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Journal of Virology, July 2008, p. 6654-6666, Vol. 82, No. 13
0022-538X/08/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JVI.00257-08
Copyright © 2008, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.

MRC Virology Unit, Institute of Virology, Church Street, Glasgow G11 5JR, United Kingdom
Received 5 February 2008/ Accepted 21 April 2008
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DNA replication, capsid assembly, and DNA packaging all take place in the nucleus, initially within discrete regions referred to as replication compartments (10, 46). Cleavage of the replicated concatemeric viral DNA into monomeric units is tightly coupled to encapsidation of the DNA, and in the absence of capsid assembly, no viral DNA cleavage is observed (12). The replicated viral DNA is inserted into the cavity of the preformed spherical-shaped icosahedral procapsid, where it forms a highly compact, ordered structure (4). During DNA packaging, the scaffolding proteins inside the procapsid are cleaved by the viral serine protease and removed, and the capsid shell becomes a more stable, angularized structure (14, 44, 47, 58). In addition to DNA-containing, angularized capsids (C capsids), two other angularized capsid forms are observed in the nucleus, both of which are considered dead-end products. These are A capsids, which lack viral DNA and scaffolding proteins, and B capsids, which are devoid of viral DNA but contain the cleaved scaffolding proteins. The C capsid acquires an envelope by budding into the inner leaflet of the nuclear membrane (50). This layer is lost when the enveloped particle fuses with the outer nuclear membrane and the capsid is released into the cytoplasm, where it gains the tegument and subsequently an outer envelope (49; reviewed in references 33 and 52).
Of the seven HSV-1 DNA-packaging proteins, only UL6, UL17, and UL25 are found in significant amounts in the mature DNA-containing capsid (17, 32, 39, 48, 57). UL6 is present at the unique vertex on the capsid, forming the portal through which the DNA enters the capsid, whereas UL25 and UL17 are located at multiple sites on the capsid (6, 7, 36, 37, 56). Unlike UL17, UL25 is found in much smaller amounts in procapsids than in angularized B capsids, and therefore, it is likely that UL25 is added after procapsid formation (48). This conclusion is supported by the observation that UL25 binds in vitro to A or B capsids lacking UL25 (35). In the absence of UL17, small amounts of UL25 are present on B capsids in vivo, indicating that UL17 is required for the attachment of UL25 to capsids (56). Wild-type (wt) HSV-1 C capsids contain greater amounts of both UL17 and UL25 than B capsids, in keeping with the idea that UL25 and some of UL17 attach to capsids at a late stage in capsid maturation and that the presence of viral DNA inside the capsid exposes more binding sites on the capsid surface (57, 59). By use of cryoelectron microscopy and image reconstruction, extra mass on the surface of the capsid, adjacent to the pentons at the vertices, was identified on wt C capsids but not on wt and UL25-null mutant A capsids. It was proposed that this C-capsid-specific component was composed of a heterodimer of UL25 and UL17 (59).
In contrast to the other DNA-packaging proteins, UL25 is not absolutely essential for the cleavage of concatemeric viral DNA and initiation of DNA packaging but appears to be important at a later stage of HSV-1 genome encapsidation (32, 53). Subsequent studies of PRV and bovine herpesvirus 1 UL25 deletion mutants are in agreement with this conclusion (13, 24). Interestingly, the defect of the PRV UL25-null mutant can be partially reversed by growing the mutant on a cell line expressing the wt HSV-1 protein (25).
Since UL25 is present at multiple sites on the exterior surface of the capsid, UL25 may be required for stabilizing the capsid shell and possibly the packaging complex at the portal during and after DNA packaging. The findings that the UL25-null mutant KUL25NS stably packages only small amounts of viral DNA in nonpermissive cells and that most of the viral DNA encapsidated is of less than genome length are consistent with this proposal (53).
