonal antibodies that are specific for the serine-5 and serine-2 forms. Surprisingly, we found decreased levels of the serine-2 form as well as an overall decrease in RNAP II holoenzyme, which suggested protein degradation rather than reduced phosphorylation. In accord with this postulate, proteasome inhibitors prevented the loss of the phosphoserine-2 form as well as the decrease in overall RNAP II levels, as did treatment with actinomycin D during infection to halt early and late viral transcription. Studies in yeasts have shown that the 26S proteasome associates with the 3' ends of genes in a transcription-dependent fashion and correlates with the accumulation of transcripts and the buildup of transcription complexes in the same region (19, 57). The results that we present here lead us to postulate that during robust transcription of HSV-1 early and late genes from both strands of the genome, RNAP II complexes may collide and stall and proteasomal degradation may be required to resolve these complexes.
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N, p
NLS, pD2
S5, pR1, pH 17, p
C, pS2, and pS18 have been described previously (5, 6, 20, 51). Plasmids p
26-100 and p
63-100 were constructed from pSG130B/S (52) containing the WT ICP27 gene by deleting the fragment from AgeI to DraIII and the fragment from DraIII to RsrII, respectively, and inserting oligonucleotides to restore the reading frame and replace flanking amino acids. pEt21-GST-CTD expressing full-length WT murine glutathione transferase (GST)-CTD with 52 repeats was generously provided by David Bentley (33). Virus infection and immunoprecipitation procedures. HeLa R19 cells were infected with the viruses indicated in each figure at a multiplicity of infection of 10. Nuclear extracts and whole-cell extracts were prepared as described previously (6, 51). For all immunoprecipitation experiments, extracts were treated with 10 µg/ml DNase I (Sigma) and a 1:100 dilution of RNase cocktail (Ambion) at 30°C for 30 min in the presence of protease inhibitors, 4 mM Pefabloc, and leupeptin at 0.1 µg/µl. Immunoprecipitations, gel electrophoresis, and immunoblotting procedures were performed as described previously (6, 51, 65).
In vitro binding assays. GST-binding assays were performed at room temperature by combining 20 µl of glutathione-Sepharose-bound GST proteins with 10 µl of 35S-labeled proteins (or as indicated in the figures) from in vitro translation reactions as described previously (6, 51). DNase and RNase were added as described above. Beads were washed five times, and bound proteins were fractionated by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE).
In vitro phosphorylation.
Twenty microliters of GST and GST-CTD bound to glutathione-Sepharose beads was incubated with 50 µCi of [
-32P]ATP and 5 units of cdc-2 kinase (New England Biolabs) under the conditions specified by the manufacturer. Apyrase (Sigma), which is an ATPase, was included in some reactions as a negative control for phosphorylation.
Immunofluorescence microscopy. RSFs were grown on coverslips and infected as described in the figure legends. At various times, cells were fixed in 3.7% formaldehyde, and immunofluorescence staining was performed as described previously (6, 51) with anti-ICP27 antibodies H1119 and H1113 (Goodwin Institute); anti-ICP4 antibody H1101 (Goodwin Institute); anti-RNAP II antibodies 8WG16, H5, and H14 (Covance Research Products); ARNA3 (Research Diagnostics); and anti-SC35 hybridoma supernatant (51). The specificity of the RNAP II antibodies is shown in Table 1. Procedures for the serial treatment of cells with different monoclonal antibodies were as described previously (51). Cells were viewed by fluorescence microscopy at a magnification of x100 with a Zeiss Axiovert S100 microscope. Images were pseudocolored and merged using Adobe Photoshop.
