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Journal of Virology, March 2007, p. 2213-2220, Vol. 81, No. 5
0022-538X/07/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JVI.01746-06
Copyright © 2007, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Interaction of Papillomavirus E2 Protein with the Brm Chromatin Remodeling Complex Leads to Enhanced Transcriptional Activation
R. Ajay Kumar,1,
Samisubbu R. Naidu,1,
Xiaoyu Wang,1
Anthony N. Imbalzano,2 and
Elliot J. Androphy1*
Department of Medicine,1
Department of Cell Biology, University of Massachusetts Medical School, 364 Plantation Street, LRB 327, Worcester, Massachusetts 016052
Received 11 August 2006/
Accepted 28 November 2006

ABSTRACT
Papillomavirus E2 is a sequence-specific DNA binding protein
that regulates transcription and replication of the viral genome.
The transcriptional activities of E2 are typically evaluated
by transient transfection of nonreplicating E2-dependent reporters.
We sought to address whether E2 activates transcription in an
episomal context and its potential interaction with the chromatin
remodeling proteins. Using an Epstein-Barr virus-based episomal
reporter, we demonstrate that E2 stimulates transcription from
an E2-dependent promoter in a chromatin context. This activation
is enhanced by the presence of proteins associated with SWI/SNF
complexes, which are ATP-dependent chromatin remodeling enzymes.
We show that exogenous expression of the Brm ATPase enhances
E2 activity in SWI/SNF-deficient cell lines and that the amino-terminal
transactivation domain of E2 mediates association with the Brm
complex in vivo. Using chromatin immunoprecipitation assays,
we demonstrate that Brm enhances promoter occupancy by E2 in
an episomal context. Our results demonstrate that E2 activates
transcription from an episomal reporter system and reveal a
novel property of E2 in collaborating with the Brm chromatin
remodeling complex in enhancing transcriptional activation.

INTRODUCTION
The double-stranded, closed circular DNA genomes of papillomaviruses
naturally replicate as episomes that are associated with nucleosomal
histone proteins (
19). In eukaryotes, the packaging of DNA into
nucleosomes and subsequent higher-order chromatin structures
poses an obstacle to nuclear processes such as transcription,
replication, and recombination during DNA repair. Transcription
factors and other proteins gain access to nucleosome-bound DNA
by using ATP-dependent chromatin modifying and remodeling enzymes.
The first proteins implicated in chromatin remodeling were identified
in yeast by characterization of defects in mating-type switching
(SWI) and sucrose fermentation (SNF [for "sucrose nonfermenting"])
(
5,
56,
75). The 2-MDa yeast SWI/SNF complex consists of 11
subunits, with functional homologues found in flies and mammals
(
59-
61,
72,
82). Brahma (Brm), the regulator of
Drosophila homeotic
genes, was the first SWI/SNF relative to be discovered in higher
eukaryotes (
77). Humans have at least two genes that are closely
related to Brm: hBrm, also known as hSNF2

, and Brm-related gene
1 (Brg1), also known as hSNF2ß (
9,
35,
54). These
SWI/SNF ATPase subunits alone are sufficient for chromatin remodeling
activity in vitro (
62). Other subunits are thought to be required
for stable complex assembly and/or targeting of transcription
complexes to the promoter in vivo (
55).
The E2 protein has a modular structure with a conserved N-terminal transactivation domain (TAD) of approximately 220 amino acids that serves as a platform for assembly of cellular transcription factors, including TBP, TFIIB, Gps2 (AMF1), and Brd4 (3, 7, 31, 58, 64, 69, 74, 89). The C-terminal 100 amino acids form the DNA binding and dimerization domain (DBD) (52, 63). The intervening nonconserved region is proposed to act as a "hinge" that separates the functional domains of the E2 protein.
Bovine papillomavirus type 1 (BPV1) E2 binds to the palindromic sequence ACCG(N4)CGGT (1), and human papillomavirus (HPV) E2 binds variations on this motif. The long control region (LCR) includes E2 binding motifs and cis elements for cellular factors that regulate the early viral promoters in a complex manner (24). These E2 binding sequences exhibit E2-dependent enhancer activity when present in two or more copies placed either upstream or downstream of a heterologous promoter (27, 73). E2 also activates transcription from E2-dependent promoters on replicating plasmids in Saccharomyces cerevisiae (39, 53). Because the E2 protein regulates viral transcription and replication, we hypothesized that it would interact with SWI/SNF complexes to overcome nucleosome repression.
