首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 950 毫秒
1.
Hepatitis C virus (HCV) envelope glycoproteins are highly glycosylated, with generally 4 and 11 N-linked glycans on E1 and E2, respectively. Studies using mutated recombinant HCV envelope glycoproteins incorporated into retroviral pseudoparticles (HCVpp) suggest that some glycans play a role in protein folding, virus entry, and protection against neutralization. The development of a cell culture system producing infectious particles (HCVcc) in hepatoma cells provides an opportunity to characterize the role of these glycans in the context of authentic infectious virions. Here, we used HCVcc in which point mutations were engineered at N-linked glycosylation sites to determine the role of these glycans in the functions of HCV envelope proteins. The mutants were characterized for their effects on virus replication and envelope protein expression as well as on viral particle secretion, infectivity, and sensitivity to neutralizing antibodies. Our results indicate that several glycans play an important role in HCVcc assembly and/or infectivity. Furthermore, our data demonstrate that at least five glycans on E2 (denoted E2N1, E2N2, E2N4, E2N6, and E2N11) strongly reduce the sensitivity of HCVcc to antibody neutralization, with four of them surrounding the CD81 binding site. Altogether, these data indicate that the glycans associated with HCV envelope glycoproteins play roles at different steps of the viral life cycle. They also highlight differences in the effects of glycosylation mutations between the HCVpp and HCVcc systems. Furthermore, these carbohydrates form a “glycan shield” at the surface of the virion, which contributes to the evasion of HCV from the humoral immune response.Hepatitis C virus (HCV) is a single-stranded positive-sense RNA virus that causes serious liver diseases in humans (31). More than 170 million people worldwide are seropositive for HCV and at risk for developing cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma (50). HCV is a small, enveloped virus that belongs to the Hepacivirus genus in the Flaviviridae family (31). Its genome encodes a single polyprotein precursor of about 3,000-amino-acid residues that is cleaved co- and posttranslationally by cellular and viral proteases to yield at least 10 mature products (31). The two envelope glycoproteins, E1 and E2, are released from the polyprotein by signal peptidase cleavages. These two proteins assemble as noncovalent heterodimers, which are retained mainly in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) (36), and they are found as large disulfide-linked oligomers on the surfaces of HCV particles (46). HCV glycoproteins are involved in the entry process, and since they are present on the surfaces of viral particles, these proteins are the targets of neutralizing antibodies (4, 21).E1 and E2 generally contain 4 and 11 N-glycosylation sites, respectively, all of which have been shown to be modified by glycans (19). Despite variability in HCV envelope glycoprotein sequences, the four glycosylation sites of E1 and nine of E2 are highly conserved, suggesting that the glycans associated with these proteins play an essential role in the HCV life cycle (22). Using retroviral particles pseudotyped with genotype 1a (H strain) HCV envelope glycoproteins (HCVpp), recent studies have determined the potential roles played by these glycans in protein folding, HCV entry, and protection against neutralization (14, 19, 22). Indeed, the lack of glycan E1N1, E1N4, E2N8, or E2N10 strongly affects the incorporation of HCV glycoproteins into HCVpp, suggesting that these glycans are important for correct protein folding (19). Furthermore, mutation of glycosylation sites E2N2 or E2N4 alters HCVpp infectivity despite normal incorporation into pseudotyped particles, suggesting a role for the corresponding glycans in viral entry, at least in this model system (19). Finally, glycans at positions E2N1, E2N6, and E2N11 were shown to reduce the sensitivity of HCVpp to antibody neutralization as well as access of the CD81 coreceptor to its binding site on E2, suggesting that glycans also contribute to HCV evasion of the humoral immune response (14, 22).It has recently been proposed that targeting glycans could be a promising approach to inhibiting viral infection (1). Indeed, HCV, as well as several other viruses with highly glycosylated envelope proteins, can be inhibited by carbohydrate binding agents such as cyanovirin-N and pradimicin A (1, 7, 23). Furthermore, resistance against drugs that target glycans is likely to develop and will probably result in mutations at some glycosylation sites (3, 52). However, since glycans associated with viral envelope proteins play an important role in the viral life cycle, adaptation of viruses to the selective pressure of carbohydrate-binding agents will most likely come at a replicative cost to the virus (2).Although the role of HCV glycans has been studied using mutant recombinant HCV envelope glycoproteins incorporated into HCVpp, these particles do not recapitulate all the functions of HCV envelope proteins. Cell culture-derived virus (HCVcc) (32, 49, 55) assembles in an ER-derived compartment in association with very low density lipoproteins (17, 26), whereas HCVpp are assembled in a post-Golgi compartment and are not associated with lipoproteins (44). Importantly, this leads to differences between HCVpp and HCVcc in the oligomerization of the envelope glycoproteins (46). It is also important to note that the carbohydrate composition of viral glycoproteins can differ when the same virus is grown in different cell lines (13). Thus, HCVpp that are produced in 293T cells are not the most appropriate model for glycosylation studies, since HCV tropism is restricted to the liver. Furthermore, differences in envelope protein glycosylation have been observed between HCVpp and HCVcc particles (46). Differences in some HCV envelope protein functions were also observed when the HCVpp and HCVcc systems were compared (28, 29, 42, 43). The development of the HCVcc system provides, therefore, the opportunity to characterize the role of E1/E2-associated glycans in the context of authentic infectious virions. Here, we analyzed the role of E1/E2 glycans by introducing point mutations at N-linked glycosylation sites in the context of the HCVcc system. The effects of these mutations on virus replication, particle secretion, infectivity, and sensitivity to neutralizing antibodies were investigated. Our results demonstrate that several glycans play an important role in HCVcc assembly and/or infectivity and reduce access of neutralizing antibodies to their epitopes.  相似文献   

2.
