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Journal of Virology, April 2006, p. 3650-3654, Vol. 80, No. 7
0022-538X/06/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JVI.80.7.3650-3654.2006
Copyright © 2006, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
INSERM U649, CHU Hotel-Dieu, Nantes, France,1 MRC Virology Unit, Church Street, Glasgow G11 5JR, Scotland, United Kingdom2
Received 26 October 2005/ Accepted 18 January 2006
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USP7 is not strictly required for ICP0-induced rep gene expression. To evaluate the effect of USP7 during ICP0-mediated rep gene reactivation, plasmids expressing a panel of insertion and deletion mutants affecting the USP7 binding domain and regions toward the C terminus of ICP0 (Fig. 1) (5, 10, 11) were transfected into HA-16 cells, and rep gene expression was analyzed by immunofluorescence (7, 13). In comparison with the plasmid expressing wild-type (wt) ICP0, the Rep signal was extremely low or undetectable in cells transfected with ICP0 mutants that have a defect in USP7 binding (M1, M4, and D12) (Fig. 2). In contrast, the ICP0-D13 mutant that has lost sequences required for self multimerization and localization to ND10 but retained the ability to interact with USP7 (10) activated rep gene expression efficiently. Removal of the RING finger from ICP0 (mutant FXE) eliminated rep gene reactivation (Fig. 2), as described in our previous report (7).
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FIG. 1. Locations and properties of ICP0 mutants used in this study. Numbers refers to amino acid positions. Filled boxes indicate the positions of the RING Finger (RF), the USP7 binding region (USP7) and the self-multimerization (MD) domain. The data below the schematic view of the ICP0 gene indicate the mutations present in each ICP0 expression plasmid and their ability to bind USP7 (USP7), to multimerize (Multimer), to induce rep gene expression in transfected HA-16 cells (Rep), and to activate a cotransfected p5luc plasmid expressing the luciferase gene under the control of the p5 rep gene promoter. The numbers indicate either the percentages of Rep- expressing cells among those expressing ICP0 (as illustrated in Fig. 2) or the p5luc n-fold activation over basal levels by wt ICP0 and the various mutants. ND, not done. The original characterization of these mutant ICP0 proteins can be found in references (5, 10, and 11).
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FIG. 2. Rep gene activation by transfection of different ICP0 mutant constructs. HA-16 cells were transfected with the indicated ICP0-expressing constructs and analyzed 24 h later by immunofluorescence using anti-ICP0 rabbit serum and anti-Rep mouse antibody (76.3) as described previously (7). The ICP0 signal was detected with a secondary tetramethyl rhodamine isothiocyanate-conjugated antirabbit antibody, and the Rep signal was detected with a fluorescein isothiocyanate-conjugated antimouse antibody. The last column shows merged images of both labeling schemes including staining of the nucleus with TO-PRO-3. Bars, 8 µm.
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Investigation of the properties of rep reactivation-proficient and -deficient ICP0 mutants. The observation that mutations in the minimal USP7 binding domain, such as M1, M4, and D12, are unable to reactivate rep gene expression in transfected cells, while lesions that affect both the USP7 binding domain and sequences further downstream (mutants E52X and M1D13) regain this activity, prompted us to examine the properties of these mutant proteins in a variety of assays. We found that rep gene reactivation in cells latently infected with AAV-2 did not correlate simply with the transactivation properties of ICP0 in transient assays. Consistent with earlier studies using other reporter genes (5), mutants M1, D12, D13, and E52X were all defective in activating the AAV-2 rep gene promoter (p5) in a cotransfected luciferase reporter plasmid (Fig. 1). Therefore, reactivation of an integrated, repressed rep gene by ICP0 differs in some way from its effects on a cotransfected plasmid containing the p5 promoter.
We next investigated the properties of the mutant forms of ICP0 that are relevant to this study during infection of HeLa cells (from which HA-16 cells were derived [13]). As expected from previous studies (1), mutations in the minimal USP7 binding domain reduced the rate of accumulation of ICP0. Surprisingly, however, this defect was corrected in mutants E52X and M1D13 (Fig. 3A and B). All of the mutants exhibited substantial reductions in the rate of accumulation of UL42, a representative member of the early class of HSV-1 genes. Therefore, defects in ICP0-mediated activation of a reporter gene in transfection assays correlate with reduced rates of accumulation of UL42 during infection. In contrast, only those ICP0 mutant proteins that accumulate with reduced efficiency during HSV-1 infection exhibit a defect in rep gene reactivation in transfected cells.
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FIG. 3. Properties of ICP0 mutants with lesions in the USP7 binding and C-terminal domains. A and B. Rate of ICP0 accumulation. HeLa cells were infected with the indicated HSV-1 viruses at a MOI of 5 PFU/ml (based on titrations in U2OS cells), and then whole-cell extracts were harvested at 3, 5, and 7 h postinfection (hpi). The samples were analyzed by Western blotting for ICP4, ICP0, and UL42 as described previously (1). C. Accumulation and stability of ICP0. HeLa cells were infected in duplicate with viruses expressing the wt and indicated mutant forms of ICP0 at a MOI of 2. In this experiment, wt ICP0 was expressed by dl1403R, the wt rescuant of the ICP0-null mutant virus dl1403, from which all the other ICP0 mutant viruses were derived. At 3 h pi, one well of each duplicate was harvested and the other was treated with cycloheximide at 100 µg/ml. These wells were harvested 1 h later. ICP0 levels were analyzed by Western blotting. D. Nonsaturated exposures of the Western blot results in C were scanned, and the relative levels of ICP0 were determined by densitometry. E. FACS analysis of ICP0- and ICP4-positive cells after infection of U2OS cells at a MOI of 0.1 PFU/cell. Cells in 35-mm dishes were harvested 5 h after infection, and duplicate samples were processed for detection of ICP4- and ICP0-positive cells as described previously (3). In all infections about 50% of the cells were ICP4 positive. The ratio of ICP0- to ICP4-positive cells in each infection was calculated and was expressed as a fraction of that obtained with wt HSV-1. F. Relative rates of PML degradation induced by wt and mutant ICP0 proteins. HeLa cells were infected with the indicated viruses at a MOI of 10 PFU/cell, and then parallel samples were harvested at 2, 4, 6, and 8 h after infection. Whole-cell extracts were analyzed for PML by Western blotting. The intensity of the major PML band was determined by densitometry, and the amount remaining was expressed as a proportion of that in the mock-infected control.