BPV1 proteins are expressed and its genome is maintained as stable episomes in cultured murine C127 and NIH 3T3 cells. HPV genomes replicate in some epithelial cell-derived cell lines and in primary human keratinocytes but are less stable than the BPV genome in cultured mouse cell lines. HPVs are biologically and phylogenetically differentiated into two groups: "low-risk" types, which cause benign warts and rarely cancer, and "high-risk" types such as HPV-16 and HPV-18, which are associated with the development of cervical and other epithelial malignancies. BPV1 contains 17 E2 binding motifs present primarily within the LCR (44), while HPV-16 and HPV-18 contain four copies of the E2 binding sequences in their LCR (16, 51). During the early stages of infection, it is thought that the high-risk HPV E2 protein represses transcription of the viral E6 and E7 genes by binding to sites situated adjacent to the early promoter and TBP binding site. It was proposed that E2 represses this promoter by interfering with recruitment of the TFIID complex required for initiation of transcription (13-15, 28, 78). This model was supported by the report that introduction of E2 into HPV-induced cervical cancer cell lines led to activation of p53 and pRb (25), which are otherwise inactivated by E6 and E7, respectively (20). A truncated BPV E2 repressor (E2R) that initiates from a promoter embedded within the E2 open reading frame expresses the DBD but excludes a functional TAD and thus can act as a transcriptional repressor, although it does not suppress E6 and E7 expression in HeLa cells (26). Despite repressor functions, BPV and HPV E2 proteins, including those of HPV-16 and HPV-18, are potent transcriptional activators of artificial constructs with E2 binding sites inserted into a promoter. These activator and repressor functions may maintain viral homeostasis by regulation of viral gene expression (79). Nonetheless, the physiologic roles of BPV and HPV E2 transcriptional activation and repression in early infection are not well understood.
It was recently reported that HPV E2 represses transcription from integrated copies of the HPV-16 LCR but has no effect on transcription from episomal HPV-16 genomes in W12-derived cell lines (2). Therefore, to study the transcriptional activation function of E2 in an episomal model, we used a heterologous EBV-based episomal reporter system containing E2 binding sites fused to the simian virus 40 (SV40) minimal promoter. We show that E2 activates transcription in an episomal context and that this activation is enhanced by its interaction with the Brm-containing SWI/SNF chromatin remodeling complex.

MATERIALS AND METHODS
C33A, SW13, HeLa, and NIH 3T3 cells were cultured in Dulbecco
modified eagle medium (Gibco) containing 10% bovine calf serum
with penicillin and streptomycin. Flag-K804R Brm was cloned
into pCG, transfected into SW13 cells, and selected by cotransfection
with pBabe-puro, and a stable expression line was generated.
FuGene 6 (Roche) was used for transfections at a ratio of 3
µl to 1 µg of DNA. Lipofectamine 2000 was used according
to the manufacturer's instructions to transfect Brm and E2 plasmids.
After 24 h, cells were washed in phosphate-buffered saline and
lysed with 1
x luciferase reporter lysis buffer (Promega). Lysates
were assayed for luciferase activity with the Luminol substrate
(Promega), and relative light units were normalized to 20 µg
of protein.
The reporter plasmid containing four E2 binding sites fused to the SV40 minimal promoter was released from construct pGL2 and cloned into pREP4-Luc (K. Zhao, NIH). Flag-tagged human Brm with a Kozak sequence inserted upstream of the coding region was cloned into pCI-Neo (Promega). For coimmunoprecipitation experiments, cells were extracted with lysis buffer (50 mM Tris [pH 8.0], 100 mM NaCl, 20 mM NaF, 50 mM KH2PO4, 1% Triton X-100, 10% glycerol, and 0.1 mM dithiothreitol [DTT]) containing protease inhibitor cocktail. Lysates were sonicated, clarified, and resuspended in binding buffer (50 mM Tris-HCl [pH 8.0], 100 mM KCl, 0.1 mM EDTA, 0.2% NP-40, 2.5% glycerol, and 1 mM DTT). Brm (BD Biosciences), Flag M2 beads (Sigma), and E2 antibodies (58) were captured with protein A/G Sepharose. The beads were washed with wash buffer (100 mM Tris-HCl [pH 8.0], 100 mM NaCl, 0.5% NP-40), and bound proteins were resolved by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) and transferred to polyvinylidene difluoride membranes (PALL), which were probed with the appropriate antibodies and developed with a Pierce chemiluminescence detection kit.
For chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) assays, formaldehyde was added to the cell medium at a final concentration of 1% at 24 h posttransfection. Reactions were stopped with 125 mM glycine. After washes with phosphate-buffered saline, cells were sonicated. Chromatin extract containing 0.1% SDS, 1% Triton X-100, 0.1% sodium deoxycholate, 140 mM NaCl, and 10 mM Tris (pH 7.4) was incubated with the appropriate antibodies and protein G Sepharose. The beads were washed with buffer containing 0.1% SDS, 1% Triton X-100, 0.1% sodium deoxycholate, 140 mM NaCl, and 10 mM Tris (pH 7.4). Following a low-salt wash, beads were washed with high-salt buffer containing 0.1% SDS, 1% Triton X-100, 0.1% sodium deoxycholate, 300 mM NaCl, and 10 mM Tris (pH 7.4). The beads were rinsed with Tris (pH 8)-EDTA and suspended in elution/de-cross-linking buffer containing 100 mM NaHCO3,1% SDS, and 300 mM NaCl at 65°C for 4 h. Eluted DNA was extracted with phenol-chloroform isoamyl alcohol mix and was ethanol precipitated in the presence of 10 µg of glycogen. DNA samples were subjected to PCR amplification followed by agarose gel electrophoresis.

RESULTS
E2 activates transcription from an episomal reporter.
To address whether E2 activates transcription from a chromatin
template in vivo, we constructed episomal and conventional nonreplicating
(pGL2) reporters containing four high-affinity E2 binding sites
upstream of a minimal SV40 promoter. The EBV-based episomal
reporter system contains the EBV origin of replication and the
EBNA1 coding region and has been used to address the chromatin
remodeling activity of several transcription factors (
17,
29,
46,
48,
84,
87). Synthetic E2 binding sites along with the SV40
minimal promoter were inserted upstream of the luciferase gene.
The nonreplicating reporter does not contain a mammalian origin
of replication, and regularly spaced nucleosomes do not assemble
on this template. These reporter constructs were cotransfected
into C33A, SW13, HeLa, and NIH 3T3 cells in the presence or
absence of BPV1 E2 or HPV-16 E2 expression plasmids. C33A and
SW13 cells are deficient for Brg1/Brm, while HeLa and NIH 3T3
cells express relatively high levels of Brg1 and Brm. In C33A
cells, there was robust activation, of 135- and 100-fold, with
BPV1 and HPV16 E2, respectively, from the nonreplicating reporter
compared to basal reporter activity (Fig.
1). When an episomal
reporter was used, moderate activations of 19- and 15-fold for
BPV-1 and HPV-16 E2, respectively, were observed. In SW13 cells,
although the activation by the E2 proteins was not as dramatic
as in the C33A cell line, we observed a twofold increase in
the ratio of activity for nonreplicating reporter compared to
the episomal reporter (Fig.
1).
In contrast, the inverse was found in HeLa cells. Transcriptional
activation was more robust, at 57- and 88-fold for BPV1 and
HPV-16, respectively, detected from the episomal reporter compared
to 7- and 10-fold with a nonreplicating reporter, respectively
(Fig.
1). In NIH 3T3 cells, E2 activation was also more pronounced
with the episomal reporter than with nonreplicating reporter.
Similarly, the SWI/SNF-positive, HPV-negative cell lines PC3
and H1299 also showed higher transcriptional activity with the
episomal reporter than with the nonreplicating reporter (data
not shown). In these experiments, equimolar amounts of episomal
or nonreplicating plasmids were transfected into the cells,
with the total amount of DNA held constant by carrier DNA. Cells
were harvested at 24 h posttransfection to limit amplification
of the replicating episomal reporter. Using PCR to detect the
luciferase gene in Hirt extracts from the transfected cells,
we found that comparable levels of both reporters were present
(data not shown). We also assayed up to 72 h posttransfection,
with results similar to the activities at 24 h, although there
was slight decrease in induction in both episomal and nonreplicating
reporters (data not shown), which may be due to progressive
loss of the E2 expression plasmid. These results suggest that
E2 activates transcription from a chromatin context in an episomal
system and that this activation is enhanced by the presence
of the endogenous SWI/SNF complexes.