Cell culture-adaptive mutations within the hepatitis C virus (HCV) E2 glycoprotein have been widely reported. We identify here a single mutation (N415D) in E2 that arose during long-term passaging of HCV strain JFH1-infected cells. This mutation was located within E2 residues 412 to 423, a highly conserved region that is recognized by several broadly neutralizing antibodies, including the mouse monoclonal antibody (MAb) AP33. Introduction of N415D into the wild-type (WT) JFH1 genome increased the affinity of E2 to the CD81 receptor and made the virus less sensitive to neutralization by an antiserum to another essential entry factor, SR-BI. Unlike JFH1WT, the JFH1N415D was not neutralized by AP33. In contrast, it was highly sensitive to neutralization by patient-derived antibodies, suggesting an increased availability of other neutralizing epitopes on the virus particle. We included in this analysis viruses carrying four other single mutations located within this conserved E2 region: T416A, N417S, and I422L were cell culture-adaptive mutations reported previously, while G418D was generated here by growing JFH1WT under MAb AP33 selective pressure. MAb AP33 neutralized JFH1T416A and JFH1I422L more efficiently than the WT virus, while neutralization of JFH1N417S and JFH1G418D was abrogated. The properties of all of these viruses in terms of receptor reactivity and neutralization by human antibodies were similar to JFH1N415D, highlighting the importance of the E2 412-423 region in virus entry.Hepatitis C virus (HCV), which belongs to the Flaviviridae family, has a positive-sense single-stranded RNA genome encoding a polyprotein that is cleaved by cellular and viral proteases to yield mature structural and nonstructural proteins. The structural proteins consist of core, E1 and E2, while the nonstructural proteins are p7, NS2, NS3, NS4A, NS4B, NS5A, and NS5B (42). The hepatitis C virion comprises the RNA genome surrounded by the structural proteins core (nucleocapsid) and E1 and E2 (envelope glycoproteins). The HCV glycoproteins lie within a lipid envelope surrounding the nucleocapsid and play a major role in HCV entry into host cells (21). The development of retrovirus-based HCV pseudoparticles (HCVpp) (3) and the cell culture infectious clone JFH1 (HCVcc) (61) has provided powerful tools to study HCV entry.HCV entry is initiated by the binding of virus particles to attachment factors which are believed to be glycosaminoglycans (2), low-density lipoprotein receptor (41), and C-type lectins such as DC-SIGN and L-SIGN (12, 37, 38). Upon attachment at least four entry factors are important for particle internalization. These include CD81 (50), SR-BI (53) and the tight junction proteins claudin-1 (15) and occludin (6, 36, 51).CD81, a member of the tetraspanin family, is a cell surface protein with various functions including tissue differentiation, cell-cell adhesion and immune cell maturation (34). It consists of a small and a large extracellular loop (LEL) with four transmembrane domains. Viral entry is dependent on HCV E2 binding to the LEL of CD81 (3, 50). The importance of HCV glycoprotein interaction with CD81 is underlined by the fact that many neutralizing antibodies compete with CD81 and act in a CD81-blocking manner (1, 5, 20, 45).SR-BI is a multiligand receptor expressed on liver cells and on steroidogenic tissue. It binds to high-density lipoproteins (HDL), low-density lipoproteins (LDL), and very low-density lipoproteins (VLDL) (31). The SR-BI binding site is mapped to the hypervariable region 1 (HVR-1) of HCV E2 (53). SR-BI ligands, such as HDL and oxidized LDL have been found to affect HCV infectivity (4, 14, 58-60). Indeed, HDL has been shown to enhance HCV infection in an SR-BI-dependent manner (4, 14, 58, 59). Antibodies against SR-BI and knockdown of SR-BI in cells result in a significant inhibition of viral infection in both the HCVpp and the HCVcc systems (5, 25, 32).Although clearly involved in entry and immune recognition, the more downstream function(s) of HCV glycoproteins are poorly understood, as their structure has not yet been solved. Nonetheless, mutational analysis and mapping of neutralizing antibody epitopes have delineated several discontinuous regions of E2 that are essential for HCV particle binding and entry (24, 33, 45, 47). One of these is a highly conserved sequence spanning E2 residues 412 to 423 (QLINTNGSWHIN). Several broadly neutralizing monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) bind to this epitope. These include mouse monoclonal antibody (MAb) AP33, rat MAb 3/11, and the human MAbs e137, HCV1, and 95-2 (8, 16, 44, 45, 49). Of these, MAbs AP33, 3/11, and e137 are known to block the binding of E2 to CD81.Cell culture-adaptive mutations within the HCV glycoproteins are valuable for investigating the virus interaction(s) with cellular receptors (18). In the present study, we characterize an asparagine-to-aspartic acid mutation at residue 415 (N415D) in HCV strain JFH1 E2 that arose during the long-term passaging of infected human hepatoma Huh-7 cells. Alongside N415D, we also characterize three adjacent cell culture adaptive mutations reported previously and a novel substitution generated in the present study by propagating virus under MAb AP33 selective pressure to gain further insight into the function of this region of E2 in viral infection.  相似文献   

3.
Scavenger receptor class B type I (SR-BI) is an essential receptor for hepatitis C virus (HCV) and a cell surface high-density-lipoprotein (HDL) receptor. The mechanism of SR-BI-mediated HCV entry, however, is not clearly understood, and the specific protein determinants required for the recognition of the virus envelope are not known. HCV infection is strictly linked to lipoprotein metabolism, and HCV virions may initially interact with SR-BI through associated lipoproteins before subsequent direct interactions of the viral glycoproteins with SR-BI occur. The kinetics of inhibition of cell culture-derived HCV (HCVcc) infection with an anti-SR-BI monoclonal antibody imply that the recognition of SR-BI by HCV is an early event of the infection process. Swapping and single-substitution mutants between mouse and human SR-BI sequences showed reduced binding to the recombinant soluble E2 (sE2) envelope glycoprotein, thus suggesting that the SR-BI interaction with the HCV envelope is likely to involve species-specific protein elements. Most importantly, SR-BI mutants defective for sE2 binding, although retaining wild-type activity for receptor oligomerization and binding to the physiological ligand HDL, were impaired in their ability to fully restore HCVcc infectivity when transduced into an SR-BI-knocked-down Huh-7.5 cell line. These findings suggest a specific and direct role for the identified residues in binding HCV and mediating virus entry. Moreover, the observation that different regions of SR-BI are involved in HCV and HDL binding supports the hypothesis that new therapeutic strategies aimed at interfering with virus/SR-BI recognition are feasible.Hepatitis C virus (HCV) is a global blood-borne pathogen, with 3% of the world''s population chronically infected. Most infections are asymptomatic, yet 60 to 80% become persistent and lead to severe fibrosis and cirrhosis, hepatic failure, or hepatocellular carcinoma (3). Currently available therapies are limited to the administration of pegylated alpha interferon in combination with ribavirin, which are expensive and often unsuccessful, with significant side effects (23, 36). Thus, the development of novel therapeutic approaches against HCV remains a high priority (18, 40, 60). Targeting the early steps of HCV infection may represent one such option, and much effort is being devoted to uncovering the mechanism of viral attachment and entry.The current view is that HCV entry into target cells occurs after attachment to specific cellular receptors via its surface glycoproteins E1 and E2 (27). The molecules to