The first evidence that the UL25 gene product was important for DNA packaging was obtained from the analysis of two HSV-1 mutants, ts1204 and ts1208, that had temperature-sensitive (ts) mutations in the UL25 gene (1). ts1204 had two phenotypic defects at the nonpermissive temperature (NPT), a very early block in virus infection and another in the assembly of functional capsids. ts1208 had a defect in only the latter function. Initially, the early defect in ts1204 infection at the NPT was thought to be in penetration. This conclusion was based on the finding that high multiplicities of infection (MOI) with the mutant at the NPT prevented subsequent infection by wt HSV-1 but not HSV-2 and that the early defect could be overcome by polyethylene glycol, a membrane-fusing agent. Although we have been able to confirm the first observation, we have been unable to reproduce the latter finding. Since more-recent work has shown that UL25 is associated with the capsids in the cell nucleus, the defects in ts1204 have been reassessed. We discovered that ts1204 contained more than one ts mutation and constructed a new mutant, ts1249, possessing the UL25 ts mutation only. In this paper, we describe the characterization of this mutant to gain insight about the role of UL25 early in infection. In addition, ts1208 has also been analyzed further, and the nucleotide changes responsible for the defects in both ts1204 and ts1208 have been determined.
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Plasmids. The amplicon pSA1 has a 200-bp packaging signal spanning the junction between two tandem a sequences derived from HSV-1 strain 17 and a copy of the HSV-1 oris origin of replication in the plasmid vector pAT153 (53). The BamHI g probe used in Southern blot hybridization was purified from BamHI-digested pGX37, which contains the HSV-1 strain 17 BamHI g genomic fragment (corresponding to HSV-1 nucleotides 52589 to 60363) inserted into the BamHI site of pAT153 (Fig. 1). Plasmids pBE1, containing HSV-1 sequences specific for IRL/TRL, and pST17, containing HSV-1 sequences specific for IRS/TRS, are described in detail in reference 53, and the locations of their HSV-1 sequences are shown in Fig. 1.
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FIG. 1. (a) Structure of the HSV-1 genome showing the unique regions (UL and US), the repeated regions (TRL, IRL, TRS, and IRS), and the a sequence, which contains the cis-acting packaging signals (shaded box). The positions of the BamHI fragments k, q, s, and g are shown. (b) Expanded section of BamHI fragments s, k, and q showing the HSV-1 regions present in the plasmids pBE1 and pST17.
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Purification of viral capsids. Viral capsids were purified from BHK cells, essentially as described by Preston and McDougall (45).
Western blotting. Capsid proteins or virus-infected cell proteins, separated by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE), were blotted onto a nitrocellulose membrane and screened with antibodies, using the enhanced chemiluminescence method as described by Thurlow et al. (56). Protein bands were quantified by densitometric analysis of digital images by using Quantity One software (Bio-Rad Laboratories). The amount of each capsid preparation was standardized using the capsid shell protein VP19C, which was assumed to be present in the same copy number in both ts1249 and wt HSV-1 capsids.
Antibodies. Mouse monoclonal antibodies (MAb) specific for UL6 (MAb 175), UL17 (MAb 203), UL25 (MAb 166), ICP0 (MAb 11060), VP5 (MAb DM165), and VP19C (MAb 2231) and the rabbit polyclonal antibodies specific for VP23 (R186) and UL25 (335) have all been described previously (16, 23, 30, 57). The actin-specific MAb AC-40 was purchased from Sigma.
Sequence analysis. DNA was sequenced by the M13 chain terminator method by using a Sequenase kit (Amersham Biosciences) or sequenced commercially by Geneservice Ltd.
Analysis of replicated and packaged amplicon DNA.
Vero cell monolayers (106 cells/60-mm-diameter dish) were transfected with 2 µg pSA1, using Lipofectamine (12 µl) and Plus (8 µl) reagents (Invitrogen), and incubated at 36.5°C as described previously (45). Fifteen minutes prior to virus infection, 100 µg/ml cycloheximide was added to each sample. At 12 h after the addition of DNA to the cells, the cells were infected with 10 PFU of virus/cell, and incubation was continued at 36.5°C for 2 h in the presence of 100 µg cycloheximide/ml. This concentration of cycloheximide was used throughout. Cells were washed three times with tissue culture medium to remove the inhibitor, and samples were transferred to the NPT of 38.5°C or 39.5°C or the permissive temperature (PT) of 32°C. At 20 h p.i., the cells were harvested and total cellular DNA and DNase-resistant DNA were extracted from cells. An aliquot of DNA was digested with DpnI, together with EcoRI or BamHI, to remove the input plasmid DNA, and the fragments were separated on agarose gels as described by Stow (53). The DNA fragments were transferred onto a Hybond XL membrane (GE Healthcare) and hybridized to 32P-labeled pAT153 or a cloned HSV-1 BamHI g fragment, as described by Jamieson et al. (20). The DNA was radiolabeled with [
-32P]dCTP and [
-32P]dGTP by random primer extension, using a kit from Roche. Phosphorimages of Southern blots were obtained using a personal phosphorimager (Bio-Rad), and the relative amounts of radioactivity in DNA bands were determined using Quantity One software (Bio-Rad).
