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Journal of Virology, February 2009, p. 2034-2037, Vol. 83, No. 4
0022-538X/09/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JVI.01883-08
Copyright © 2009, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Replication of Equine Infectious Anemia Virus in Engineered Mouse NIH 3T3 Cells 
Baoshan Zhang and
Ronald C. Montelaro*
Center for Vaccine Research and Department of Microbiology and Molecular Genetics, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15261
Received 8 September 2008/
Accepted 27 November 2008

ABSTRACT
We employed the equine lentivirus equine infectious anemia virus
(EIAV) to investigate the cellular restrictions for lentivirus
replication in murine NIH 3T3 cells. The results of these studies
demonstrate that NIH 3T3 cells expressing the EIAV receptor
ELR1 and equine cyclin T1 supported productive replication of
EIAV and produced infectious virions at levels similar to those
found in a reference permissive equine cell line. The studies
presented here demonstrate, for the first time, differential
levels of restriction for EIAV and human immunodeficiency virus
type 1 (HIV-1) replication in murine cells and suggest that
these differences can be exploited to reveal critical virus-cell
interactions required for HIV-1 assembly and budding of lentivirus
particles.

TEXT
To date, efforts to establish a murine model of lentivirus infection
and disease have been hampered by the realization of a series
of host cell restrictions to human immunodeficiency virus type
1 (HIV-1) replication that impede critical steps in HIV-1 infection,
gene expression, and virus assembly and budding (
1,
2,
4,
6,
9,
17,
18). In our previous studies of host cell receptors and
assembly mechanisms of the equine lentivirus equine infectious
anemia virus (EIAV), we made several observations suggesting
that murine cells may be able to support EIAV replication with
only minimal engineering. First, we observed that transfected
murine NIH 3T3 cells transiently expressing the EIAV receptor
ELR1 were susceptible to EIAV infection at levels that were
similar to those achieved in permissive equine cell lines, indicating
no obvious host restrictions to early steps in virus entry (
11,
19). Second, we discovered that murine NIH 3T3 cells transfected
with EIAV Gag plasmids produced virus particles at levels similar
to those of transfected equine cell lines, indicating a lack
of host cell restrictions to late steps in virus replication
leading to Gag assembly and virus budding (
10). While murine
NIH 3T3 cells were found to be permissive for EIAV entry and
budding, previous studies have shown that expression of EIAV
provirus requires the presence of equine cyclin T1 (cycT1) and
that human and murine forms of cycT1 fail to effect efficient
Tat-mediated transactivation of the EIAV proviral long terminal
repeat (
3,
16). Based on these individual observations with
EIAV, we hypothesized that murine NIH 3T3 cells engineered to
express the ELR1 receptor and equine cycT1 would be permissive
for EIAV replication.
To test this hypothesis, the NIH 3T3 cell line (ATCC CRL-1658) was stably transduced with murine leukemia virus retroviruses expressing either ELR1 or equine cycT1, respectively. The ELR1-expressing retrovirus vector was designed to express the full-length ELR1 receptor protein as described previously (19). The equine cycT1 retrovirus vector was constructed from the functional 300-amino-acid fragment of equine cycT1 described by Bieniasz et al. (3). The equine cycT1 plasmid (provided by B. R. Cullen) was modified to contain a hemagglutinin (HA) tag. The expression construct contains a ribosome internal entry site and has the gene for enhanced green fluorescent protein inserted following the cycT1 gene to provide a screening marker. Vesicular stomatitis virus-pseudotyped retroviruses expressing ELR1 or cycT1 were made as described previously (19). The ELR1-expressing NIH 3T3 cell line, designated NIH3T3(ELR1), was generated by ELR1-expressing retrovirus infection, followed by G418 selection. The ELR1-transduced NIH 3T3 cells were then infected with the cycT1-expressing retrovirus, followed by cell sorting for enhanced green fluorescent protein-positive cells with a FACSAria cell sorting system (BD Biosciences, San Jose, CA). ELR1 and cycT1 expression levels were analyzed by flow cytometry and compared to those in the permissive equine dermal (ED) cell line routinely used to produce EIAV. The results indicate that about 90% of the transduced cells were ELR1 positive with a mean fluorescent intensity of 680 (Fig. 1A), similar to the level of ELR1 expression detected on the surface of the reference ED cells (89% positive, mean fluorescent intensity of 1,100) (Fig. 1B). In addition, more than 50% of the transduced NIH 3T3 cells expressed equine cycT1 (Fig. 1C). The expression of the equine cycT1 and ELR1 proteins of the expected molecular weights by the transduced cells was also confirmed by Western blotting of cell lysates (data not shown). The product NIH 3T3 cell line expressing ELR1 and equine cycT1 is designated NIH3T3(ELR1/cyc).