which HCV initially binds might constitute a diverse collection of cellular proteins, carbohydrates, and lipids that concentrate viruses on the cell surface and determine to a large extent which cell types, tissues, and organisms HCV can infect.CD81, claudin 1 (CLDN1), occludin (OCLN), and scavenger receptor class B type I (SR-BI) were previously shown to play essential roles in HCV cell entry (15, 22, 26, 35, 42, 43, 50, 63, 64).Recent reports suggest that CD81 engagement triggers intracellular signaling responses, ultimately leading to actin remodeling and the relocalization of CD81 to tight junctions (TJ) (11). Thus, CD81 may function as a bridge between the initial interaction of the virus with receptors on the basolateral surface of the hepatocyte and the TJ where two of the HCV entry molecules, CLDN1 and OCLN, are located. CD81 acts as a postbinding factor, and the TJ proteins CLDN1 and OCLN seem to be involved in late steps of HCV entry, such as HCV glycoprotein-dependent cell fusion (9, 11, 22). The discovery of TJ proteins as entry factors has added complexity to the model of HCV entry, suggesting parallels with other viruses like coxsackievirus B infection, where an initial interaction of the viral particle with the primary receptor decay-accelerating factor induces the lateral movement of the virus from the luminal surface to TJ, where coxsackievirus B binds coxsackievirus-adenovirus receptor and internalization takes place (17).Much less is known about the specific role of SR-BI in virus entry: neither the specific step of the entry pathway that SR-BI is involved in nor the protein determinants that mediate such processes are known. SR-BI is a lipoprotein receptor of 509 amino acids (aa) with cytoplasmic C- and N-terminal domains separated by a large extracellular domain (1, 13, 14). It is expressed primarily in liver and steroidogenic tissues, where it mediates selective cholesteryl ester uptake from high-density lipoprotein (HDL) and may act as an endocytic receptor (45, 46, 51, 52). SR-BI was originally identified as being a putative receptor for HCV because it binds soluble E2 (sE2) through interactions with E2 hypervariable region 1 (HVR1) (8, 50). RNA interference studies as well as the ability to block both HCV pseudoparticles (HCVpp) and cell culture-derived HCV (HCVcc) infections with anti SR-BI antibodies have confirmed its involvement in the HCV entry process (7, 8, 15, 26, 33, 63). Intriguingly, lipoproteins were previously shown to modulate HCV infection through SR-BI (12). It was indeed previously demonstrated that two natural ligands of SR-BI, HDL and oxidized low-density lipoprotein, can improve and inhibit HCV entry, respectively (57, 59). Moreover, small-molecule inhibitors of SR-BI-mediated lipid transfer (block of lipid transfer BLT-3 and BLT-4) abrogate the stimulation of HCV infectivity by human serum or HDL, suggesting that the enhancement of viral infection might be dependent on the lipid exchange activity of SR-BI (20, 58).We previously generated high-affinity monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) specific for human SR-BI and showed that they were capable of inhibiting the binding of SR-BI to sE2 and blocking HCVcc infection of human hepatoma cells (15). The HDL-induced enhancement of infection had no impact on the ability of the anti-SR-BI MAbs to block HCV infection, and the antibodies were effective in counteracting HCV infection even in the absence of lipoproteins. These data demonstrated that SR-BI participates in the HCV infection process as an entry receptor by directly interacting with viral glycoproteins. Here we have used one of the anti-SR-BI MAbs to show that SR-BI participates in an early step of HCV infection. By assays of binding of sE2 to SR-BI molecules from different species and to SR-BI mutants, we identified species-specific SR-BI protein residues that are required for sE2 binding. The functional significance of these observations was confirmed by the finding that SR-BI mutants with reduced binding to sE2 were also impaired in their ability to restore the infectivity of an SR-BI-knocked-down Huh-7.5 cell line. Finally, we demonstrated that SR-BI mutants with impaired sE2 binding can still form oligomeric structures and that they can bind the physiological ligand HDL and mediate cholesterol efflux, suggesting that distinct protein determinants are responsible for the interaction with HDL and the HCV particle.  相似文献   

4.
Membrane glycoproteins of alphavirus play a critical role in the assembly and budding of progeny virions. However, knowledge regarding transport of viral glycoproteins to the plasma membrane is obscure. In this study, we investigated the role of cytopathic vacuole type II (CPV-II) through in situ electron tomography of alphavirus-infected cells. The results revealed that CPV-II contains viral glycoproteins arranged in helical tubular arrays resembling the basic organization of glycoprotein trimers on the envelope of the mature virions. The location of CPV-II adjacent to the site of viral budding suggests a model for the transport of structural components to the site of budding. Thus, the structural characteristics of CPV-II can be used in evaluating the design of a packaging cell line for replicon production.Semliki Forest virus (SFV) is an enveloped alphavirus belonging to the family Togaviridae. This T=4 icosahedral virus particle is approximately 70 nm in diameter (30) and consists of 240 copies of E1/E2 glycoprotein dimers (3, 8, 24). The glycoproteins are anchored in a host-derived lipid envelope that encloses a nucleocapsid, made of a matching number of capsid proteins and a positive single-stranded RNA molecule. After entry of the virus via receptor-mediated endocytosis, a low-pH-induced fusion of the viral envelope with the endosomal membrane delivers the nucleocapsid into the cytoplasm, where the replication events of SFV occur (8, 19, 30). Replication of the viral genome and subsequent translation into structural and nonstructural proteins followed by assembly of the structural proteins and genome (7) lead to budding of progeny virions at the plasma membrane (18, 20). The synthesis of viral proteins shuts off host cell macromolecule synthesis, which allows for efficient intracellular replication of progeny virus (7). The expression of viral proteins leads to the formation of cytopathic vacuolar compartments as the result of the reorganization of cellular membrane in the cytoplasm of an infected cell (1, 7, 14).Early studies using electron microscopy (EM) have characterized the cytopathic vacuoles (CPVs) in SFV-infected cells (6, 13, 14) and identified two types of CPV, namely, CPV type I (CPV-I) and CPV-II. It was found that CPV-I is derived from modified endosomes and lysosomes (18), while CPV-II is derived from the trans-Golgi network (TGN) (10, 11). Significantly, the TGN and CPV-II vesicles are the major membrane compartments marked with E1/E2 glycoproteins (9, 11, 12). Inhibition by monensin results in the accumulation of E1/E2 glycoproteins in the TGN (12, 26), thereby indicating the origin of CPV-II. While CPV-II is identified as the predominant vacuolar structure at the late stage of SFV infection, the exact function of this particular cytopathic vacuole is less well characterized than that of CPV-I (2, 18), although previous observations have pointed to the involvement of CPV-II in budding, because an associated loss of viral budding was observed when CPV-II was absent (9, 36).In this study, we characterized the structure and composition of CPV-II in SFV-infected cells in situ with the aid of electron tomography and immuno-electron microscopy after physical fixation of SFV-infected cells by high-pressure freezing and freeze substitution (21, 22, 33). The results revealed a helical array of E1/E2 glycoproteins within CPV-II and indicate that CPV-II plays an important role in intracellular transport of glycoproteins prior to SFV budding.  相似文献   

5.