Analysis of total and encapsidated viral DNA. Prior to virus infection, cycloheximide was added to the medium of BHK cell monolayers (106 cells in 60-mm-diameter petri dishes). Fifteen minutes later, the medium was removed and the cell monolayers were infected with 10 PFU of virus per cell, and the virus adsorbed to cells for 2 h at 36.5°C in the presence of cycloheximide. Cells were washed with 0.1 M glycine-0.14 M NaCl (pH 3.0) to inactivate virus bound to the cell surface as described by Stow (53). After this treatment, the cells were washed three times with medium prewarmed to 39°C and incubated at the NPT (38.5°C) or the PT (32°C) in the absence of cycloheximide. At 20 h p.i., the cells were harvested, total cellular DNA and DNase-resistant DNA were extracted from cells and digested with BamHI, and Southern blot analysis was carried out as described above.
Assay of VP16 activity in cells. The multiply defective HSV-1 virus in1383 (42), carrying the lacZ reporter gene under the control of the ICP0 immediate-early promoter, was central in the design of an assay to determine whether VP16 was released from incoming ts1249 capsids in cells at the NPT. Vero cells were either mock infected or infected with 5 PFU of in1383/cell in the presence of cycloheximide at 38.5°C. After 30 min at the NPT, cells were mock infected or were infected with purified ts1249 virions or virions of a control virus at an MOI of 10 PFU/cell in the presence of cycloheximide. The virions were prewarmed to 42°C for 10 min immediately prior to infection. After incubation for 5.5 h at the NPT in the presence of cycloheximide, the cells were washed three times with medium containing 1 µg/ml of the RNA synthesis inhibitor actinomycin D to remove the cycloheximide block, and incubation was continued at the NPT in the presence of actinomycin D. The samples were harvested at 9 h and 20 min after the addition of the second virus. Cells were washed once with ice-cold phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) prior to the addition of 100 µl 10 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.5), 2 mM MgCl2, 10 mM NaCl, and 0.1% NP-40. Dishes were stored overnight at –20°C. Samples were thawed, and cells were scraped off into the supernatant. The samples were centrifuged at 14,500 x g for 2 min at 4°C and assayed for β-galactosidase activity essentially as described by Preston and Nicholl (41).
Confocal immunofluorescence microscopy. Prior to infection, viruses were warmed to 42°C for 10 min and cells were incubated at 38.5°C for 1 h. The prewarmed Vero cells on 13-mm-diameter coverslips (7 x 104 cells per well) were infected with 10 PFU of prewarmed, purified virions per cell at 38.5°C in the presence of cycloheximide. After 1 h at 39°C, the virus inoculum was removed and the cells were washed twice with prewarmed tissue culture medium containing cycloheximide. Incubation of virus-infected cells was continued at 39°C in the presence of cycloheximide for various times up to 4 h. Immunofluorescence was performed as described by Preston and McDougall (45), using MAb DM165, specific for VP5, and for some experiments 335, a polyclonal rabbit antibody to UL25 protein, as the primary antibodies. The secondary antibodies used were fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC)-conjugated goat anti-mouse immunoglobulin G (IgG) (FITC-GAM) (Sigma) and Cy5-conjugated goat anti-rabbit IgG (Cy5-GAR) (Sigma). In experiments using only MAb DM165, after the cells were treated with secondary antibodies, they were incubated with propidium iodide (Sigma-Aldrich) at a concentration of 1 µg/ml in PBS containing 1% fetal calf serum. Stained cells were examined under a Zeiss LSM 510 confocal microscope, using a 63x oil immersion lens (NA 1.4). For samples containing FITC and Cy5 conjugates, lasers with excitation lines at 488 nm and 633 nm were used. For samples containing the FITC conjugate and propidium iodide, lasers with excitation lines of 488 nm and 543 nm were activated.
