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Journal of Virology, January 2007, p. 1048-1051, Vol. 81, No. 2
0022-538X/07/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JVI.01801-06
Copyright © 2007, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Efficient Incorporation of Tegument Proteins pUL46, pUL49, and pUS3 into Pseudorabies Virus Particles Depends on the Presence of pUL21
Kathrin Michael,
Barbara G. Klupp,
Axel Karger, and
Thomas C. Mettenleiter*
Institute of Molecular Biology, Friedrich-Loeffler-Institut, 17493 Greifswald-Insel Riems, Germany
Received 18 August 2006/
Accepted 23 October 2006

ABSTRACT
The mature virion of the alphaherpesvirus pseudorabies virus
(PrV) contains a minimum of 31 structural proteins which are
recruited into the virus particle by a network of protein-protein
interactions which is only incompletely understood. We show
here that deletion of the tegument protein pUL21 resulted in
a drastic decrease in the incorporation of the pUL46, pUL49,
and pUS3 tegument components into mature virions. Moreover,
the attenuated PrV strain Bartha (PrV-Ba), which, among other
defects, carries mutations in pUL21, also fails to package pUL46,
pUL49, and pUS3 efficiently. By the reconstitution of wild-type
pUL21 expression to PrV-Ba and the transfer of mutated PrV-Ba
pUL21 into wild-type PrV, we demonstrate that this phenotype
is due to the mutated pUL21.