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TABLE 1. Specificity of monoclonal antibodies against RNAP II
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FIG. 1. ICP27 binds to both unphosphorylated and phosphorylated RNAP II CTD in vitro and in vivo. (A) GST binding assays were performed with GST-CTD and in vitro translated ICP27. Two or twenty microliters of the translation reaction was added to the binding assays as indicated. The binding assays were performed in the presence of DNase and RNase to eliminate the possibility of nucleic acid bridging. Luciferase was included as a negative control. (B) GST-CTD was phosphorylated in vitro with cdc2 kinase. GST was included as a negative control. (C) Unphosphorylated or cdc2-phosphorylated GST-CTD was added to binding assays with in vitro translated ICP27 as indicated. The binding reactions were also performed with GST-CTD that was treated with cdc-2 in the presence of the ATPase apyrase as a control. All binding assays were performed in the presence of DNase and RNase. (D) RNAP II was immunoprecipitated with antibody 8WG16 or a combination of H14 and H5 from nuclear extracts (NE) of cells that were infected with HSV-1 KOS for 6 h. ICP27 in the immunoprecipitated complexes was detected by Western blot analysis with antibody H1119, which is specific for ICP27. The intense band beneath the ICP27 band is heavy chain immunoglobulin G from the immunoprecipitation. (E) Immunoprecipitations were performed with ICP27 antibody H1119 on nuclear extracts from cells that were mock-infected (UN) or were infected with 27-LacZ or HSV-1 KOS. Western blot analysis was performed to detect RNAP II and ICP27 with the indicated antibodies. NE, nuclear extracts; Luc, luciferase; IP, immunoprecipitation.
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N, in which N-terminal residues 3 to 28 are deleted (65);
C, in which C-terminal residues 450 to 512 are deleted (51); and S2, which has an insertion of four amino acids between residues 465 and 466 (20). C-terminal mutant S18, with an insertion of four amino acids between residues 504 and 505 (20), bound as efficiently as WT ICP27 (Fig. 2B). Thus, as with ICP27's self-interaction (65) and its interaction with several other proteins, including splicing SR proteins (51) and export receptor TAP/NXF1 (5), both the N terminus and C terminus, at least until amino acid 504, must be intact for efficient binding to unphosphorylated GST-CTD (Fig. 2B). It was similarly found that the N terminus and C terminus must be intact for binding of ICP27 to phosphorylated GST-CTD (Fig. 2C); however, mutant S2 bound efficiently to phosphorylated GST-CTD, but binding to unphosphorylated GST-CTD was barely detectable (Fig. 2B). The insertion and deletion mutations undoubtedly cause conformation changes in ICP27, and it is possible that binding to the more extended structure of the phosphorylated CTD (63) is more tolerant of these alterations. It should also be noted that the in vitro binding assays were repeated five times, and the results were similar to the representative results shown in Fig. 2 in all cases.
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FIG. 2. Both the N terminus and the C terminus of ICP27 must be intact for binding to RNAP II CTD in vitro. In vitro binding assays were performed with GST-CTD and WT or mutant forms of ICP27 that were translated in vitro. (A) A schematic representation of the ICP27 coding sequence showing the sites of the mutations. The leucine-rich region (LRR), the nuclear localization signal (NLS), the RGG-box motif (RGG), the arginine-rich region 2 (R2), three predicted KH domains (KH1, KH2, KH3), and a zinc finger-like domain (CCHC) are depicted. (B) In vitro binding assays were performed with unphosphorylated (unphos) GST-CTD and WT or mutant forms of ICP27 as indicated. Luciferase was included as a negative control. Input 35S-labeled proteins are shown in the lower panel. (C) GST-CTD was phosphorylated (phos) in vitro with [ -32P]ATP by cdc2 kinase, and binding assays were performed with WT and mutant forms of ICP27. Input 35S-labeled proteins are shown in the lower panel. DNase and RNase were added to all binding reactions. Luc, luciferase.