Nearly all livers transplanted into hepatitis C virus (HCV)-positive patients become infected with HCV, and 10 to 25% of reinfected livers develop cirrhosis within 5 years. Neutralizing monoclonal antibody could be an effective therapy for the prevention of infection in a transplant setting. To pursue this treatment modality, we developed human monoclonal antibodies (HuMAbs) directed against the HCV E2 envelope glycoprotein and assessed the capacity of these HuMAbs to neutralize a broad panel of HCV genotypes. HuMAb antibodies were generated by immunizing transgenic mice containing human antibody genes (HuMAb mice; Medarex Inc.) with soluble E2 envelope glycoprotein derived from a genotype 1a virus (H77). Two HuMAbs, HCV1 and 95-2, were selected for further study based on initial cross-reactivity with soluble E2 glycoproteins derived from genotypes 1a and 1b, as well as neutralization of lentivirus pseudotyped with HCV 1a and 1b envelope glycoproteins. Additionally, HuMAbs HCV1 and 95-2 potently neutralized pseudoviruses from all genotypes tested (1a, 1b, 2b, 3a, and 4a). Epitope mapping with mammalian and bacterially expressed proteins, as well as synthetic peptides, revealed that HuMAbs HCV1 and 95-2 recognize a highly conserved linear epitope spanning amino acids 412 to 423 of the E2 glycoprotein. The capacity to recognize and neutralize a broad range of genotypes, the highly conserved E2 epitope, and the fully human nature of the antibodies make HuMAbs HCV1 and 95-2 excellent candidates for treatment of HCV-positive individuals undergoing liver transplantation.Hepatitis C virus (HCV) is a major cause of liver failure and infects more than 170 million people worldwide. HCV is a member of the Flaviviridae family and contains a 9.6-kb positive-strand RNA genome. The genome is translated into a single polypeptide that is cleaved by viral and cellular proteases into at least nine different proteins. The major HCV surface glycoproteins, E1 and E2, form a noncovalent heterodimer on the virion surface (23) and are believed to mediate viral entry via a complex set of poorly understood interactions with cellular coreceptors, including CD81 (28), claudin-1 (8), occludin (29), scavenger receptor class B type I (30), and others (38). The E2 glycoprotein has been shown to interact directly with receptors (38); currently, no function has been assigned to E1, although it is known to be required for viral infection. These viral glycoproteins provide an obvious target for neutralizing monoclonal antibodies (MAbs).Isolation of potently neutralizing HCV-specific MAbs has been complicated by the lack of an in vitro cell culture system to study the full infection cycle of the virus. Recently, systems have been developed that allow for the generation of infectious viral particles, highlighting the importance of E1 and E2 in viral binding and entry. A novel in vitro infection system employs HCV pseudotyped viral particles (HCVpp) generated from a lentivirus that are devoid of native glycoproteins and engineered to contain HCV glycoproteins E1 and E2 (4, 15). HCVpp specifically infect cell lines derived from human liver cells and can be neutralized by polyclonal and MAbs directed against the HCV envelope glycoproteins.HCVpp have allowed the identification of antibodies that can neutralize HCV infection in cell culture. E1 has proven to be a difficult target for MAb-mediated neutralization, possibly because it appears to have low immunogenicity (32), has no identified binding proteins on the cell surface, and has an undefined role in cell entry. Despite this challenge, two groups have identified HCV neutralizing MAbs directed to E1: these MAbs are H-111, which has moderate neutralizing activity (17), and the recently isolated IGH505 and IGH526, which neutralize numerous HCV genotypes (1a, 1b, 2a, 4a, 5a, and 6a but not 2b and 3a) (22). Although they are predicted to inhibit viral binding or fusion, the mechanism by which these E1-directed MAbs neutralize HCV infection is unclear.A diverse group of mouse anti-E2 antibodies, recognizing both linear and discontinuous epitopes, has been generated. Many of these MAbs showed broad neutralization of multiple HCV genotypes, but not surprisingly, several HCV isolates were refractory to neutralization. In contrast, AP33, a mouse MAb that largely recognizes a highly conserved linear epitope in the N terminus of E2 (amino acids 412 to 423), was identified as a broadly cross-reactive antibody that neutralized strains from all genotypes tested (1a, 1b, 2a, 2b, 3a, 4, 5, and 6), with the exception of one genotype 5 virus (UKN5.14.4; GenBank accession no. AY894682) (24). Recently, several cross-reactive neutralizing MAbs have been identified that are of human origin and have the capacity to neutralize a significant fraction of the genotypes tested (1, 5, 12, 13, 27, 31) or to neutralize all genotypes tested (16, 20, 25). As with the vast majority of previously described human MAbs (HuMAbs), these MAbs recognize conformation-dependent epitopes of E2. One broadly neutralizing human antibody, AR3B, was tested in a mouse model of infection and showed significant protection from viremia (20). Given the known function of the E2 envelope glycoprotein, the high level of immunogenicity, the surface vulnerability, and the abundance of data pertaining to E2 and HCV neutralization, E2 provides a promising target for the development of fully human neutralizing antibodies.Liver deterioration due to HCV infection is the leading reason for liver transplantation in the United States. Unfortunately, it is highly likely that the transplanted liver will also become infected with HCV, and 10 to 25% of these patients develop cirrhosis within 5 years of transplant (9, 40). Here we describe the characterization of HuMAbs directed against the HCV E2 envelope glycoprotein, generated using transgenic mice. Based on epitope conservation and broad neutralization capacity, HuMAbs HCV1 and 95-2 provide excellent candidates for prevention of graft reinfection of HCV-infected individuals undergoing liver transplantation.  相似文献   

6.
Claudin-1, a component of tight junctions between liver hepatocytes, is a hepatitis C virus (HCV) late-stage entry cofactor. To investigate the structural and functional roles of various claudin-1 domains in HCV entry, we applied a mutagenesis strategy. Putative functional intracellular claudin-1 domains were not important. However, we identified seven novel residues in the first extracellular loop that are critical for entry of HCV isolates drawn from six different subtypes. Most of the critical residues belong to the highly conserved claudin motif W30-GLW51-C54-C64. Alanine substitutions of these residues did not impair claudin-1 cell surface expression or lateral protein interactions within the plasma membrane, including claudin-1-claudin-1 and claudin-1-CD81 interactions. However, these mutants no longer localized to cell-cell contacts. Based on our observations, we propose that cell-cell contacts formed by claudin-1 may generate specialized membrane domains that are amenable to HCV entry.Hepatitis C virus (HCV) is a major human pathogen that affects approximately 3% of the global population, leading to cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma in chronically infected individuals (5, 23, 42). Hepatocytes are the major target cells of HCV (11), and entry follows a complex cascade of interactions with several cellular factors (6, 8, 12, 17). Infectious viral particles are associated with lipoproteins and initially attach to target cells via glycosaminoglycans and the low-density lipoprotein receptor (1, 7, 31). These interactions are followed by direct binding of the E2 envelope glycoprotein to the scavenger receptor class B type I (SR-B1) and then to the CD81 tetraspanin (14, 15, 33, 36). Early studies showed that CD81 and SR-B1 were necessary but not sufficient for HCV entry, and claudin-1 was discovered to be a requisite HCV entry cofactor that appears to act at a very late stage of the process (18).Claudin-1 is a member of the claudin protein family that participates in the formation of tight junctions between adjacent cells (25, 30, 37). Tight junctions regulate the paracellular transport of solutes, water, and ions and also generate apical-basal cell polarity (25, 37). In the liver, the apical surfaces of hepatocytes form bile canaliculi, whereas the basolateral surfaces face the underside of the endothelial layer that lines liver sinusoids. Claudin-1 is highly expressed in tight junctions formed by liver hepatocytes as well as on all hepatoma cell lines that are permissive to HCV entry (18, 24, 28). Importantly, nonhepatic cell lines that are engineered to express claudin-1 become permissive to HCV entry (18). Claudin-6 and -9 are two other members of the human claudin family that enable HCV entry into nonpermissive cells (28, 43).The precise role of claudin-1 in HCV entry remains to be determined. A direct interaction between claudins and HCV particles or soluble E2 envelope glycoprotein has not been demonstrated (18; T. Dragic, unpublished data). It is possible that claudin-1 interacts with HCV entry receptors SR-B1 or CD81, thereby modulating their ability to bind to E2. Alternatively, claudin-1 may ferry the receptor-virus complex to fusion-permissive intracellular compartments. Recent studies show that claudin-1 colocalizes with the CD81 tetraspanin at the cell surface of permissive cell lines (22, 34, 41). With respect to nonpermissive cells, one group observed that claudin-1 was predominantly intracellular (41), whereas another reported associations of claudin-1 and CD81 at the cell surface, similar to what is observed in permissive cells (22).Claudins comprise four transmembrane domains along with two extracellular loops and two cytoplasmic domains (19, 20, 25, 30, 37). The first extracellular loop (ECL1) participates in pore formation and influences paracellular charge selectivity (25, 37). It has been shown that the ECL1 of claudin-1 is required for HCV entry (18). All human claudins comprise a highly conserved motif, W30-GLW51-C54-C64, in the crown of ECL1 (25, 37). The exact function of this domain is unknown, and we hypothesized that it is important for HCV entry. The second extracellular loop is required for the holding function and oligomerization of the protein (25). Claudin-1 also comprises various signaling domains and a PDZ binding motif in the intracellular C terminus that binds ZO-1, another major component of tight junctions (30, 32, 37). We further hypothesized that some of these domains may play a role in HCV entry.To understand the role of claudin-1 in HCV infection, we developed a mutagenesis strategy targeting the putative sites for internalization, glycosylation, palmitoylation, and phosphorylation. The functionality of these domains has been described by others (4, 16, 25, 35, 37, 40). We also mutagenized charged and bulky residues in ECL1, including all six residues within the highly conserved motif W30-GLW51-C54-C64. None of the intracellular domains were found to affect HCV entry. However, we identified seven residues in ECL1 that are critical for entry mediated by envelope glycoproteins derived from several HCV subtypes, including all six residues of the conserved motif. These mutants were still expressed at the cell surface and able to form lateral homophilic interactions within the plasma membrane as well as to engage in lateral interactions with CD81. In contrast, they no longer engaged in homophilic trans interactions at cell-cell contacts. We conclude that the highly conserved motif W30-GLW51-C54-C64 of claudin-1 is important for HCV entry into target cells and participates in the formation of cell-cell contacts.  相似文献   

7.