Human Brm enhances the transcriptional activity of E2.
Robust transactivation of the episomal reporter compared to a nonreplicating reporter in HeLa cells and the opposite effect in C33A cells led us to predict that chromatin remodeling factors might act as cofactors in transcriptional activation by E2. If this were the case, E2 transcriptional activity might be enhanced in a Brm/Brg1-deficient cell line upon heterologous expression of a SWI/SNF factor such as Brm. To test this, SWI/SNF-deficient C33A cells were transiently transfected with the episomal reporter plasmid, BPV1 E2, and human Brm. In this cell line, Brm enhanced E2-mediated activation by 2.7- to 3.7-fold as a function of increasing amounts of transfected Brm (Fig. 2, top). The transactivation-defective mutant BPV1 E39G failed to show any activity itself or in the presence of Brm. A similar stimulatory response was observed in the Brm/Brg1-deficient cell line SW13; E2 transcriptional activity increased from 2- to 5.5-fold in SW13 cells with increasing amounts of transfected Brm (Fig. 2, bottom). To confirm that the transcriptional increase observed was not due to an increase in E2 transcript levels upon introduction of Brm, we assayed E2 RNA levels by reverse transcription-PCR. We did not observe any significant change in the levels of E2 transcripts (data not shown), which is in agreement with our previous results that the Brm protein does not significantly alter transcription from a nonreplicating plasmid (E2 is expressed from the CMV promoter). These data suggest that enhancement of E2 transactivation is facilitated by SWI/SNF factors.
E2 interacts with the Brm complex.
We reasoned that for enhanced transcriptional activation, E2
might physically interact with the Brm complex in vivo. Our
attempts to create a stable cell line expressing wild-type Brm
were unsuccessful, as overexpression of Brm proved to be lethal
to SWI/SNF-deficient SW13 cells. This difficulty was overcome
by creating a stable SW13 cell line expressing a Brm protein
containing a C-terminal Flag epitope and a mutation (K804R)
in the ATPase domain. The stable SW13 cells (Brm NTP-Flag) were
transfected with BPV1 E2 and harvested after 24 h. The Brm complexes
were immunoprecipitated with anti-Flag monoclonal antibody,
and the bound proteins were analyzed for the presence of E2
by resolving the precipitates by SDS-PAGE and subsequent Western
analysis using E2 antibodies. The immunoblotting results showed
that E2 associated with the Brm complex (Fig.
3a). This interaction
is specific, as control antibodies did not coprecipitate the
E2 protein.
Brm is a 180-kDa protein, and we had difficulties expressing
it at detectable levels in transient transfection experiments.
This was overcome by introducing a Kozak sequence at the translation
initiation site of the Brm expression vector. This modified
Flag-tagged Brm plasmid was introduced into C33A cells along
with an E2 expression construct. E2 was immunoprecipitated with
rabbit antiserum to E2, and the immunoprecipitate was resolved
by SDS-PAGE and then immunoblotted with Flag antibody. The results
show that E2 is in complex with Brm (Fig.
3c). Our unrelated
control antibody did not coimmunoprecipitate the Brm complex,
indicating that the E2-Brm immunoprecipitation is specific.
To test whether endogenous Brm complexes with E2, we used HeLa cells that constitutively express high levels of Brm in coimmunoprecipitation-Western blot experiments. HeLa cells were transfected with BPV-1 E2 and the Brm-E2 complexes were harvested 24 h posttransfection to avoid senescence due to the repression of E6/E7 transcription (25). Lysates were immunoprecipitated with a Brm monoclonal antibody and subjected to Western analysis for E2. Our results indicate that endogenous Brm associates with the BPV E2 protein and that this interaction is specific, as the control antibody did not immunoprecipitate E2 (Fig. 3b).
E2 associates with the Brm complex through its N-terminal domain.
Having demonstrated that E2 associates with the Brm complex, we proceeded to identify the domain of E2 required for this interaction. C33A cells were cotransfected with Flag-tagged Brm and either with full-length BPV E2 or a series of E2 deletion constructs (6, 89) (Fig. 4a). Cell lysates were subjected to immunoprecipitation with M2 beads to capture the Brm complexes and immunoblotted with E2 antibodies. Brm complexed with full-length E2, E2-TAD (1 to 216), and E2-
hinge constructs containing the transactivation domain of E2; however, it did not associate with E2R (160 to 410), E2 (55 to 410), or E2 (113 to 410) (Fig. 4a and b). These results imply that the E2-TAD is required for interaction with the Brm complex.