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There is no obvious explanation of why removal of C-terminal sequences of ICP0 results in a more stable protein, even in the absence of USP7 binding. The D13, E52X, and M1D13 mutant proteins lack sequences required for multimerization of ICP0 and are more diffusely spread through the nucleoplasm (Fig. 2). Therefore, it is possible that autoubiquitination of ICP0 is increased either by its self-interaction or when the protein is initially resident in ND10. Although there is a correlation between the stabilities of these ICP0 mutant proteins at early times of infection and their ability to reactivate rep gene expression in transfected HA-16 cells, we cannot conclude that ICP0 stability is a crucial factor, because all of the ICP0 proteins analyzed here accumulate to similar levels in transfection experiments analogous to those of Fig. 2 (data not shown). We can conclude, however, that ICP0 mutant proteins that fail to reactivate rep gene expression in transfected HA-16 cells also accumulate less efficiently during HSV-1 infection.
Finally, we investigated the effects of selected mutations on ICP0-induced PML degradation. Consistent with results of an earlier study using HFFF-2 cells (1), the M1 mutation decreased the rate at which PML was degraded in HeLa cells (Fig. 3F). Previous work had established that mutants M1, M4, and D12 disrupt ND10 more slowly than the wt (5). These effects are likely to be due to reduced rates of accumulation of the mutant ICP0 proteins (Fig. 3A), resulting in inefficient PML degradation. Despite their normal rates of accumulation, mutants D13 and E52X also degraded PML with reduced kinetics (Fig. 3F), probably due to their inefficient localization at ND10 (9, 10). Therefore, the gene expression and reporter gene activation defects caused by the D13 and E52X mutations correlate with reduced effects on PML and hence ND10, but despite these defects, these mutant ICP0 proteins reactivate rep gene expression efficiently in transfected cells.
Comparison of reactivation of rep gene expression by ICP0 in transfected and infected cells. The results presented above suggest that there is a clear difference between the abilities of selected ICP0 mutants to activate rep gene expression in transfected cells and to activate HSV-1 early gene expression efficiently during infection. Therefore, we investigated reactivation of rep gene expression during HSV-1 infection of HA-16 cells, rather than after transfection of ICP0 alone. At 8 h postinfection and with the notable exception of mutant FXE, all the HSV-1 mutants reactivated rep gene expression, in contrast to the results using ICP0 alone in transfected cells. However, all the mutants carrying lesions in the USP7 binding and C-terminal domains induced Rep protein synthesis at a lower level than wt HSV-1, despite the wt, D13, M1D13, and E52X ICP0 proteins accumulating to similar levels (Fig. 4A). Consistent with the experiment of Fig. 3A, expression of UL29, a major HSV-1 helper factor for AAV replication (8, 12, 14), was reduced at this time point in the mutant virus infections (Fig. 4A). The differences between wt HSV-1 and the mutant viruses (except FXE) were essentially eliminated after 24 h of infection (Fig. 4B). Therefore, at the multiplicity used here and in these HeLa-derived cells, the HSV-1 mutant viruses with lesions in the USP7 binding domain and adjacent regions exhibit only a delay in the accumulation of HSV-1 replication proteins and reactivation of AAV rep expression.
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FIG. 4. Effect of wt and mutated HSV strains on the induction of Rep protein synthesis in HA-16 cells. A and B. HA-16 cells were infected in duplicate at a MOI of 5 with HSV-1 viruses as indicated. At 8 h (panel A) and 24 h (panel B) after infection, the cells were washed and lysed in sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis loading buffer and analyzed by Western blotting as described previously (7). ICP0, UL29 (detected using a rabbit polyclonal antibody), and tubulin (monoclonal antibody T5168; Sigma) were detected after successive reprobing of the same membrane, whereas ICP4 was detected on a different membrane.
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The experiments presented here illustrate an experimental issue that may complicate many investigations, namely, that the behavior of wt and mutant ICP0 proteins in transfection assays may not simply correlate with the situation in virus-infected cells. In transfected cells, we have shown that interaction with USP7 is not directly required for ICP0 to reactivate rep gene transcription from quiescent, integrated AAV genomes and that this activity does not simply correlate with the ability of ICP0 to transactivate gene expression from cotransfected reporter plasmids. Reactivation of rep gene expression in HSV-1-infected cells also requires ICP0, but once reactivation has occurred, the level of Rep protein expression is influenced by the expression of other HSV-1 proteins.
This work was supported by the U.K. Medical Research Council, INSERM, the Association Française contre les Myopathies (AFM), Vaincre les Maladies Lysosomales (VML), Association Nantaise de Thérapie Génique (ANTG), and the Fondation pour la Thérapie Génique en Pays de la Loire.
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