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FIG. 3. The N terminus and the C terminus of ICP27 must be intact for efficient interaction with RNAP II in virus-infected cells. (A) A schematic diagram of the ICP27 coding sequence showing the positions of the lesions in the ICP27 viral mutants. The domains shown are as described in the legend to Fig. 2. (B) The residues affected in each mutant are indicated. (C) HeLa cells were infected for 6 h with WT HSV-1 KOS and the indicated mutant viruses. A portion of each nuclear extract was analyzed by Western blotting with anti-RNAP II antibody 8WG16 to monitor RNAP II expression. (D) Immunoprecipitations (IP) were performed with antibody H1119 to ICP27, and RNAP II was detected by Western blot analysis with antibody 8WG16. ICP27 mutant dLeu has a deletion in the epitope recognized by H1119 (dLeu-9), and therefore immunoprecipitation was performed in parallel with ICP27 antibody H113, which recognizes a different epitope (dLeu-3). RNAP II was detected with antibody 8WG16, and ICP27 was detected with H1119. Asterisks denote the positions of WT and mutant forms of ICP27. The plus (+) signs indicate heavy chain immunoglobulin G that was present from the immunoprecipitations. The numbers under the lanes indicate the amount of immunoprecipitated protein relative to the WT, which was arbitrarily set to equal 1.0. Protein amounts were quantified using SigmaScan software. UN, untreated.
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FIG. 4. ICP27 mutants that failed to interact with RNAP II also fail to colocalize and recruit RNAP II to viral transcription sites. RSFs were infected for 6 h with WT HSV-1 KOS and the indicated ICP27 mutants. In panel E, WT-infected cells were fixed at 3 and 8 h after infection, and mutant-infected cells were fixed at 8 h after infection. Cells were stained with anti-ICP27, anti-ICP4, and the RNAP II antibodies 8WG16, ARNA3, and H14 as indicated.
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Next, we looked at the distribution of the phosphoserine-5 form of RNAP II, which is recognized by antibody H14 (41) and which is found predominantly at promoters in initiation complexes (26). H14 staining was not seen to be largely redistributed in WT-infected cells even at 8 h after infection (Fig. 4E). While there was a movement of some of the H14 staining to viral transcription compartments seen at 8 h compared to 3 h, staining was distributed throughout the nucleus. These results are in agreement with those of Fraser and Rice (17), who also found little redistribution with H14 in WT-infected cells. This observation suggests that cellular transcription initiation continues during viral infection even at late times. Interestingly, the H14 staining pattern seen in ICP27 null mutant 27-LacZ-infected cells and in m15-infected cells more closely resembles what is seen in mock-infected cells (Fig. 4E). There was also little evidence of transcription compartment formation in 27-LacZ- and m15-infected cells. These results suggest that viral transcription is greatly reduced even at 8 h after infection with these mutants. In fact, microarray analysis of total RNA extracted 8 h after infection with 27-LacZ and m15 showed that the abundance of viral early and late transcripts was reduced to 10% of WT KOS levels for 27-LacZ and to 15% of KOS levels for m15 (A. Sun, E. K. Wagner, and R. M. Sandri-Goldin, unpublished results). Further, dLeu and n406 also showed greatly decreased levels of late transcripts in microarray analysis, and little redistribution of RNAP II and poor formation of ICP4-transcription compartments were also observed (Fig. 4B, D, and E). We conclude that the interaction of ICP27 with RNAP II is required for efficient redistribution of RNAP II to viral transcription sites and that these sites are poorly formed in infections with ICP27 mutants that do not interact with RNAP II. Further, viral transcription appears to be reduced in ICP27 N-terminal and C-terminal mutants that fail to interact with RNAP II. Thus, ICP27's role in the stimulation of viral transcription may hinge upon its ability to interact with and recruit RNAP II.