TEXT
Alphaherpesvirus virions contain in excess of 30 structural
proteins which form the nucleocapsid, the tegument, and constituents
of the viral envelope. The tegument, which links the viral envelope
and nucleocapsid, is the least understood structure of the herpesvirus
virion. It consists of numerous viral and several cellular proteins
which are recruited into the virus particle by a network of
protein-protein interactions which is only incompletely understood
(
22,
23). Generally, the importance of viral proteins in virus
replication has been analyzed by mutating single viral gene
products and ascribing the observed phenotypes directly to the
mutated protein. However, both functional redundancy, which
precludes a direct correlation of a phenotype to the absence
of one viral protein (
2,
6,
15), and
trans effects of mutations
in a specific protein on other viral components have been observed
(
4,
25). Thus, the assignment of a particular phenotype to a
specific mutation requires an in-depth analysis of possible
effects on other viral or cellular factors.
The pUL21 protein of the alphaherpesvirus pseudorabies virus (PrV) has been described as a capsid-associated protein involved in capsid maturation during cleavage and encapsidation of the viral genome (3, 33). However, a UL21 mutant of PrV is only slightly impaired in replication in cell culture (13, 14) and in a murine intranasal infection model (12) but is strongly attenuated in PrV's natural host, the pig (13). This indicates that pUL21 is important for PrV replication in vivo. Although little is known about pUL21 function, interestingly the live attenuated PrV strain Bartha (PrV-Ba) (1), besides containing a large deletion in the unique short (US) region eliminating the genes for glycoprotein I (gI) (pUS7), gE (pUS8), pUS9, and pUS2 (17, 24, 29), contains point mutations in the signal sequence of gC (30), in gM (5), in pUS3 (20), and in pUL21 (13). Marker rescue experiments showed that the deleted genes as well as UL21 are important for attenuation since their repair with the corresponding genes from PrV strain Kaplan (PrV-Ka) also restored to PrV-Ba the virulent phenotype of PrV-Ka (13, 17, 18). However, the molecular basis for this phenotype and which role pUL21 plays in PrV replication are still unclear.
Lyman and colleagues demonstrated by Western blot analysis of purified virions that PrV-Ba fails to package the tegument proteins pUS3 and pUL49 (VP22) (20). However, this has been challenged by Granzow et al. (9), who detected pUS3 and pUL49 in highly purified PrV-Ba virion preparations. Restoration of the large deletion in the US region by the corresponding gene from the PrV strain Becker did not restore pUS3 packaging into virions (20), and restoration of gE expression did not restore pUL49 incorporation despite the known interaction between the two (7). Thus, a discrepancy still exists about the question of whether PrV-Ba is indeed unable to package pUS3 and pUL49 and, if it is, which PrV-Ba component is responsible for this phenotype.
We recently adapted a highly quantitative method for the analysis of proteins in purified herpesvirus virions (25). The original procedure has been designated stable isotope labeling by amino acids in cell culture (SILAC) (27). Here, the samples to be compared were differentially labeled metabolically with either unmodified leucine or leucine carrying three atoms of the stable heavy hydrogen isotope deuterium. After gel electrophoresis and mass spectrometry, the ratio of each protein in the virus particle was determined with high accuracy, using the constant amount of 960 copies per capsid of the pUL19 major capsid protein (32) as the standard. Thus, we reanalyzed the protein composition of PrV-Ba in comparison to that of wild-type PrV-Ka (10), to that of a UL21 deletion mutant of PrV-Ka (PrV-
UL21) (14) as well as to that of rescuants of PrV-Ba isolated after marker rescue with the US region of PrV-Ka (PrV-Ba43/25a) (17), and, in addition, with BamHI fragment 4 of PrV-Ka, which includes the pUL21 mutations (18). Moreover, the PrV-Ba UL21 gene was used to restore UL21 expression to PrV-
UL21, which carries a complete deletion of the UL21 gene (Fig. 1). Viruses were propagated on porcine kidney cells and purified by sucrose density gradient centrifugation (11). Purified PrV-Ka was propagated in cells cultured in Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium-F-12 medium (catalog no. D-9785; Sigma-Aldrich) containing exclusively deuterated leucine (L-leucine-5,5,5-d3, 99 atom% D, catalog no. 486825; Sigma-Aldrich), which resulted in the insertion of a mass tag of 3 Da per leucine residue. PrV-Ka virions served as a global internal standard for the SILAC procedure. All other viruses were propagated on cells maintained in medium supplemented with conventional leucine. To compare the relative amounts of proteins in the different viruses in relation to those in PrV-Ka, purified virion preparations were mixed at a 1:1 protein ratio and mixtures were separated by standard sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (16). Thereafter, bands of interest were cut from the Coomassie-stained gels (26). After tryptic digestion (31), peptide mass fingerprint spectra were obtained on an Ultraflex mass spectrometer (Bruker, Bremen, Germany), and the data were further processed by FlexAnalysis and BioTools software (Bruker). Database queries were performed with MASCOT software (Matrixscience, London, United Kingdom) (28), using an in-house database representing the PrV proteome as compiled from the Swiss-Prot database (8). Quantitative evaluation of the spectra was carried out using self-developed software. Mass lists were screened for peak pairs representing leucine-containing peptides of the respective protein in the conventional and the mass-tagged variant, and an average intensity ratio reflecting the relative amounts of protein originating from PrV-Ka, PrV-Ba, or the recombinant viruses was calculated from all qualified peaks of the spectrum. Intensity ratios of the tegument proteins were normalized to the intensity ratios of the major capsid protein, which is present in every intact virus particle in the capsid in 960 copies (32), to correct for any variations in protein input (25).