Binding to the primary receptor CD4 induces conformational changes in the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) gp120 envelope glycoprotein that allow binding to the coreceptor (CCR5 or CXCR4) and ultimately trigger viral membrane-cell membrane fusion mediated by the gp41 transmembrane envelope glycoprotein. Here we report the derivation of an HIV-1 gp120 variant, H66N, that confers envelope glycoprotein resistance to temperature extremes. The H66N change decreases the spontaneous sampling of the CD4-bound conformation by the HIV-1 envelope glycoproteins, thus diminishing CD4-independent infection. The H66N change also stabilizes the HIV-1 envelope glycoprotein complex once the CD4-bound state is achieved, decreasing the probability of CD4-induced inactivation and revealing the enhancing effects of soluble CD4 binding on HIV-1 infection. In the CD4-bound conformation, the highly conserved histidine 66 is located between the receptor-binding and gp41-interactive surfaces of gp120. Thus, a single amino acid change in this strategically positioned gp120 inner domain residue influences the propensity of the HIV-1 envelope glycoproteins to negotiate conformational transitions to and from the CD4-bound state.Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1), the cause of AIDS (6, 29, 66), infects target cells by direct fusion of the viral and target cell membranes. The viral fusion complex is composed of gp120 and gp41 envelope glycoproteins, which are organized into trimeric spikes on the surface of the virus (10, 51, 89). Membrane fusion is initiated by direct binding of gp120 to the CD4 receptor on target cells (17, 41, 53). CD4 binding creates a second binding site on gp120 for the chemokine receptors CCR5 and CXCR4, which serve as coreceptors (3, 12, 19, 23, 25). Coreceptor binding is thought to lead to further conformational changes in the HIV-1 envelope glycoproteins that facilitate the fusion of viral and cell membranes. The formation of an energetically stable six-helix bundle by the gp41 ectodomain contributes to the membrane fusion event (9, 10, 79, 89, 90).The energy required for viral membrane-cell membrane fusion derives from the sequential transitions that the HIV-1 envelope glycoproteins undergo, from the high-energy unliganded state to the low-energy six-helix bundle. The graded transitions down this energetic slope are initially triggered by CD4 binding (17). The interaction of HIV-1 gp120 with CD4 is accompanied by an unusually large change in entropy, which is thought to indicate the introduction of order into the conformationally flexible unliganded gp120 glycoprotein (61). In the CD4-bound state, gp120 is capable of binding CCR5 with high affinity; moreover, CD4 binding alters the quaternary structure of the envelope glycoprotein complex, resulting in the exposure of gp41 ectodomain segments (27, 45, 77, 92). The stability of the intermediate state induced by CD4 binding depends upon several variables, including the virus (HIV-1 versus HIV-2/simian immunodeficiency virus [SIV]), the temperature, and the nature of the CD4 ligand (CD4 on a target cell membrane versus soluble forms of CD4 [sCD4]) (30, 73). For HIV-1 exposed to sCD4, if CCR5 binding occurs within a given period of time, progression along the entry pathway continues. If CCR5 binding is impeded or delayed, the CD4-bound envelope glycoprotein complex decays into inactive states (30). In extreme cases, the binding of sCD4 to the HIV-1 envelope glycoproteins induces the shedding of gp120 from the envelope glycoprotein trimer (31, 56, 58). Thus, sCD4 generally inhibits HIV-1 infection by triggering inactivation events, in addition to competing with CD4 anchored in the target cell membrane (63).HIV-1 isolates vary in sensitivity to sCD4, due in some cases to a low affinity of the envelope glycoprotein trimer for CD4 and in other cases to differences in propensity to undergo inactivating conformational transitions following CD4 binding (30). HIV-1 isolates that have been passaged extensively in T-cell lines (the tissue culture laboratory-adapted [TCLA] isolates) exhibit lower requirements for CD4 than primary HIV-1 isolates (16, 63, 82). TCLA viruses bind sCD4 efficiently and are generally sensitive to neutralization compared with primary HIV-1 isolates. Differences in sCD4 sensitivity between primary and TCLA HIV-1 strains have been mapped to the major variable loops (V1/V2 and V3) of the gp120 glycoprotein (34, 42, 62, 81). Sensitivity to sCD4 has been shown to be independent of envelope glycoprotein spike density or the intrinsic stability of the envelope glycoprotein complex (30, 35).In general, HIV-1 isolates are more sensitive to sCD4 neutralization than HIV-2 or SIV isolates (4, 14, 73). The relative resistance of SIV to sCD4 neutralization can in some cases be explained by a reduced affinity of the envelope glycoprotein trimer for sCD4 (57); however, at least some SIV isolates exhibit sCD4-induced activation of entry into CD4-negative, CCR5-expressing target cells that lasts for several hours after exposure to sCD4 (73). Thus, for some primate immunodeficiency virus envelope glycoproteins, activated intermediates in the CD4-bound conformation can be quite stable.The HIV-1 envelope glycoprotein elements important for receptor binding, subunit interaction, and membrane fusion are well conserved among different viral strains (71, 91). Thus, these elements represent potential targets for inhibitors of HIV-1 entry. Understanding the structure and longevity of the envelope glycoprotein intermediates along the virus entry pathway is relevant to attempts at inhibition. For example, peptides that target the heptad repeat 1 region of gp41 exhibit major differences in potency against HIV-1 strains related to efficiency of chemokine receptor binding (20, 21), which is thought to promote the conformational transition to the next step in the virus entry cascade. The determinants of the duration of exposure of targetable HIV-1 envelope glycoprotein elements during the entry process are undefined.To study envelope glycoprotein determinants of the movement among the distinct conformational states along the HIV-1 entry pathway, we attempted to generate HIV-1 variants that exhibit improved stability. Historically, labile viral elements have been stabilized by selecting virus to replicate under conditions, such as high temperature, that typically weaken protein-protein interactions (38, 39, 76, 102). Thus, we subjected HIV-1 to repeated incubations at temperatures between 42°C and 56°C, followed by expansion and analysis of the remaining replication-competent virus fraction. In this manner, we identified an envelope glycoprotein variant, H66N, in which histidine 66 in the gp120 N-terminal segment was altered to asparagine. The resistance of HIV-1 bearing the H66N envelope glycoproteins to changes in temperature has been reported elsewhere (37). Here, we examine the effect of the H66N change on the ability of the HIV-1 envelope glycoproteins to negotiate conformational transitions, either spontaneously or in the presence of sCD4. The H66N phenotype was studied in the context of both CD4-dependent and CD4-independent HIV-1 variants.  相似文献   

8.
