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Journal of Virology, July 2007, p. 7310-7315, Vol. 81, No. 13
0022-538X/07/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JVI.00034-07
Copyright © 2007, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
The Vaccinia Virus F13L YPPL Motif Is Required for Efficient Release of Extracellular Enveloped Virus
Kady M. Honeychurch,1
Guang Yang,2
Robert Jordan,2 and
Dennis E. Hruby1,2*
Department of Microbiology, Oregon State University, Corvallis, Oregon 97331,1
SIGA Technologies, Inc., Corvallis, Oregon 973332
Received 5 January 2007/
Accepted 20 April 2007

ABSTRACT
The Tyr-X-X-Leu (YxxL) motif of the vaccinia virus F13L protein
was examined for late (L) domain activity. The ability of an
F13L deletion virus to form plaques was restored by PCR products
containing single alanine substitutions within the motif and
a YAAL construct but not by constructs lacking both the Y and
L residues. Recombinant viruses possessing alanine substitutions
in place of the tyrosine or the leucine residue in the YxxL
motif demonstrated small, asymmetrical plaques. RNA interference-dependent
depletion of Alix and TSG101 (host proteins involved in L domain-dependent
protein trafficking) diminished extracellular enveloped virion
production to various degrees, suggesting that the YxxL motif
is a genuine L domain.

TEXT
Viral late assembly domains (L domains) are tetrapeptide motifs
thought to mediate the assembly and egress of viral particles.
The Pro-Thr-Ala-Pro (PTAP) motif was first identified in the
p6 Gag protein of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1)
as a requirement for viral budding (
14,
22). Since then, two
additional retroviral L domain motifs, Pro-Pro-X-Tyr (PPxY)
and Tyr-X-X-Leu (YxxL), have been discovered (reviewed in reference
11). Mutation of these motifs reduces secretion of HIV particles
in certain cell types by arresting virus budding through the
plasma membrane. Electron microscopy shows virus particles tethered
to the plasma membrane on "stalk-like" structures, consistent
with a defect in the assembly/budding process. Additional studies
have revealed several cellular components involved in protein
trafficking that interact with L domains, suggesting that the
assembly of virus particles utilizes established host pathways
for egress (reviewed in references
10 and
30). Furthermore,
it is now accepted that L domains are likely important for viruses
outside the
Lentiviridae family as well (
8,
9,
32,
34,
39).
Vaccinia virus (VV), a member of the Orthopoxvirus genus, is among the largest of the DNA viruses. During replication, VV undergoes three distinct stages of gene expression, the products of which are referred to as early, intermediate, and late proteins. It is mainly the late proteins that provide the virion with structural elements, the trafficking and assembly of which are regulated by modifications such as acylation, myristoylation, and palmitoylation as well as processing by host cell and virally encoded proteases (1, 5, 7, 16, 17, 18, 21, 26, 42).
Mature VV assumes four infectious forms: the intracellular mature virus (IMV), the intracellular enveloped virus (IEV), the cell-associated enveloped virus (CEV), and the extracellular enveloped virus (EEV). Both CEV and EEV originate from IEV, which are IMV particles swathed in membranes derived from trans-Golgi or endosomal cisternae (reviewed in references 36 and 37). The major antigen located on the surface of IEV is F13L, the product of the F13L open reading frame (ORF) (3, 19, 20). F13L is a 372-amino-acid palmitoylprotein (15) that contains a centrally located YxxL L domain-like motif (residues 153 to 156). F13L has been shown to be involved in viral envelopment and egress (15). The YPPL sequence is 100% conserved in the F13L protein of all strains of VV, as well as in the F13L homologs within the Orthopoxvirus genus. It is also highly conserved in F13L homologs throughout the entire Poxviridae family (Table 1), suggesting that this domain may convey an essential biological advantage to the virus.