ICP27 colocalizes with the phosphoserine-2 form of RNAP II at early times after infection but not at later times. We were particularly interested in determining if ICP27 colocalized with the phosphoserine-2 form of RNAP II, which is found predominantly in elongating transcription complexes, and with which factors required for splicing and 3' end formation have been found to associate (1, 2, 24). Antibody H5 has been reported to specifically recognize serine-2 phosphorylation in the CTD (41). At 4 h after infection with WT KOS, H5 staining was seen to be redistributed compared to mock- and 27-Lac Z-infected cells and to colocalize with ICP27 (Fig. 5A.) This was confirmed by Z-stack analysis. The deconvoluted maximum view of H5 (green) and ICP27 (red) staining is shown to the right of WT panels at 4 h in Fig. 5A. However, by 8 h postinfection, ICP27 was actively shuttling between the nucleus and cytoplasm, and H5 staining was seen to move to structures that resembled splicing speckles (Fig. 5A). Z-stack deconvolution analysis demonstrated that ICP27 and H5 staining were distinct and did not overlap (Fig. 5A, right column). In m15- and n406-infected cells, the speckled staining pattern seen with H5 was not observed, and a pattern more similar to what was seen in mock- and 27-LacZ-infected cells was seen. Further, ICP27, which is confined to the nucleus even at late times in these mutants because they are defective in export (5), did not colocalize with H5 staining (Fig. 5A). The phosphoserine-2 form of RNAP II recognized by H5 was recently reported to be found in splicing speckles rather than in HSV-1 replication compartments marked by ICP8 staining in WT HSV-1-infected cells (17). We sought to determine whether any H5 staining colocalized with ICP4. In WT-infected cells, H5 staining was again observed in structures resembling splicing speckles, and colocalization with ICP4 compartments was not observed (Fig. 5B). In cells infected with ICP27 mutants 27-LacZ, m15, and n406, a diffuse distribution of H5 staining was observed similar to what was seen in mock-infected cells, and, again, there was little formation of ICP4 compartments evident (Fig. 5B). To further determine the nature of the H5 speckled staining pattern in WT-infected cells at late times after infection, we did a colocalization analysis with a monoclonal antibody to splicing factor SC35, which has been shown to be a component of splicing speckles (18). In mock- and n406-infected cells, H5 staining was diffusely distributed throughout the nucleus and was distinct from SC35 speckles (Fig. 5C). In WT KOS-infected cells, H5 staining colocalized with SC35 staining (Fig. 5C). There was also a striking reduction in the overall level of H5 staining compared to what was seen in mock- and n406-infected cells. Antibody H5 has been reported to cross-react with splicing SR proteins, including SC35, when levels of SR proteins are more abundant than levels of the phosphoserine-2 form of RNAP II (13). Because overall H5 staining was greatly reduced, we reasoned that H5 may actually be cross-reacting with SC35 and other SR proteins, which are enriched in splicing speckles. Z-stack analysis supported this supposition because there was a perfect coincidence in the staining patterns (Fig. 5C). This result leads us to conclude that the phosphoserine-2 form of RNAP II becomes depleted at late times after WT HSV-1 infection and that the H5 antibody preferentially reacts with SR splicing proteins whose serine phospho-epitopes can be recognized by H5.
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FIG. 5. H5 staining decreases and colocalizes with splicing speckles at late times in WT HSV-1 infection. RSFs were either mock infected or were infected with WT HSV-1 KOS or the ICP27 mutants 27-LacZ, m15, and n406. Cells were fixed at 4 and 8 h after infection where indicated and at 8 h if not indicated. Cells were stained with anti-phosphoserine-2 antibody H5 and antibodies to ICP27, ICP4, and SC35 as indicated. Z-stack deconvolution analysis was performed where indicated, and the maximum view is shown in each case.
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FIG. 6. Phosphoserine-2 levels, as well as RNAP II levels, in general decrease during the course of WT HSV-1 infection. (A) HeLa cells were mock infected (M) or were infected with ICP27 null mutant 27-LacZ or WT HSV-1 KOS, and nuclear extracts were prepared at the times indicated. Western blot analysis was performed with the following anti-RNAP II antibodies: ARNA3, which detects all forms of RNAP II both phosphorylated and unphosphorylated; H14, which is specific for phosphoserine-5; and H5, which is specific for phosphoserine-2. The blots were also probed with antibodies to ICP27, the nuclear transcription factor YY1, and kinases cdk7 and cdk9. (B) Protein quantification is shown for total RNAP II (top panel), phosphoserine-5 (P-Ser5) RNAP II (middle panel), and phosphoserine-2 (P-Ser-2) RNAP II forms (bottom panel).