We analyzed the biochemical and ultrastructural properties of hepatitis C virus (HCV) particles produced in cell culture. Negative-stain electron microscopy revealed that the particles were spherical (∼40- to 75-nm diameter) and pleomorphic and that some of them contain HCV E2 protein and apolipoprotein E on their surfaces. Electron cryomicroscopy revealed two major particle populations of ∼60 and ∼45 nm in diameter. The ∼60-nm particles were characterized by a membrane bilayer (presumably an envelope) that is spatially separated from an internal structure (presumably a capsid), and they were enriched in fractions that displayed a high infectivity-to-HCV RNA ratio. The ∼45-nm particles lacked a membrane bilayer and displayed a higher buoyant density and a lower infectivity-to-HCV RNA ratio. We also observed a minor population of very-low-density, >100-nm-diameter vesicular particles that resemble exosomes. This study provides low-resolution ultrastructural information of particle populations displaying differential biophysical properties and specific infectivity. Correlative analysis of the abundance of the different particle populations with infectivity, HCV RNA, and viral antigens suggests that infectious particles are likely to be present in the large ∼60-nm HCV particle populations displaying a visible bilayer. Our study constitutes an initial approach toward understanding the structural characteristics of infectious HCV particles.Hepatitis C virus (HCV) is a major cause of chronic hepatitis worldwide, with approximately 170 million humans chronically infected. Persistent HCV infection often leads to fibrosis, cirrhosis, and hepatocellular carcinoma (27). There is no vaccine against HCV, and the most widely used therapy involves the administration of type I interferon (IFN-α2Α) combined with ribavirin. However, this treatment is often associated with severe adverse effects and is often ineffective (53).HCV is a member of the Flaviviridae family and is the sole member of the genus Hepacivirus (43). HCV is an enveloped virus with a single-strand positive RNA genome that encodes a unique polyprotein of ∼3,000 amino acids (14, 15). A single open reading frame is flanked by untranslated regions (UTRs), the 5′ UTR and 3′ UTR, that contain RNA sequences essential for RNA translation and replication, respectively (17, 18, 26). Translation of the single open reading frame is driven by an internal ribosomal entry site (IRES) sequence residing within the 5′ UTR (26). The resulting polyprotein is processed by cellular and viral proteases into its individual components (reviewed in reference 55). The E1, E2, and core structural proteins are required for particle formation (5, 6) but not for viral RNA replication or translation (7, 40). These processes are mediated by the nonstructural (NS) proteins NS3, NS4A, NS4B, NS5A, and NS5B, which constitute the minimal viral components necessary for efficient viral RNA replication (7, 40).Expression of the viral polyprotein leads to the formation of virus-like particles (VLPs) in HeLa (48) and Huh-7 cells (23). Furthermore, overexpression of core, E1, and E2 is sufficient for the formation of VLPs in insect cells (3, 4). In the context of a viral infection, the viral structural proteins (65), p7 (31, 49, 61), and all of the nonstructural proteins (2, 29, 32, 41, 44, 63, 67) are required for the production of infectious particles, independent of their role in HCV RNA replication. It is not known whether the nonstructural proteins are incorporated into infectious virions.The current model for HCV morphogenesis proposes that the core protein encapsidates the viral genome in areas where endoplasmic reticulum (ER) cisternae are in contact with lipid droplets (47), forming HCV RNA-containing particles that acquire the viral envelope by budding through the ER membrane (59). We along with others showed recently that infectious particle assembly requires microsomal transfer protein (MTP) activity and apolipoprotein B (apoB) (19, 28, 50), suggesting that these two components of the very-low-density lipoprotein (VLDL) biosynthetic machinery are essential for the formation of infectious HCV particles. This idea is supported by the reduced production of infectious HCV particles in cells that express short hairpin RNAs (shRNAs) targeting apolipoprotein E (apoE) (12, 30).HCV RNA displays various density profiles, depending on the stage of the infection at which the sample is obtained (11, 58). The differences in densities and infectivities have been attributed to the presence of host lipoproteins and antibodies bound to the circulating viral particles (24, 58). In patients, HCV immune complexes that have been purified by protein A affinity chromatography contain HCV RNA, core protein, triglycerides, apoB (1), and apoE (51), suggesting that these host factors are components of circulating HCV particles in vivo.Recent studies using infectious molecular clones showed that both host and viral factors can influence the density profile of infectious HCV particles. For example, the mean particle density is reduced by passage of cell culture-grown virus through chimpanzees and chimeric mice whose livers contain human hepatocytes (39). It has also been shown that a point mutation in the viral envelope protein E2 (G451R) increases the mean density and specific infectivity of JFH-1 mutants (70).HCV particles exist as a mixture of infectious and noninfectious particles in ratios ranging from 1:100 to 1:1,000, both in vivo (10) and in cell culture (38, 69). Extracellular infectious HCV particles have a lower average density than their noninfectious counterparts (20, 24, 38). Equilibrium sedimentation analysis indicates that particles with a buoyant density of ∼1.10 to 1.14 g/ml display the highest ratio of infectivity per genome equivalent (GE) both in cell culture (20, 21, 38) and in vivo (8). These results indicate that these samples contain relatively more infectious particles than any other particle population. Interestingly, mutant viruses bearing the G451R E2 mutation display an increased infectivity-HCV RNA ratio only in fractions with a density of ∼1.1 g/ml (21), reinforcing the notion that this population is selectively enriched in infectious particles.The size of infectious HCV particles has been estimated in vivo by filtration (50 to 80 nm) (9, 22) and by rate-zonal centrifugation (54 nm) (51) and in cell culture by calculation of the Stokes radius inferred from the sedimentation velocity of infectious JFH-1 particles (65 to 70 nm) (20). Previous ultrastructural studies using patient-derived material report particles with heterogeneous diameters ranging from 35 to 100 nm (33, 37, 42, 57, 64). Cell culture-derived particles appear to display a diameter within that range (∼55 nm) (65, 68).In this study we exploited the increased growth capacity of a cell culture-adapted virus bearing the G451R mutation in E2 (70) and the enhanced particle production of the hyperpermissive Huh-7 cell subclone Huh-7.5.1 clone 2 (Huh-7.5.1c2) (54) to produce quantities of infectious HCV particles that were sufficient for electron cryomicroscopy (cryoEM) analyses. These studies revealed two major particle populations with diameters of ∼60 and ∼45 nm. The larger-diameter particles were distinguished by the presence of a membrane bilayer, characterized by electron density attributed to the lipid headgroups in its leaflets. Isopycnic ultracentrifugation showed that the ∼60-nm particles are enriched in fractions with a density of ∼1.1 g/ml, where optimal infectivity-HCV RNA ratios are observed. These results indicate that the predominant morphology of the infectious HCV particle is spherical and pleomorphic and surrounded by a membrane envelope.  相似文献   

9.