In the present study, we sought to determine whether the tetrapeptide
motif located within the VV strain WR F13L protein functions
in an L domain-like capacity. VV lacking a functional F13L ORF
do not produce EEV and therefore form very small plaques over
an extended incubation period (reviewed in reference
31). Thus,
the introduction of a PCR product containing a functional F13L
ORF into cells infected with an F13L deletion mutant virus (vv

F13LGFP)
should restore the ability of the virus to form plaques. In
order to determine the requirement for the YxxL motif, we designed
a
trans complementation assay in which BSC40 cells were infected
with 150 PFU/well of vv

F13LGFP (the F13L ORF was inactivated
by the insertion of green fluorescent protein [GFP] at nucleotide
19) for 1 h at 37°C. Subsequently, the viral inoculum was
replaced with fresh medium, and cells underwent liposome-mediated
transfection overnight with a PCR product encoding an F13L-GFP
fusion protein containing a wild-type or a mutant YxxL motif
(Fig.
1A). The medium was then removed and replaced with fresh
growth medium containing 1% methylcellulose. At 3 days postinfection,
cells were fixed with 5% glutaraldehyde and stained with 0.1%
crystal violet. All constructs included a 1-kbp region of flanking
DNA on either side of the fusion to allow for transient expression
of the fusion protein and to facilitate recombination between
the F13L deletion mutant virus and the PCR product. Results
from this
trans complementation assay demonstrated that the
capability of the deletion mutant to form plaques was restored
by the wild-type PCR product as well as PCR products containing
mutations Y153A, P154A, P155A, and, to a lesser degree, L156A
(Fig.
1B). A double-proline mutant also demonstrated wild-type
levels of rescue. In contrast, no appreciable rescue was observed
for constructs lacking both the Y and L residues as well as
for constructs containing the deletion of the YxxL motif. Replacement
of the YxxL motif with PTAP also failed to rescue.
Previous studies of other YxxL L domains have demonstrated that
residues Y and L are critical for viral budding (
8,
33). To
determine if the F13L motif behaved similarly, recombinant viruses
were isolated and plaque purified (hereafter referred to as
vvY153AGFP, vvP154AGFP, vvP155AGFP, and vvL156AGFP). The plaque
phenotype associated with each mutant relative to those of both
the wild-type F13L-GFP recombinant virus (vvF13LGFP) and the
WR parental strain was then examined. The fusion of GFP to the
C terminus of F13L has been shown to be fully functional (
13),
although virus particles encoding the GFP fusion construct produce
slightly smaller plaques. This phenomenon may be due to a less
efficient interaction of F13L with other viral factors as a
result of the GFP tag, or perhaps the presence of a C-terminal
GFP fusion interferes with the viral mechanism of release. In
this experiment, BSC40 cells were infected with 50 PFU/well
of either a mutant virus or one of the controls for 1 h at 37°C.
The viral inoculum was removed and replaced with fresh growth
medium containing 1% methylcellulose. At 3 days postinfection,
cells were fixed with 5% glutaraldehyde and stained with 0.1%
crystal violet. Each mutant virus exhibited a distinct plaque
phenotype, with vvP154AGFP and vvP155AGFP producing large plaques
reminiscent of those observed for VV WR (Fig.
2). The fact that
these mutants produced plaques that are larger than those of
the parental vvF13LGFP strain of virus was an unexpected result
and is currently under investigation. In contrast, mutants lacking
either the Y or the L residue produced extremely small plaques,
suggesting a reduction in extracellular virus production. Furthermore,
plaque development for each virus was photographed under UV
light on a daily basis. Both vvY153AGFP and vvL156AGFP displayed
an asymmetric pattern of spread, while the proline-deficient
mutants maintained a circular symmetry characteristic of wild-type
virus (data not shown). To verify if these observations could
be related to decreased stability of the fusion protein as a
result of the mutations within the YxxL motif, we conducted
an immunoblot analysis of F13L-GFP expression levels for each
mutant recombinant virus and compared them to that of vvF13LGFP.
Differences in steady-state expression levels were observed
for the various mutants (a fivefold reduction for vvY153AGFP,
a twofold reduction for vvP154AGFP, a sixfold reduction for
vvP155AGFP, and no reduction for vvL156AGFP) (data not shown);
however, this does not appear to correlate with the plaque phenotypes.
vvL156AGFP, which demonstrated a slight increase in F13L-GFP
expression relative to that of the wild-type recombinant virus,
rescued the least efficiently and exhibited a small plaque phenotype.
Thus, it is unlikely that these amino acid changes lead to the
destabilization of protein structure that causes the observed
plaque phenotypes.