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FIG. 7. Loss of phosphoserine-2 (P-Ser2) and RNAP II can be prevented by the proteasomal inhibitors MG123 and lactacystin. (A) RNAP II was immunoprecipitated from WT HSV-1 KOS-infected cells at 5 h after infection, and dephosphorylation with alkaline phosphatase was performed as described previously (64). ICP27 was immunoprecipitated and treated with alkaline phosphatase in parallel as a control. UN, untreated; Buf, treated with buffer alone; AP, treated with alkaline phosphatase. Upper panels show autoradiographs, and the lower panels show Western blots of the same gels probed with antibody for ICP27 or RNAP II. (B) Cells were mock infected or infected WT KOS. Increasing amounts of the proteasome inhibitor MG132 from 0 to 50 µM were added as indicated at 1 h after infection, and nuclear extracts were prepared at 6 h. Western blots were probed with anti-RNAP II antibody ARNA3, which detects all forms, and H5, which detects phosphoserine-2. Blots were also probed with antibody to nuclear transcription factor YY1 and to ICP27. (C) Lactacystin was added in increasing amounts from 0 to 60 µM to mock- and WT KOS-infected cells at 1 h after infection, and nuclear extracts were prepared 5 h later. Blots were probed with antibodies as indicated in panel B.
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Ubiquitination of RNAP II can be detected in HSV-1-infected cells in the presence of MG132, which also prevents decreased H5 staining and its relocalization to splicing speckles. To determine if ubiquitinated forms of RNAP II could be detected, Western blot analysis was performed on samples from mock- and HSV-1 WT KOS-infected cells that were or were not treated with MG132. The blots were probed with H5, specific for serine-2 phosphorylation, and H14, specific for serine-5 phosphorylation. The blots were overexposed to allow detection of the labile ubiquitinated forms (Fig. 8A). Slower-migrating species indicative of ubiquitinated forms were detected in WT HSV-1 samples that were treated with MG132 but not in the absence of the inhibitor. In fact, reduced levels of the phosphoserine-2 form were again seen in the absence of MG132 in KOS-infected cells (Fig. 8A). To directly demonstrate ubiquitination, WT HSV-1-infected cells were treated with MG132 as described above. Infected cell lysates were immunoprecipitated with anti-ubiquitin antibody (12), and Western blot analysis was performed with anti-RNAP II antibodies 8WG16 and ARNA3 to detect all forms of RNAP II (Fig. 8B). Slower-migrating forms of RNAP II that coprecipitated with anti-ubiquitin antibody were readily detected in the longer exposure seen in the middle panel of Fig. 8B (marked by arrows). Ubiquitinated forms were more apparent in the MG132-treated sample, as would be expected with a proteasome inhibitor. To verify that RNAP II was coprecipitated with anti-ubiquitin antibody, in a parallel experiment proteins bound to the antibody-protein A Sepharose beads were eluted, and the eluate was immunoprecipitated with anti-RNAP II antibodies 8WG16 and ARNA3 (right panel). Western blot analysis confirmed that RNAP II was precipitated with anti-ubiquitin antibody. Further, addition of MG132 to KOS-infected cells at 4 h after infection prevented the decrease in H5 staining seen at 8 h after infection when no MG132 was added (Fig. 8C). Additionally, H5 staining was not relocalized to splicing speckles in the presence of MG132 but, instead, remained diffusely nuclear. These findings lend further support to our conclusion that H5 staining of splicing speckles resulted from cross-reactivity of the H5 antibody with SR proteins, rather than from a redistribution of the phosphoserine-2 form to these sites.