Increased E2 recruitment to E2 binding sequence by Brm.
Our coimmunoprecipitation experiments demonstrate that E2 physically
interacts with the Brm complex, and the reporter assays show
that E2 enhanced transcription from episomal promoters. To address
whether Brm increases the occupancy of E2 onto its cognate binding
sequences on this episomal promoter, we performed ChIP assays
with SW13 cells. Only trace levels of the 300-bp region of the
episomal reporter encompassing the four E2 binding sites were
amplified following ChIP assay with E2 antibodies (Fig.
5a,
top). When both E2 and Brm were cotransfected into SW13 cells,
there was increased E2-bound reporter DNA detected by PCR (Fig.
5a, bottom). To confirm the enhanced recruitment of E2 in the
presence of Brm on E2 binding sites, we performed PCR with increasing
volumes of input and immunoprecipitated DNA (Fig.
5b; compare
the top and bottom panels). To test whether Brm-enhanced E2
recruitment to E2 binding sites requires the adjacent promoter
and associated transcription factors, we performed ChIP assays
using an episomal plasmid containing E2 binding sites but without
the promoter region. Our results show that exogenous Brm increased
the loading of E2 onto E2 binding sites (Fig.
5c and d). These
results demonstrate that Brm facilitates E2 occupancy on its
cognate binding sites.

DISCUSSION
Viral transcription is programmed by E2 binding sequences and
multiple regulatory elements present in the LCR. Transcription
of the early LCR promoter is repressed by heterologous expression
of E2, but the contribution of E2 transcriptional activation
in the context of the genome has not been fully evaluated. While
the transcriptional activation property of E2 is highly conserved
(
36,
80), this is typically studied by transient transfection
of a nonreplicating E2-dependent reporter. One function of E2
proposed to be necessary for activation of transcription and
replication is relief of nucleosome-mediated repression (
42,
43,
88). Therefore, to address whether E2 can activate or repress
transcription in the context of episomes, independent of secondary
effects on PV protein expression and viral genome replication,
we undertook a conventional approach in which E2 binding sites
were positioned upstream of a minimal promoter and introduced
into an EBV-based episomal luciferase reporter. EBV-based episomal
luciferase reporter systems have been exploited to address the
role of chromatin remodeling factors in transcription. These
studies have shown that to assess the transcriptional activity
of SWI/SNF remodeling factors, an episomal reporter system is
more suitable than a nonreplicating reporter (
17,
29,
46,
48,
84,
87). Using this assay system, we show that the BPV1 and
HPV-16 E2 proteins activate transcription from an episomal promoter.
This activation is enhanced in cells in which chromatin remodeling
enzymes are abundant and is correspondingly reduced in those
that are deficient.
Interestingly, with an episomal reporter system, E2 transcriptional activity increased relative to a nonreplicating reporter in the cell lines that express SWI/SNF factors. In HeLa cells, E2 showed robust activation with an episomal reporter compared to a nonreplicating reporter. HeLa cells have been extensively used to purify and characterize the components of SWI/SNF remodeling complexes (37, 38, 57, 70, 71, 83). In contrast, E2 showed weaker transcriptional activity on an episomal reporter than on a nonreplicating reporter in C33A cells. Correspondingly, C33A cells do not express detectable levels of Brm/Brg1 (54). We also observed a similar pattern of reduced activity with an episomal reporter compared to a nonreplicating reporter in SW13 cells. SW13 is commonly used as a SWI/SNF-deficient cell line (18, 46, 48). Importantly, heterologous expression of Brm enhanced the transcriptional activity of E2 from the episomal reporters in C33A and SW13 cells. We also observed relatively higher transcriptional activity of E2 on an episomal reporter than on a nonreplicating reporter in other SWI/SNF-positive cell lines, such as PC3 and H1299 (data not shown). A recent report indicated that the HPV-16 E2 protein is unable to activate transcription from an episomal HPV-16 genome present in the established cell line W12 (2). This outcome may also be complicated by the physiologic regulation of HPV E6 and E7, on which the cells depend for viability.