The plaque phenotypes coupled with the rescue data suggest that
the YxxL motif located within F13L may possess L domain activity.
Phenotypic differences in plaques created by the recombinant
mutants and plaques produced by way of the rescue assay may
be due to the transient nature of F13L expression associated
with the rescue assay. It is likely that the mutant PCR products
were successful in the rescue of viral release but that the
particles formed were defective in that they contained the more
abundant F13L-deleted genome.
To confirm the apparent function of the F13L YxxL motif in EEV release, the roles of several endogenous trafficking components were examined. AIP1/Alix (hereafter referred to as Alix) was first identified as a novel mouse protein that undergoes calcium-dependent interaction with the apoptosis-linked-gene 2 (ALG-2) protein (29). Alix has also been shown to play a role in the formation of late endosomes and in endocytic membrane trafficking (31). Studies involving equine infectious anemia virus (EIAV), which contains the most extensively characterized viral YxxL-type L domain, have demonstrated that a lack of Alix expression results in a dramatic decrease in the production of EIAV virions (27, 38). The YxxL-Alix relationship has also been established in HIV-1 and murine leukemia virus, although to a lesser extent due to the presence of a second L domain motif, PTAP and PPxY, respectively (27, 35). Furthermore, Alix has been recognized as a binding partner of the EIAV p9 protein (38). Thus, if the F13L YxxL motif functions as an L domain, Alix may also play a role in the formation of VV EEV. We also sought to determine whether TSG101, a known binding partner of viral PTAP L domains (12, 40), had any effect on EEV release. While it is true that VV does not contain the PTAP motif in any of its known envelope proteins, the C-terminal proline-rich domain of Alix does contain a PSAP motif and has been shown to bind to TSG101 (27, 38, 41). Finally, it has been proposed that F13L is recycled from the plasma membrane via an association with clathrin complexes which lead to the formation of early endosomes (23). Blocking the F13L endocytic retrieval pathway using a dominant-negative form of the accessory protein Eps15 (2) demonstrated a decreased quantity of EEV released from cells (24). To compare the effects of each of these trafficking factors on VV EEV release, an analysis of VV comet formation following the depletion of Alix, TSG101, or Eps15 via RNA interference (RNAi) transfection was performed. Additionally, the amount of EEV released into the medium was quantified by plaque assay. Commercially available sets of RNAi oligonucleotides targeting Alix, TSG101, and Eps15 as well as a scrambled control were purchased from Invitrogen (Carlsbad, CA). Prior to this study, the knockdown efficiency of each oligo set was qualitatively evaluated by immunoblot analysis, and Alix expression was further analyzed by densitometry (Fig. 3A and B). The best set was chosen for each target, with the exception of Alix, in which case, two sets of differing efficiencies were chosen in an attempt to demonstrate a correlation between Alix expression and EEV release. BSC40 cells underwent liposome-mediated transfection with 200 pmol of each oligo set. Fresh growth medium was added at 24 h posttransfection. At 48 h posttransfection, the growth medium was replaced with medium containing 50 PFU/well of VV strain IHDJ for 1 h at 37°C. IHDJ was chosen for this assay since it possesses a mutation in the A34R protein that allows it to release up to 40 times more EEV than other strains of VV, resulting in the formation of comet-like plaques (4). The viral inoculum was then replaced with growth medium and incubated at 37°C for an additional 30 h, at which time the supernatant was collected and subjected to IMV depletion via a 1-h incubation with anti-A27L antisera. Viral titers were then determined using BSC40 cells. The most dramatic effect on EEV release was associated with the depletion of Alix, followed by the depletion of TSG101 and to a lesser extent the depletion of Eps15 (Fig. 3C). Cell monolayers were fixed and stained and revealed an inhibition of comet formation that correlated with the results obtained for the EEV quantification (Fig. 3D), suggesting that VV may interact with Alix in a way similar to that which has been described for EIAV. Moreover, these results also imply that TSG101 and Eps15 may be involved in EEV egress as well. IMV formation does not appear to be affected by the depletion of any of the three host factors or the scrambled control as all four wells treated with RNAi demonstrated primary plaques of similar size and quantity relative to those of the untreated control.