Hepatitis C virus (HCV) is a leading cause of liver disease worldwide. As HCV infects only human and chimpanzee cells, antiviral therapy and vaccine development have been hampered by the lack of a convenient small-animal model. In this study we further investigate how the species tropism of HCV is modulated at the level of cell entry. It has been previously determined that the tight junction protein occludin (OCLN) is essential for HCV host cell entry and that human OCLN is more efficient than the mouse ortholog at mediating HCV cell entry. To further investigate the relationship between OCLN sequence and HCV species tropism, we compared OCLN proteins from a range of species for their ability to mediate infection of naturally OCLN-deficient 786-O cells with lentiviral pseudoparticles bearing the HCV glycoproteins. While primate sequences function equivalently to human OCLN, canine, hamster, and rat OCLN had intermediate activities, and guinea pig OCLN was completely nonfunctional. Through analysis of chimeras between these OCLN proteins and alanine scanning mutagenesis of the extracellular domains of OCLN, we identified the second half of the second extracellular loop (EC2) and specific amino acids within this domain to be critical for modulating the HCV cell entry factor activity of this protein. Furthermore, this critical region of EC2 is flanked by two conserved cysteine residues that are essential for HCV cell entry, suggesting that a subdomain of EC2 may be defined by a disulfide bond.Hepatitis C virus (HCV), a member of the family Flaviviridae, is the causative agent of classically defined non-A, non-B hepatitis and is highly prevalent, with approximately 3% of the worldwide population infected (48). HCV infection often results in a chronic, life-long infection that can have severe health consequences, including hepatitis, cirrhosis, hepatocellular carcinoma, and liver failure. There is no HCV vaccine available, and the currently employed interferon-based treatment is inadequate as it has severe side effects and is effective only in half of the major genotype-infected individuals (22, 32). Specific anti-HCV inhibitors targeting the viral proteases and polymerase are currently being developed and will likely improve therapeutic options substantially. Undoubtedly, however, the emergence of viral resistance to such inhibitors will be a problem facing future HCV treatment options. As such, developing a spectrum of inhibitors targeting diverse steps in the virus life cycle, including HCV cell entry, is a priority for HCV research. Such inhibitors may be particularly useful following liver transplantation. Although HCV is the leading cause of liver transplants worldwide (10), the usefulness of such procedures is limited by subsequent universal graft reinfection and often accelerated disease progression (21). Even transiently inhibiting graft reinfection with HCV cell entry inhibitors could greatly improve the effectiveness of this procedure. Therefore, a greater understanding of HCV cell entry is required for the development of therapies targeting this stage of the viral life cycle.HCV host cell entry is a complex process that culminates in the clathrin-dependent endocytosis of the virion and low-pH-mediated fusion of viral and cellular lipid membranes in an early endosome (9, 12, 26, 27, 36, 51). The entry process requires the two viral envelope glycoproteins, E1 and E2, and many cellular factors, including glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) (3, 27), lipoproteins, the low-density lipoprotein receptor (LDL-R) (1, 38-40), tetraspanin CD81 (43), scavenger receptor class B type I (SR-BI) (47), and two tight junction proteins, claudin-1 (CLDN1) (17) and occludin (OCLN) (31, 44). The polarized nature of hepatocytes and the tight junction roles of OCLN and CLDN1 suggest an entry pathway similar to that of the group B coxsackieviruses, where the virion initially binds readily accessible factors that then provide a mechanism for migration of the virion into the tight junction region, just prior to internalization (14). Indeed, cellular factors are utilized by the incoming HCV virion in a temporal manner. At least GAGs and LDL-R appear to mediate virion binding (1, 3, 27, 38-40). Conflicting evidence has shown that SR-BI acts as either a binding (11) or postbinding entry factor (53), while CD81 (7, 13, 17, 27) and CLDN1 (17, 29) play postbinding roles in the HCV cell entry process. Although the kinetics of OCLN usage have not been clearly defined, this protein does not appear to play a role in virion binding (6). However, recent data showing that CD81 and CLDN1 may form complexes prior to infection (15, 24, 25, 28, 29, 35, 52) and imaging of the cell entry process (12) may contradict such a model.Human hepatocytes are the major target for HCV infection. While multiple blocks at a number of viral life cycle stages likely exist in other cell types, cell entry is one of the events limiting HCV tropism (45). Although species differences in SR-BI and CLDN1 may exert some influence on this selectivity (11, 23), CD81 and OCLN appear to be largely responsible for the restriction of HCV entry to cells from human and chimpanzee origin (7, 8, 20, 44). In fact, overexpression of the human versions of CD81 and OCLN, along with either mouse or human SR-BI and CLDN1, renders a mouse cell able to support HCV cell entry (44).We sought to provide greater insight into the species-specific restrictions of HCV cell entry and to elucidate the mechanism by which OCLN acts to mediate HCV cell entry. We examined the ability of OCLN proteins from a range of species to mediate HCV cell entry and how this function correlated with the degree of similarity to the human protein. A six-amino-acid portion of the second extracellular loop (EC2) of human OCLN was found to be responsible for the species-specific differences in entry factor function. OCLN proteins that were less functional than the human protein could be rendered fully functional by adding the human residues at these positions. Conversely, the ability of the human OCLN protein to mediate HCV cell entry was impaired by swapping this region with the corresponding sequence from species with less functional OCLN proteins. Comprehensive alanine scanning of the extracellular loops of human OCLN confirmed that the second half of EC2 was most important for the HCV cell entry process. Two cysteine residues that flank this region were found to be essential for HCV cell entry, suggesting that these residues may define a disulfide-linked subdomain of EC2. None of these amino acid changes influenced OCLN expression or localization, implying that they may serve to modulate an interaction with either another host protein or the incoming HCV virion.  相似文献   

10.