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FIG. 8. MG132 prevents the decrease in H5 staining and its relocalization to splicing speckles. (A) Mock- and HSV-1 WT KOS-infected cells were left untreated () or were treated with 50 µM MG132 added 1 h after infection, and nuclear extracts were prepared at 6 h. Samples of the nuclear extracts were fractionated by SDS-PAGE, and Western blot analysis was performed with H5 antibody, specific for phosphoserine-2, and H14 antibody, specific for phosphoserine-5 (P-Ser2). The blots were overexposed to detect the faint, slower-migrating species that are marked by arrows. (B) WT KOS-infected cells were either left untreated () or were treated with MG132 added 1 h after infection as indicated. At 6 h after infection, samples of nuclear extracts (NE) were either fractionated directly by SDS-PAGE or were immunoprecipitated (IP) with anti-ubiquitin antibody (left and middle panels) (12). The blot was probed with anti-RNAP II antibodies 8WG16 and ARNA3 to detect all species of RNAP II. The panel in the middle is a darker exposure of the panel on the left. Arrows indicate the position of slower-migrating ubiquitinated forms of RNAP II. In a parallel experiment, after immunoprecipitation with anti-ubiquitin antibody, precipitated proteins bound to the antibody-protein A Sepharose beads were eluted in 1% SDS in phosphate-buffered saline at 60°C for 15 min as previously described (12). The eluate was diluted with 20 volumes of phosphate-buffered saline containing 100 mM NaCl and1% Triton X-100. Samples were then immunoprecipitated with anti-RNAP II antibodies 8WG16 and ARNA3 and were fractioned by SDS-PAGE. Western blot analysis was performed with 8WG16 and ARNA3. (C) WT HSV-1 KOS-infected cells were either left untreated (left panels) or were treated with 50 µM MG132 at 4 h after infection (right panels). Cells were fixed at 8 h and stained with phosphoserine-2 antibody H5, antibody to ICP4, and antibody to SR splicing factor SC35.
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FIG. 9. Inhibition of viral transcription prevents the loss of phosphoserine-2, as well as its relocalization to splicing speckles. (A and B) Mock- and WT HSV-1 KOS-infected cells were either untreated or were treated with actinomycin D (10 µg/ml) at 4 h after infection, and cells were fixed at 8 h. Cells were stained with antibody H5 and with antibodies to SC35 (A) and ICP4 (B) as indicated. (C) Mock (M)- and WT HSV-1 KOS-infected cells were either untreated or were treated with actinomycin D (10 µg/ml) at 4 h after infection; total cell extracts were prepared at 8 h, and samples were fractioned by SDS-PAGE. Western blots were probed with antibodies to RNAP II (ARNA3 and H5); HSV-1 IE proteins ICP4, ICP0 and ICP27; and viral late protein gC. Antibody to YY1 was also used as a loading control. (D) Cells were mock (M)-infected or were infected with WT HSV-1 KOS or ICP27 mutants n406 and m15. Nuclear extracts were prepared at the times indicated; samples were fractionated by SDS-PAGE, and Western blot analysis was performed with antibodies to RNAP II large subunit (ARNA3), phosphoserine-5 (H14), and phosphoserine-2 (H5). YY1 was also probed as a loading control. P-Ser, phosphoserine.
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MG132 rescues phosphoserine-2 degradation but results in reductions in viral late proteins and in virus yields. We postulated that the elongating transcription complex containing the phosphoserine-2 form became arrested or stalled during active HSV-1 transcription and DNA replication. This could result from colliding elongation complexes, because HSV-1 transcripts are transcribed from both strands in some regions of the genome, from simultaneous transcription and DNA replication on the same template, from DNA damage due to HSV-1 recombination events, or from a combination of these possible events. If ubiquitination and proteasomal degradation of RNAP II were occurring to resolve stalled complexes and allow appropriate 3' end processing, inhibition of this process by proteasome inhibitors could result in diminished levels of late viral products. To determine whether that was the case, WT HSV-1-infected cells were either treated with MG132 at 1 h after infection or left untreated, and total RNA (Fig. 10A) and proteins were extracted at 4 and 8 h (Fig. 10B). Viral RNA was analyzed by microarray analysis as described previously (60). Although there were some differences seen in the accumulation of early (green) and late (blue) transcripts in infected cells treated with MG132 compared to untreated cells (Fig. 10A), these increases or decreases were in the range of less than twofold for each viral transcript. This indicates that MG132 did not inhibit transcript accumulation. In contrast to the modest increases or reductions seen in the levels of viral early and late transcripts, MG132 treatment had a greater effect on late protein levels. Levels of gB and gD were significantly reduced, and gC was undetectable in MG132-treated cells (Fig. 10B). Further, virus yields were reduced 25- to 60-fold when MG132 or lactacystin was added (Fig. 10C). These data suggest that proteasomal degradation of RNAP II is beneficial for HSV-1 gene expression and replication.