Fluorescence in situ hybridization. Vero cells on 13-mm-diameter coverslips were infected with 50 PFU of prewarmed virus/cell. A high concentration of virus was used in these experiments because at lower levels the method was less sensitive. After 1 h at 38.5°C, the virus inoculum was removed, the cells were washed three times with medium warmed to 42°C, and incubation was continued at 38.5°C. At 5 h p.i., the cells were washed twice with PBS containing 1% fetal calf serum prior to fixation with precooled 95% ethanol-5% acetic acid for 5 min at –20°C. The fixed cells were washed three times with PBS-1% fetal calf serum and stored at 4°C until required. The probe used for in situ hybridization was a cosmid, cos56, containing HSV-1 strain 17 sequences from bp 79442 to 115152 (9, 31). The DNA was labeled by nick translation with Cy3-dCTP as described previously (15), and the cells were subsequently treated with DAPI (4',6'-diamidino-2-phenylindole) to stain cell nuclei. Cells were examined under a Zeiss LSM 510 confocal microscope with 405- and 543-nm laser lines, with each channel scanned separately.
Reversibility of the ts1249 uncoating defect. BHK cells in 35-mm dishes, prewarmed for 1 h at 38.5°C, were infected with virus (100 to 200 PFU per dish) that had been prewarmed at 42°C for 10 min and were incubated at 38.5°C. At 1 h after virus infection, the cells were washed once with tissue culture medium and overlaid with medium containing 3% human serum, 2% calf serum, and antibiotics. The cells were transferred to the PT at various times after virus infection and stained with Giemsa after 3 days at 32°C, and the number of virus plaques was recorded.
Sequence alignment. The multiple-sequence alignment of the UL25nt domains (HSV-1 UL25 amino acid residues 134 to 580) from 38 herpesvirus members, described by Bowman et al. (5), was used. The alignment was generated with the program CLUSTALW (55).
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FIG. 2. Identification of ts1204 and ts1208 UL25 mutations. The solid black box indicates the location of the ts mutation within the BamHI u genomic fragment obtained previously by marker rescue experiments. The numbers refer to the positions of the restriction endonuclease sites in the HSV-1 strain 17 genome. The precise base pair change determined by DNA sequence analysis and the effect of the mutation on the UL25 amino acid sequence are shown below the marker rescue data. ORF, open reading frame.
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TABLE 1. Comparison of the efficiencies of plaque formation (e.o.p.) at the NPT of 38.5°C or 39.5°C and the PT of 32°Ca
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FIG. 3. Comparison of [35S]methionine-labeled mutant virus-infected cell polypeptides synthesized at the PT and NPT. Vero cells were mock infected (mi) or infected with wt HSV-1, ts1204, ts1249, ts+1249MR, ts1208, or ts+1208MR, and the virus-infected cells were incubated at 32°C, 38.5°C, or 39.5°C. At 5 h p.i., [35S]methionine was added to the cells and incubation continued for a further 15 h. Samples were analyzed on an SDS-10% polyacrylamide gel and the proteins detected by autoradiography. Selected virus polypeptides are labeled on the left-hand side, and on the right-hand side the positions of molecular mass markers (kDa) are indicated. TK, thymidine kinase.
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FIG. 4. Localization of incoming capsids in the cell. Vero cells were either mock infected or infected with wt HSV-1, ts+1249 MR, or ts1249 in the presence of cycloheximide and incubated for 1 (a, c, e, g) or 2 (b, d, f, h) h at 38.5°C. Capsids were detected by indirect immunofluorescence with MAb DM165, specific for VP5, and the secondary IgG antibody FITC-GAM. The nuclei were stained with propidium iodide. The cells were examined by confocal microscopy and digital images taken. Bar, 10 µm.
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FIG. 5. Colocalization of UL25 with VP5 in incoming ts1249 capsids at the NPT. Vero cells were either mock infected or infected with wt HSV-1 or ts1249 in the presence of cycloheximide and incubated for 4 h at 38.5°C. Capsids were detected in the cell by indirect immunofluorescence with MAb DM165, specific for VP5, and the secondary IgG antibody FITC-GAM (a, d, e), and UL25 was identified with rabbit antibody 335 and the secondary IgG antibody Cy5-GAR (b, e, h). Each set of three images shows FITC staining of VP5 (left), Cy5 staining of UL25 (middle), and a merged image of the two for the same field of infected cells (right). The cells were examined by confocal microscopy and digital images taken. Bar, 10 µm.