We show that E2 interacts with endogenous human Brm expressed in HeLa cells and Brm K804R expressed stably in SW13 cells. BPV and HPV E2 transcriptional activation correlates with levels of the Brm factor in transiently transfected Brg1/Brm-deficient cells. Our mapping results showed that the E2 amino-terminal TAD region is required for interaction with the Brm complex. It remains to be determined whether the association of E2 with Brm is direct or mediated by other factors. Brm interaction mapped to a large region of the E2 TAD, suggesting that multiple contacts and factors may be necessary for assembly of a stable Brm SWI/SNF complex. The E2 binding proteins Gps2 and hNAP-1 interact with p300 and probably connect E2 to this histone acetylase to modify chromatin access (7, 58, 65). TopBP1 is another candidate factor that may bridge E2 and Brm, as it interacts with the SWI/SNF remodeling complex (4, 47).
Viral proteins are known to interact with chromatin-modifying factors or remodeling complexes (45). HPV E7 interacts with the chromatin remodeling factor Brg1 and deregulates the transcriptional properties of Brg1 (40). Likewise, several viral proteins, such as the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 integrase, Tat, Tax, EBNA2, E1A, and SV40 large T protein, interact with chromatin-modifying factors in modulating their transcriptional properties (21-23, 50, 86, 90). Our coimmunoprecipitation results extend this list to papillomavirus E2. Interestingly, HPV E1 protein has been reported to directly interact with the nucleosomal protein H1 (76) and with the SWI/SNF chromatin remodeling component Ini1 (41). An E1 mutant defective for Ini1 binding failed to support replication of the viral genome. These observations suggest that E1 engages these enzymes during S phase to drive viral episome replication. E2 may also have a role in replication, as it was shown that E2 opposes the nucleosomal repression of the viral genome and facilitates its replication in vitro (42). Interestingly, E2 binding sites and additional elements that extend beyond the minimal replication origin that is otherwise sufficient for transient DNA replication are necessary for BPV genome maintenance (30). In an elegant study that investigated chromatin structure, nucleosome rearrangement was observed on the HPV-31 genome during epithelial cell differentiation and late gene expression was induced with histone deacetylase inhibitor (12).
SWI/SNF enzymes are proposed to disrupt histone-DNA contacts such that the histone octamer slides along the DNA, thereby mobilizing and repositioning the nucleosomes (33, 85). Although the precise mechanism by which SWI/SNF complexes disrupt nucleosome structure is still not fully resolved, recent data support the notion that these remodeling enzymes act as DNA translocating motors (67). Remodeling activity leads to enhanced accessibility of nucleosomal DNA to sequence-specific DNA binding proteins and facilitates numerous aspects of development, differentiation, cell cycle control, signaling, and transcriptional regulation (10, 11, 32, 38, 49, 66, 67, 81).
Numerous studies have shown that transcription factors recruit the SWI/SNF complex to promoter regions during transcriptional activation (8, 11, 34, 68). By ChIP assays, we show that Brm increases promoter occupancy by E2 on a chromatin template. These results suggest that E2 exploits the cellular Brm complex for its transcriptional activity. Moreover, our ChIP assays suggest that Brm enhances the occupancy of E2 on its binding sites in the absence of the minimal promoter. We do not know at this point whether the accessibility or stability of E2 protein is increased at the site of transcription by interaction with the SWI/SNF complex. Overall, our findings are in agreement with published reports and with the prediction that nucleosomes on the viral genome pose an obstacle to the transcription and replication machinery, an obstacle which is overcome by recruitment of the SWI/SNF complex by E2.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We thank K. Zhao (NIH) for pREP4-luciferase and Said Sif (Ohio
State) for plasmids.
This work was supported by NIH grants R01 CA58376 to E.J.A. and R01 GM56244 to A.N.I.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of Medicine, University of Massachusetts Medical School, 364 Plantation Street, LRB 327, Worcester, MA 01605. Phone: (508) 856-6605. Fax: (508) 856-6797. E-mail:
Elliot.Androphy{at}umassmed.edu.

Published ahead of print on 6 December 2006. 
R. Ajay Kumar and Samisubbu R. Naidu contributed equally to this work. 

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Journal of Virology, March 2007, p. 2213-2220, Vol. 81, No. 5
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