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FIG. 10. Proteasomal inhibitors rescued phosphoserine-2 (P-Ser 2), but reduced levels of viral late proteins and virus yields result. (A) WT HSV-1 KOS-infected cells were either left untreated or treated with MG132 as indicated beginning 1 h after infection. Total RNA was isolated at 8 h after infection, and microarray analysis was performed against an array of HSV-1 transcript-specific probes as described previously (60). Immediate-early genes are shown in red, early genes are shown in green, and late genes are shown in blue. The experiment was performed twice, and the hybridizations were performed in triplicate in each experiment. Error bars represent the standard deviations. (B) WT HSV-1 KOS-infected cells were treated with increasing amounts of MG132 as indicated, beginning at 1 h after infection. Total cell lysates were prepared at 4 and 8 h after infection, and samples were fractionated by SDS-PAGE. Western blot analysis was performed with H5 antibody and antibodies to HSV-1 late proteins gB, gD, and gC and to immediate-early protein ICP4. (C) WT KOS-infected cells were either untreated or were treated with MG132 (20 µM) or lactacystin (20 µM), which was added at 1 h after infection. Cells were harvested at 24 h, and virus titers were determined.
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Interestingly, recruitment of RNAP II was observed with antibodies 8WG16 and ARNA3, which recognize both unphosphorylated and different phosphorylated forms of RNAP II, but not with H14, which recognizes phosphoserine-5, or with H5, which recognizes phosphoserine-2. H14 staining was seen to remain diffusely localized throughout the nucleus even at late times after infection (Fig. 4), and only a fraction of the staining was seen to overlap with ICP4-containing compartments. Serine-5 phosphorylation occurs during transcription initiation at the promoters of genes (7, 21, 33), and the finding that serine-5 phosphorylation can be found throughout the nucleus during HSV-1 infection implies that cellular transcription is an ongoing process. In contrast to the pattern seen with H14, H5 staining was reduced and relocalized to splicing speckles marked by SC35 staining. H5 is specific for phosphoserine-2, which is found in elongating RNAP II (41). A similar result has been reported by Fraser and Rice (17). These authors interpreted this result to mean that the partial depletion of serine-2 phosphorylation along with relocalization of the remaining H5 staining material to splicing speckles occurred as a result of the inhibition of cellular transcription. It has been reported previously that HSV-1 infection causes repression of transcription for some cellular genes (58). These authors also speculated that serine-2 phosphorylation was not required for HSV-1 transcription because of the disappearance of the H5 staining and its relocalization to splicing speckles and that HSV-1-induced phosphorylation of the CTD through the action of ICP22 and UL13 could substitute for serine-2 phosphorylation. Although the sites of CTD phosphorylation mediated by ICP22 and UL13 have not been elucidated, Durand et al. (14) have shown recently that ICP22 associates with cdk9 in a complex that can phosphorylate the CTD in vitro. Because cdk9 phosphorylates serine-2 on the CTD, it seems unlikely that the HSV-1-induced changes would not involve serine-2 phosphorylation. Furthermore, 3' end formation and transcription have been shown to be coupled through the binding of factors required for cleavage and polyadenylation to the serine-2-phosphorylated CTD (2). Therefore, we sought to determine if the loss of H5 staining was due to degradation of phosphoserine-2 RNAP II.