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FIG. 6. Localization of incoming virion DNA in the cell by in situ hybridization. Vero cells were either mock infected or infected with wt HSV-1, ts+1249MR, ts+1249rev, or ts1249 in the presence or absence of cycloheximide (CHI) and incubated for 5 h at 38.5°C or 36.5°C as indicated. HSV-1 DNA was detected by in situ hybridization and confocal microscopy. Bar, 10 µm.
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At 36.5°C, much of ts1249 input DNA remained in the cytoplasm in cells grown in the presence of cycloheximide, although some genomes appeared to be transported into the nucleus. Consistent with this, in the absence of cycloheximide, ts1249 DNA replication was detected in most of the nuclei (Fig. 6s and t). It should be noted that at 36.5°C ts1249 had a plating efficiency similar to that at 32°C and the yield from cells infected with 10 PFU/cell of mutant virus at 36.5°C was similar to the yield obtained at 32°C, indicating that 36.5°C is permissive for replication of ts1249 (data not shown).
VP16 activity in cells infected at the NPT by ts1249. A possible explanation for the failure of ts1249 to uncoat its genome at the NPT is that some of the tegument proteins remain attached to the incoming capsid, blocking the release of the genome into the nucleus at the nuclear pore. VP16 is a major tegument protein that, in addition to its structural role, is required for the transcription of immediate-early viral genes. To determine whether VP16 was released from incoming ts1249 capsids, an experiment was carried out using the highly disabled HSV-1 mutant in1383 containing a reporter gene carrying lacZ under the control of the immediate-early promoter of ICP0 in place of the thymidine kinase gene (42). This virus has three other defects. It has a ts mutation (tsK) in the ICP4 gene, which makes the protein nonfunctional at 38.5°C, and an insertion in the VP16 gene, which abolishes the transactivating function of VP16 but does not affect its structural role as a tegument protein. in1383 also contains a nonfunctional ICP0 gene in which sequences encoding the zinc ring finger in ICP0 have been deleted, generating a frameshift mutation. As a consequence of these mutations, in1383 is severely impaired in viral mRNA synthesis. β-Galactosidase activity expressed from mRNA transcribed from the lacZ reporter gene in the in1383 genome is minimal but is increased substantially when another virus supplies VP16.
Cells were infected at the NPT with purified virions of ts1249, ts+1249MR, or wt HSV-1 or were mock-infected in the presence or absence of in1383 and incubated at the NPT in the presence of cycloheximide to allow the accumulation of immediate-early mRNAs from input viral genomes released into the cell nuclei. After 5.5 h, the medium containing cycloheximide was removed and replaced with medium containing the RNA synthesis inhibitor actinomycin D for 4 h to permit translation of the immediate-early transcripts. Cells were harvested, and extracts were assayed for β-galactosidase activity.
No β-galactosidase was detected in the absence of in1383, and only very low levels were found in cells infected with in1383 alone. In contrast, extracts of cells that had been coinfected with in1383 and ts1249 expressed high levels of β-galactosidase, comparable to the amounts detected in cells coinfected with in1383 and wt HSV-1 or ts+1249MR, suggesting that VP16 was released from the capsids of input ts1249 (Fig. 7a). Extracts were also screened for the presence of ICP0 by using a Western blot assay. In the presence or absence of in1383, wt HSV-1 and ts+1249MR produced high levels of ICP0, much of which was present as proteolytic fragments, which are typically observed in Vero cells. By contrast, ICP0 was not detected in cells infected with in1383 alone, ts1249 alone, or in1383 plus ts1249 (Fig. 7b). Thus, although VP16 supplied by ts1249 activated the ICP0 promoter in in1383 driving β-galactosidase expression, it failed to express ICP0 from its own genome, supporting the finding that incoming ts1249 capsids at the NPT are unable to release the viral DNA into cell nuclei.
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FIG. 7. (a) β-Galactosidase activity in cell extracts. Cells were mock infected (–) or infected with in1383 (+), followed by superinfection with ts1249, ts+1249MR, or wt HSV-1 virions as indicated. The activities shown are expressed in arbitrary fluorescence units and represent the means of readings obtained for duplicate samples. (b) Western blot analysis of protein extracts from cells infected with ts1249 (1249), ts+1249MR (MR), or wt HSV-1 (wt) or mock infected (MI) cells in the presence or absence of in1383 infecting virus, screened with ICP0 or actin antibodies. (c) β-Galactosidase activity in extracts from cells infected with in1383 and different MOI of ts1249, ts+1249MR, or wt HSV-1 virions.