Deletion of UL21 from PrV-Ka resulted in a decrease in the incorporation
of the pUL46, pUL49, and pUS3 proteins into virions (Fig.
2)
by 80 to 90%. A similar reduction in the incorporation of these
proteins compared to PrV-Ka was observed with PrV-Ba, indicating
that PrV-Ba still packages pUL46, pUL49, and pUS3 but at strikingly
lower levels. Thus, the differences observed in the assessment
of whether PrV-Ba packages pUS3 and pUL49 (
9,
20) can be explained
by the nonquantitative nature of the immunoblot analysis and
differences in the sensitivities of the immunological reagents
used. Restoration of expression of gI, gE, pUS9, and pUS2 in
PrV-Ba43/25a did not correct the pUS3 incorporation defect (Fig.
2), which is in line with previous experiments (
20), but increased
the incorporation of pUL46 and pUL49. The latter finding may
be due to the interaction of gE with pUL49 (
7). Interestingly,
the incorporation of pUL46, pUL49, and pUS3 was restored to
nearly wild-type levels when, in addition to the repair of the
U
S deletion, an intact wild-type UL21 gene derived from PrV-Ka
was present in the PrV-Ba genome. Thus, in a PrV-Ba background,
PrV-Ka pUL21 aids in the incorporation of pUL46 and pUL49 and
is required for the efficient virion localization of pUS3. This
is further corroborated after transfer of the mutated UL21 gene
of PrV-Ba into PrV-Ka. In PrV-UL21(Ba), pUS3 incorporation is
decreased by more than 70% and that of pUL49 by ca. 60%, whereas
incorporation of pUL46 was only slightly affected. To allow
a direct comparison of the obtained spectra, examples of relevant
regions of the peptide mass fingerprints are compiled in Fig.
3. In all virus preparations, the amounts of the capsid protein
pUL18 and the capsid-associated pUL25 did not differ significantly
from that of wild-type PrV-Ka, as indicated by their values
around 1. The same was observed for the inner tegument protein
pUL36 and tegument proteins pUL16 and pUL21 (Fig.
2). PrV-Ka
pUL21 has been shown to form a complex with pUL16 (
14), which,
in turn, may interact with pUL11 (
19). Complex formation with
pUL16 has also been observed for PrV-Ba pUL21 (data not shown),
so the mutations apparently do not interfere with interaction
between pUL16 and pUL21. The intracellular levels of these proteins
did not differ significantly between the different virus mutants,
which correlated with similar RNA expression profiles as detected
by Northern blot analysis (data not shown).
In summary, we demonstrate that PrV pUL21 is a virion component
which is necessary for the efficient incorporation of pUL46,
pUL49, and pUS3 into mature PrV virions. The serine/threonine
kinase pUS3 and the major tegument protein pUL49 are not packaged
efficiently into mature virions in the absence of pUL21 or in
the presence of mutated PrV-Ba pUL21, which indicates that the
point mutations in pUL21 of PrV-Ba interfere with the incorporation
of pUS3 and pUL49 but not pUL46. Thus, different domains of
the protein may be important for this differential
trans effect
of pUL21 on virion localization of these PrV tegument proteins.
It has been described that the absence of pUS3 results in inefficient virion localization of pUL46 in herpes simplex virus type 2 (21) and PrV-Ka (25). Thus, the defects observed in pUL46 incorporation in PrV-
UL21, PrV-Ba, or PrV-Ba43/25a may be an indirect effect of the deficient pUS3 incorporation. However, PrV-UL21(Ba) packages nearly wild-type amounts of pUL46 while incorporation of pUS3 is strikingly decreased, indicating that there is no direct interaction between the two.
Our data demonstrate another hitherto unknown direct or indirect interaction between herpesvirus tegument proteins yielding an additional piece for the herpesvirus assembly puzzle (22). pUL21 is a virion protein conserved throughout the Herpesviridae, whereas pUS3, pUL46, and pUL49 are found only in the alphaherpesviruses. Thus, it is conceivable that pUL21 of beta- and gammaherpesviruses interacts with other nonconserved tegument proteins during virion morphogenesis. Quantitation of virion components by SILAC and mass spectrometry should help to analyze whether this is indeed the case.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This study was supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft
(DFG Me 854/5-2).

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Friedrich-Loeffler-Institut, Institute of Molecular Biology, Boddenblick 5A, 17493 Greifswald-Insel Riems, Germany. Phone: 49-38351-7250. Fax: 49-38351-7151. E-mail:
thomas.mettenleiter{at}fli.bund.de.

Published ahead of print on 1 November 2006. 

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Journal of Virology, January 2007, p. 1048-1051, Vol. 81, No. 2
0022-538X/07/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JVI.01801-06
Copyright © 2007, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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