It has been reported that antibody H5 cross-reacts with SR splicing proteins, including SC35 when these factors are more abundant than phosphoserine-2 of RNAP II (13). Z-stack analysis demonstrated that H5 and SC35 staining were strikingly coincident (Fig. 5), leading us to speculate that we were observing H5 cross-reacting with SC35 and other SR proteins. Western blot analysis confirmed that the phosphoserine-2 form of RNAP II was significantly reduced in WT HSV-1-infected cells and, furthermore, that there was also a reduction in RNAP II levels overall (Fig. 6). This suggested that protein degradation rather than dephosphorylation was occurring. Treatment with proteasome inhibitors MG132 and lactacystin prevented the loss of RNAP II and the serine-2 phosphorylated form, and relocalization to splicing speckles also was not observed (Fig. 7 and 8). Because the degradation occurred faster and more dramatically in WT HSV-1-infected cells compared to infections with ICP27 null mutant 27-LacZ, whose viral transcriptional program is greatly reduced, we considered the possibility that active viral transcription was responsible. It has been shown in yeasts that stalled transcription complexes at sites of DNA damage or due to accumulating transcription complexes undergo proteasomal degradation of RNAP II to resolve stalled complexes and to rescue 3' end formation (2, 19). Therefore, at times of active viral transcription, elongating RNAP II might stall because of accumulating complexes during robust transcription and possibly simultaneous DNA replication. Rescue of these RNAs through proteasomal degradation might be a necessary aspect of viral replication. If that is the case, then, first, inhibiting transcriptional elongation by actinomycin D should also rescue phosphoserine-2, and we observed this result (Fig. 9). Second, blocking proteasomal degradation with proteasome inhibitors should interfere with viral replication, at least to some extent because transcripts in stalled complexes would not undergo correct processing and 3' end formation. While we did not look directly at 3' ends of viral transcripts, we did find that while early and late transcripts were altered in abundance by less than twofold, viral late proteins were reduced more significantly, and virus yields were reduced 25- to 60-fold (Fig. 10). These findings indicate that proteasome inhibitors do not inhibit transcription per se but prevent the degradation of stalled RNAP II complexes, which could result in improper 3' ends. These inappropriately processed transcripts may make poor substrates for export and/or translation, such that viral protein levels are reduced, in turn leading to reductions in virus yields.
Thus, our model for the results that we have described is as follows. During viral infection, ICP27 interacts with the CTD of RNAP II, which acts as a platform for RNA processing factors. ICP27 also interacts with ICP8 and ICP4, which are part of HSV-1 replication compartments, and ICP27 recruits mostly unphosphorylated RNAP II to these sites. ICP27 mutants that cannot interact with RNAP II show reductions in viral transcription, and this may result from the inability of these mutants to recruit sufficient amounts of RNAP II to viral transcription-replication sites, which in turn do not assemble into full-fledged compartments. In WT HSV-1-infected cells, transcription is robust following immediate-early gene expression and the commencement of DNA replication. Furthermore, transcription occurs on both strands of the viral genome in some regions, and there is not a tight clustering of genes of different kinetic classes. Instead, immediate-early, early, and late genes can be found juxtaposed to each other, with relatively short intergenic regions between genes. It is also possible that DNA replication and transcription could be occurring on the same template simultaneously. Finally, DNA breaks may occur as a result of recombination events. Thus, it is likely that elongating transcription complexes could pause or become stalled. It has been demonstrated in yeast and in mammalian cells that resolution of these complexes requires proteasomal degradation (2, 19, 22, 25). Therefore, we propose that proteasomal degradation of stalled RNAP II complexes occurs as part of the HSV-1 robust transcriptional program and, furthermore, that viral gene expression and replication are enhanced by this process.
These studies were supported by U.S. Public Health Service grant AI21515 from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases. J. Q. Dai-Ju was supported by a Virology Training Grant from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases. L. A. Johnson was supported for part of these studies by a Structure and Macromolecular Synthesis Training Grant from the National Institute of General Medical Sciences.
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2) genes in infected cells. Virology 283:273-284.[CrossRef][Medline]
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