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Reversibility of the uncoating phenotype of ts1249. BHK cells were infected at the NPT with approximately 150 PFU of ts1249 or the marker rescuant per dish and were transferred to the PT of 32°C at various times after infection to determine whether the effect of the ts1249 uncoating defect could be overcome by lowering the incubation temperature. The ability of ts1249 to form plaques at the PT declined with increasing time at the NPT, in contrast to ts+1249MR, which gave similar numbers of plaques upon downshift of virus-infected cells, irrespective of the time of downshift (Fig. 8).
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FIG. 8. Reversibility of the ts1249 uncoating defect. BHK cells were infected with either ts1249 or ts+1249MR (MR) at the NPT and transferred to the PT at the times indicated. After 3 days at 32°C, the virus plaques were counted. The values shown are the means of values obtained for duplicate samples.
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FIG. 9. Amplification and packaging of the plasmid pSA1 in Vero cells by ts1249 and ts1208. One set of cell monolayers was transfected with pSA1, and cells subsequently were infected with wt HSV-1, gCB, ts+1249MR, or ts1249 or were mock infected (mi) in the presence of cycloheximide at 36.5°C. After 2 h, the cycloheximide block was removed and the samples were transferred to 38.5°C. The second set of cell monolayers was transfected with pSA1, and cells were subsequently infected with ts1208, ts+1208MR, or wt HSV-1 or were mock infected. These samples were incubated only at 39.5°C in the absence of cycloheximide. At 20 h p.i., the cells were harvested and total cellular DNA and DNase-resistant DNA were prepared and digested with DpnI and EcoRI (a, c) or BamHI (b, d). Southern blot analysis was carried out, using 32P-labeled plasmid vector pAT153 (a, c) or the 32P-labeled, cloned HSV-1 genomic fragment BamHI g (b, d) as a probe. The numbers at the bottom of the lanes indicate the percentage of radioactivity present in the band in the DNase-treated sample relative to that in the band in the total DNA sample. Note that gCB BamHI g is smaller than that of wt HSV-1 strain 17.
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FIG. 10. Analysis of ts1249 total and DNase-resistant viral DNAs at the NPT. Duplicate samples of cells were infected with wt HSV-1, ts+1249MR (MR), ts+1249rev (Rev), or ts1249 or were mock infected (mi) in the presence of cycloheximide at 36.5°C. After 2 h, the cycloheximide block was removed and the samples were transferred to 38.5°C. One set of samples was harvested at 4 h p.i. and the other set at 20 h p.i. Total cellular DNA and DNase-resistant DNA were prepared and digested with BamHI. Southern blot analysis was carried out, using 32P-labeled, cloned HSV-1 genomic fragment BamHI g (a), pBE1 (b), or pST17 (c) as a probe. The far right-hand lanes in panels b and c are the ts1249 lanes after longer exposure. The numbers at the bottom of the lanes indicate the ratio of radioactivity present in the joint fragment k to that in the terminal s or q fragment in the DNase-treated sample.
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FIG. 11. (a) Association of UL25 with ts1249 B capsids produced at the PT. Cells were infected with wt HSV-1 and ts1249 at 36.5°C for 2 h and transferred to 32°C for 18 h. Serial twofold dilutions of purified B capsids were prepared and equalized on the basis of their VP23 content by Western blotting. The polypeptides from the equalized capsids were resolved by SDS-PAGE, transferred onto nitrocellulose, and probed sequentially with UL6, UL17, and UL25 MAbs as indicated on the left side. (b) Association of UL25 with ts1249 B capsids produced at the NPT. Capsids were treated in the same way as those produced at the PT and the equalized capsids screened sequentially with UL6, UL17, UL25, and VP19C MAbs.
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TABLE 2. Quantification of DNA-packaging proteins in ts1249 B capsids produced at the NPTa
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Analysis of incoming ts1249 capsids by immunofluorescence revealed that ts1249 was able to enter the cell at the NPT, and this result was supported by the finding that cells coinfected with ts1249 and the defective virus in1383 at the NPT expressed high levels of β-galactosidase activity due to the release of functional ts1249 VP16 into the nuclei. The observations that cells infected with ts1249 at the NPT produced very low levels of viral proteins and that most of the input viral DNA remained in the cytoplasm are consistent with an uncoating defect, although the precise role of UL25 in this process is uncertain. The ts UL25 protein might directly prevent the release of the viral DNA from the capsid or release the DNA prematurely. Alternatively, it might interfere with other key processes, such as the association of the capsid with the nuclear pore complex or the dissociation of viral proteins from the capsid. Two ts mutants of UL36 have also been implicated in uncoating, and one of them, tsB7, has features similar to those of ts1249 inasmuch as incoming capsids at the NPT accumulate around the nuclei of virus-infected cells (3, 43). UL36 is thought to be important for the transport of capsids along the microtubules to the microtubule organizer, although direct evidence for this function is lacking.