The identification and characterization of viral L domains have
provided a more solid understanding regarding the way in which
enveloped virions are produced and released into the extracellular
environment. By encoding sequence domains that mimic those of
the host cell, nascent viral particles are able to usurp established
pathways for their own dissemination, and VV, with its highly
conserved L domain-like motif, is likely no exception (Table
1). In the manuscript, we report on the analysis of the YxxL
domain identified within the VV F13L envelope protein. A panel
of F13L-GFP fusion constructs containing mutations to the YxxL
motif was generated (Fig.
1A) and used in conjunction with a
recombinant F13L-deleted mutant VV in a
trans complementation
assay. The results obtained indicate that the ability of the
deletion virus to form plaques may be restored by the introduction
of a functional F13L ORF (Fig.
1B). However, in order for rescue
to proceed, certain minimum requirements within the YxxL motif
were established: (i) single alanine substitutions at each residue
restored the plaque-forming ability, albeit to various degrees,
but constructs lacking both the Y and the L residues were not
functional, indicating that these residues work in tandem to
direct EEV release, and (ii) the YxxL motif is absolutely required
for plaque formation and cannot be deleted or replaced with
other known L domains, as was demonstrated by a lack of complementation
for the AAAA construct, the YxxL deletion construct, and the
PTAP substitution construct. This suggests that VV EEV utilizes
a very specific process to achieve budding. Recombinant YxxL
motif mutant viruses supported these observations in that isolates
containing alanine substitutions for either the Y or the L residue
demonstrated an extremely small, asymmetrical plaque phenotype,
while alanine substitutions for either of the P residues produced
much larger, circular plaques, similar to those observed for
the parental virus strains (Fig.
2). At no time were isolates
containing an AxxA or an AAAA mutation, a YxxL deletion, or
a YxxL substitution obtained, implying that the result of this
type of recombination may be detrimental to the formation of
mature virions. RNAi experiments involving the depletion of
known host protein trafficking components also demonstrated
measurable effects on EEV release (Fig.
3C and D). A reduction
in the expression of Alix, an established binding partner of
the YxxL L domain of EIAV (
38), resulted in a 3.5- to 4.5-fold
reduction of EEV release. Data from these experiments also support
a less significant role for TSG101 in VV EEV release. Since
VV lacks a PTAP domain, TSG101 is not thought to participate
in the direct binding of VV proteins but may instead act as
a trafficking regulator through its association with Alix. These
data also support previous assertions that EEV release is somewhat
dependent upon the recycling of F13L from the plasma membrane
(
23,
24), although from these experiments, it appears as though
endocytosis is not as crucial for EEV release as Alix and possibly
TSG101.
The role of the VV F13L YxxL motif and potential host binding factors in the production and release of EEV particles is of great interest. The highly conserved nature of the motif coupled with its sensitivity to mutation suggests that the YxxL motif located within the F13L protein may conduct late domain function in order to subvert host protein sorting machinery and facilitate EEV release, making it the subject of future research. One possible role for the YxxL motif may be in the wrapping of IMV particles to form IEV, or perhaps the motif is responsible for the recruitment of cellular factors to the site of IEV particle release. Recent studies indicate that Alix is involved in intracellular membrane metabolism through interactions with endophilins (6) and with 2,2'-dioleoyllysobisphosphatidic acid (LBPA) (25, 28). As a result of this relationship, the recruitment of Alix by viral L domains may be necessary to facilitate the release of enveloped VV particles from the plasma membrane. Experiments to decipher how the YxxL motif functions in extracellular enveloped particle production are under way. If the YxxL motif is recognized as a bona-fide L domain, it will be of interest to identify potential antiviral targets common to both enveloped DNA and enveloped RNA viruses with the intention of preventing a systemic viral infection.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This work was supported by NIH grant 5R44AI056409-06.
The authors thank Sean Amberg for a contributing role in the conception of the project and Chelsea Byrd for critical analysis of the manuscript.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Oregon State University, 220 Nash Hall, Corvallis, OR 97331. Phone: (541) 737-1849. Fax: (541) 737-2440. E-mail:
hrubyd{at}bcc.orst.edu 
Published ahead of print on 2 May 2007. 

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Journal of Virology, July 2007, p. 7310-7315, Vol. 81, No. 13
0022-538X/07/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JVI.00034-07
Copyright © 2007, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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