We have shown in previous studies that NIH 3T3 cells transiently
transfected with ELR1 are permissive for EIAV entry, but not
for productive virus replication (
19). In the present study,
the specificity of EIAV entry into stably transduced NIH3T3(ELR1)
cells was assayed by evaluating the ability of a reference anti-ELR1
serum to block EIAV entry into NIH3T3(ELR1) cells. For these
studies, EIAV infection was measured by assaying the level of
EIAV cDNA produced in infected cells at 24 h postinfection,
as described previously (
19). As summarized in Fig.
2A, EIAV
entry into NIH3T3(ELR1) cells was blocked in a dose-dependent
manner by the ELR1-specific antiserum, with more than 90% inhibition
observed at a 1:33 dilution of the antiserum and 50% inhibition
at a serum dilution of 1:1,000. These results demonstrate receptor-specific
EIAV entry into NIH3T3(ELR1) cells.
We next examined if EIAV infection of NIH3T3(ELR1) cells was
successful in producing integrated EIAV provirus. For this experiment,
NIH3T3(ELR1) cells and the permissive ED cell line were infected
in parallel with EIAV at a multiplicity of infection (MOI) of
1.0. At 14 days postinfection, high-molecular-weight cellular
DNA was extracted from the respective cells and analyzed for
proviral DNA with our standard real-time PCR assay (
19). The
results of this assay (Fig.
2B) revealed about 10
6.5 DNA copies
per 10
5 NIH3T3(ELR1) cells and about 10
5.5 DNA copies per 10
5 ED cells following infection, with no detectable proviral DNA
observed in control NIH 3T3 cells lacking ELR1 expression or
in ED cells not exposed to the virus. Thus, these data confirm
that EIAV infection of NIH3T3(ELR1) cells supports the early
steps of EIAV replication, from infection to provirus integration,
as efficiently as that of a reference equine cell line routinely
used for EIAV production.
While NIH3T3(ELR1) cells supported the early steps of EIAV infection, we were unable to detect the production of virus particles in the supernatant of infected cells (see Fig. 3), suggesting a block in virus replication following provirus integration, and consistent with the expected requirement for equine cycT1 for efficient expression of the EIAV provirus in murine cells.
To address this restriction, we next tested the replication
competence of EIAV in NIH3T3(ELR1/cyc) cells stably expressing
both ELR1 and equine cycT1. For this assay, equal numbers of
NIH3T3(ELR1/cyc) cells, NIH3T3(ELR1) cells, NIH 3T3 cells, and
permissive ED cells were infected in parallel with EIAV at an
MOI of 1.0 and reverse transcriptase (RT) activity in cell culture
supernatants was assayed to quantify the levels of virus replication
(
12). The virus replication profiles presented in Fig.
3 clearly
demonstrate that NIH3T3(ELR1/cyc) cells were able to support
virus replication at levels similar to those of permissive ED
cells, as measured by the production of supernatant RT activity.