The uncoating defect in ts1249-infected cells at the NPT was reversible at early times by transferring the cells to 36.5°C or lower temperatures. The decline in reversibility with time could be the result of cellular defense mechanisms reducing virus viability, or alternatively, the ts UL25 protein could become locked in an irreversible conformation. Although the ts1249 protein functioned at 36.5°C, it was clear from in situ hybridization experiments that ts1249 showed some impairment in the release of viral DNA into the cell nuclei, consistent with the observation that ts1249 formed slightly smaller plaques than wt HSV-1 at this temperature and also at 32°C. Nonetheless, virus stocks with high titers were readily obtained at both 36.5°C and 32°C, suggesting that the ts mutant had only a slight growth disadvantage at these temperatures.
The phenotype of ts1249 at the NPT upon release of the viral DNA from the incoming capsids was similar to that of the UL25-null mutant KUL25NS under restrictive conditions (53). Like the null mutant, ts1249 initiated packaging but was impaired at a late stage in the process. Furthermore, both sets of data supported a model in which viral DNA is packaged from the L segment end. Taking into account the proposed location of UL25 on the capsid and the phenotype of the UL25-null mutant, we favor the idea that UL25 is required for capsid stabilization during late stages of DNA packaging and that if it is also located around the portal, it may additionally stabilize the packing machinery. This stabilization may need to be reversed during uncoating to allow the viral DNA to be released from the capsid.
In contrast to what was found for the UL25-null mutant capsids, however, some UL25 was present in purified ts1249 B capsids produced at the NPT, about twofold less than the level observed in wt HSV-1 B capsids, suggesting that the ts protein was able to bind to capsids, although less efficiently than wt UL25. Preliminary immunogold analysis of ts1249 capsids by use of UL25 antibody supported this finding (data not shown), and Western blot analysis of UL25 in wt HSV-1- and ts1249-infected cells at the NPT excluded the possibility that the mutant UL25 was less stable than the wt protein (data not shown). Recent work by Trus et al. (59) suggested that UL25 on C capsids interacted with three different proteins (VP5, present in the peripentonal hexon; UL17; and VP19C), and it is likely that one or more of these interactions is impaired in the association of the ts UL25 protein with the capsid at the NPT. ts1249 UL25 was also retained on incoming capsids at the NPT, although we do not have any information as to whether the amounts present on the capsid were similar to those on wt HSV-1 capsids. It is conceivable that UL36 could stabilize the interaction of ts1249 UL25 with the capsid at the NPT.
Both the ts1208 and the ts1249 mutations map within the UL25 protein region whose structure is known (5). The ts1249 mutation E233K lies toward the end of an alpha helix close to a loop. Given the predicted flexible architecture of UL25, the change in the charge of residue 233 in ts1249 UL25 by the replacement of an acidic amino acid with a basic residue may be responsible for altering the conformation of the protein on the capsid at the NPT and could affect the strength of interaction with one or more of its binding partners. This glutamic acid residue is highly conserved among the alphaherpesvirus and betaherpesvirus UL25 orthologues analyzed but is not found in gammaherpesvirus counterparts (Table 3). Valine residue 161, absent in ts1208 UL25 protein, is also located toward the end of an alpha helix. It is conserved in 11 of the 16 alphaherpesviruses, and all but one had a small hydrophobic amino acid at this position (Table 3). The UL25 proteins of both the beta- and the gammaherpesviruses also had a small, hydrophobic amino acid at this position. Interestingly, all 14 gammaherpesviruses had a leucine present at this site.
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TABLE 3. Conservation of amino acid sequence at the sites of the ts1249 and ts1208 mutations among the alpha-, beta-, and gammaherpesviruses
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Published ahead of print on 30 April 2008. ![]()
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deenvelopment
reenvelopment pathway. J. Virol. 75:5697-5702.This article has been cited by other articles:
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