In contrast, EIAV did not replicate in normal NIH 3T3 cells
or in NIH3T3(ELR1) cells, as evidenced by the lack of supernatant
RT production from these nonpermissive cells. Thus, these data
reveal for the first time the ability of a minimally engineered
murine cell line to achieve productive infection by a lentivirus.
Finally, to complete the evaluation of EIAV replication in NIH3T3(ELR1/cyc) cells, we evaluated the infectivity of the virions produced in the engineered mouse cells compared to virions produced in the ED cells. For this evaluation, supernatant virus infectivity titers were determined by using a standard infectious-center assay (7) and the concentration of virus particles in cell supernatants was quantified by real-time PCR assays of EIAV genomic RNA (5). As summarized in Table 1, at 30 days after infection, the supernatant from infected NIH3T3(ELR1/cyc) cells contained about 0.9 x 105 infectious units (IU)/ml virus and the supernatant from the ED cells contained 3.3 x 105 IU/ml. Quantification of the supernatant viral genomic RNA produced by the two cell lines revealed similar levels of 5.2 x 109 copies per ml produced from NIH3T3(ELR1/cyc) cells and 5.9 x 109 copies per ml from ED cells. Taking the ratio of RNA copies per IU to normalize virion infectivity indicates that the virus produced by NIH3T3(ELR1/cyc) cells displayed 5.7 x 104 RNA copies/IU, while the virus produced by ED cells was calculated to be 1.8 x 104 RNA copies/IU. Thus, these results indicate that the quality of the virus produced in engineered NIH 3T3 cells was similar to that of the virus produced by a permissive equine cell line in terms of virion infectivity.
Taken together, these experiments represent the first successful
engineering of a murine cell line to achieve productive replication
of a natural unmodified lentivirus. Numerous efforts to engineer
permissive murine cells for HIV-1 replication have revealed
host restrictions at virtually every step of the virus replication
cycle, indicating the lack of appropriate host factors to mediate
critical steps in HIV-1 entry, gene expression, and assembly
and budding (
1,
1,
8,
9,
13,
15,
17). While it is not clear
what differences between EIAV and HIV-1 are responsible for
the different replication phenotypes in mouse cell lines, it
is evident that EIAV is intrinsically able to utilize murine
host cell machinery and to avoid restriction factors to a greater
extent than HIV-1, especially as related to late stages of virus
infection leading to assembly and budding. In this regard, the
murine cells lacked only the EIAV receptor ELR1 and the necessary
equine cycT1 protein to support EIAV replication. In contrast
to HIV-1, EIAV is able to effectively use mouse cell factors
for late replication stages of assembly and budding. Based on
these differences between the two lentiviruses, it should now
be possible to use chimeric constructs of HIV-1 and EIAV to
map critical virus determinants of replication potential and
to identify critical host cell factors that mediate lentivirus
replication in murine cells.
EIAV has one of the simplest genomes characterized to date among lentiviruses, containing only three regulatory genes (rev, tat, and S2) in addition to the canonical gag, pol, and env genes found in all retroviruses. We have previously proposed that EIAV may represent a link in genomic organization and replication properties between simple retroviruses and the more complex lentiviruses (14). The ability of EIAV to establish productive replication in minimally engineered murine cells is consistent with this proposed linkage between simple retroviruses like murine leukemia viruses and complex lentiviruses like HIV-1.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We thank Bryan R. Cullen for providing the equine cycT1 cDNA.
This research was supported by NIH grants 5R01 CA049296 from the National Cancer Institute and R56 AI073261 from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Center for Vaccine Research, 9014 Biomedical Science Tower 3, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA 15261. Phone: (412) 648-8869. Fax: (412) 624-4440. E-mail:
rmont{at}pitt.edu 
Published ahead of print on 10 December 2008. 

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Journal of Virology, February 2009, p. 2034-2037, Vol. 83, No. 4
0022-538X/09/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JVI.01883-08
Copyright © 2009, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.