Recently, claudin-1 (CLDN1) was identified as a host protein essential for hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection. To evaluate CLDN1 function during virus entry, we searched for hepatocyte cell lines permissive for HCV RNA replication but with limiting endogenous CLDN1 expression, thus permitting receptor complementation assays. These criteria were met by the human hepatoblastoma cell line HuH6, which (i) displays low endogenous CLDN1 levels, (ii) efficiently replicates HCV RNA, and (iii) produces HCV particles with properties similar to those of particles generated in Huh-7.5 cells. Importantly, naïve cells are resistant to HCV genotype 2a infection unless CLDN1 is expressed. Interestingly, complementation of HCV entry by human, rat, or hamster CLDN1 was highly efficient, while mouse CLDN1 (mCLDN1) supported HCV genotype 2a infection with only moderate efficiency. These differences were observed irrespective of whether cells were infected with HCV pseudoparticles (HCVpp) or cell culture-derived HCV (HCVcc). Comparatively low entry function of mCLDN1 was observed in HuH6 but not 293T cells, suggesting that species-specific usage of CLDN1 is cell type dependent. Moreover, it was linked to three mouse-specific residues in the second extracellular loop (L152, I155) and the fourth transmembrane helix (V180) of the protein. These determinants could modulate the exposure or affinity of a putative viral binding site on CLDN1 or prevent optimal interaction of CLDN1 with other human cofactors, thus precluding highly efficient infection. HuH6 cells represent a valuable model for analysis of the complete HCV replication cycle in vitro and in particular for analysis of CLDN1 function in HCV cell entry.Hepatitis C virus (HCV) is a liver-tropic plus-strand RNA virus of the family Flaviviridae that has chronically infected about 130 million individuals worldwide. During long-term persistent virus replication, many patients develop significant liver disease which can lead to cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma (54). Current treatment of chronic HCV infection consists of a combination of pegylated alpha interferon and ribavirin. However, this regimen is not curative for all treated patients and is associated with severe side effects (37). Therefore, an improved therapy is needed and numerous HCV-specific drugs targeting viral enzymes are currently being developed (47). These efforts have been slowed down by a lack of small-animal models permissive for HCV replication since HCV infects only humans and chimpanzees. Among small animals, only immunodeficient mice suffering from a transgene-induced disease of endogenous liver cells and repopulated with human primary hepatocytes are susceptible to HCV infection (39).The restricted tropism of HCV likely reflects very specific host factor requirements for entry, RNA replication, assembly, and release of virions. Although HCV RNA replication has been observed in nonhepatic human cells and even nonhuman cells, its efficiency is rather low (2, 11, 59, 67). In addition, so far, efficient production of infectious particles has only been reported with Huh-7 human hepatoma cells, Huh-7-derived cell clones, and LH86 cells (33, 61, 65, 66). Although murine cells sustain HCV RNA replication, they do not produce detectable infectious virions (59). Together, these results suggest that multiple steps of the HCV replication cycle may be blocked or impaired in nonhuman or nonhepatic cells.HCV entry into host cells is complex and involves interactions between viral surface-resident glycoproteins E1 and E2 and multiple host factors. Initial adsorption to the cell surface is likely facilitated by interaction with attachment factors like glycosaminoglycans (4, 31) and lectins (13, 35, 36, 51). Beyond these, additional host proteins have been implicated in HCV entry. Since HCV circulates in the blood associated with lipoproteins (3, 43, 57), it has been postulated that HCV enters hepatocytes via the low-density lipoprotein receptor (LDL-R), and evidence in favor of an involvement of LDL-R has been provided (1, 40, 42, 44). Direct interactions between soluble E2 and scavenger receptor class B type I (SR-BI) (53) and CD81 (49) have been reported, and firm experimental proof has accumulated that these host proteins are essential for HCV infection (5, 6, 16, 26, 28, 33, 41, 61). Finally, more recently, claudin-1 (CLDN1) and occludin, two proteins associated with cellular tight junctions, have been identified as essential host factors for infection (20, 34, 50) and an interaction between E2 and these proteins, as revealed by coimmunoprecipitation assays, was reported (7, 34, 63). Although the precise functions of the individual cellular proteins during HCV infection remain poorly defined, based on kinetic studies with antibodies blocking interactions with SR-BI, CD81, or CLDN1, these factors are likely required subsequent to viral attachment (14, 20, 31, 64). Interestingly, viral resistance to antibodies directed against CLDN1 seems to be slightly delayed compared to resistance to antibodies directed against CD81 and SR-BI (20, 64), suggesting that there may be a sequence of events with the virus encountering first SR-BI and CD81 and subsequently CLDN1. Moreover, in Huh-7 cells, engagement of CD81 by soluble E1/E2 induces Rho GTPase-dependent relocalization of these complexes to areas of cell-to-cell contact, where these colocalized with CLDN1 and occludin (9). Together, these findings are consistent with a model where HCV reaches the basolateral, sinusoid-exposed surface of hepatocytes via the circulation. Upon binding to attachment factors SR-BI and CD81, which are highly expressed in this domain (52), the HCV-receptor complex may be ferried to tight-junction-resident CLDN1 and occludin and finally be endocytosed in a clathrin-dependent fashion (8, 38). Once internalized, the viral genome is ultimately delivered into the cytoplasm through a pH-dependent fusion event (24, 26, 31, 58). Recently, Ploss et al. reported that expression of human SR-BI, CD81, CLDN1, and occludin was sufficient to render human and nonhuman cells permissive for HCV infection (50). These results indicate that these four factors are the minimal cell type-specific set of host proteins essential for HCV entry. Interestingly, HCV seems to usurp at least CD81 and occludin in a very species-specific manner since their murine orthologs permit HCV infection with limited efficiency only (22, 50). Recently, it was shown that expression of mouse SR-BI did not fully restore entry function in Huh-7.5 cells with knockdown of endogenous human SR-BI, suggesting that also SR-BI function in HCV entry is, to some extent, species specific (10).In this study, we have developed a receptor complementation system for CLDN1 that permits the assessment of functional properties of this crucial HCV host factor with cell culture-derived HCV (HCVcc) and a human hepatocyte cell line. This novel model is based on HuH6 cells, which were originally isolated from a male Japanese patient suffering from a hepatoblastoma (15). These cells express little endogenous CLDN1, readily replicate HCV RNA, and produce high numbers of infectious HCVcc particles with properties comparable to those of Huh-7 cell-derived HCV. In addition, we identified three mouse-typic residues of CLDN1 that limit receptor function in HuH6 cells. These results suggest that besides CD81 and occludin, and to a minor degree SR-BI, CLDN1 also contributes to the restricted species tropism of HCV.  相似文献   

11.
The precise mechanisms regulating hepatitis C virus (HCV) entry into hepatic cells remain unknown. However, several cell surface proteins have been identified as entry factors for this virus. Of these molecules, claudin-1, a tight junction (TJ) component, is considered a coreceptor required for HCV entry. Recently, we have demonstrated that HCV envelope glycoproteins (HCVgp) promote structural and functional TJ alterations. Additionally, we have shown that the intracellular interaction between viral E2 glycoprotein and occludin, another TJ-associated protein, could be the cause of the mislocalization of TJ proteins. Herein we demonstrated, by using cell culture-derived HCV particles (HCVcc), that interference of occludin expression markedly reduced HCV infection. Furthermore, our results with HCV pseudotyped particles indicated that occludin, but not other TJ-associated proteins, such as junctional adhesion molecule A or zonula occludens protein 1, was required for HCV entry. Using HCVcc, we demonstrated that occludin did not play an essential role in the initial attachment of HCV to target cells. Surface protein labeling experiments showed that both expression levels and cell surface localization of HCV (co)receptors CD81, scavenger receptor class B type I, and claudin-1 were not affected upon occludin knockdown. In addition, immunofluorescence confocal analysis showed that occludin interference did not affect subcellular distribution of the HCV (co)receptors analyzed. However, HCVgp fusion-associated events were altered after occludin silencing. In summary, we propose that occludin plays an essential role in HCV infection and probably affects late entry events. This observation may provide new insights into HCV infection and related pathogenesis.Hepatitis C virus (HCV) is a small enveloped positive-strand RNA virus that belongs to the Flaviviridae family (20). More than 80% of acute infections become chronic, which eventually progress to cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma (28). HCV infects mainly hepatocytes, but the precise mechanisms of infection are largely unknown (11). The HCV particle consists of a nucleocapsid surrounded by a lipid bilayer in which the two envelope glycoproteins (HCVgp), E1 and E2, are anchored as a heterodimer and play a major role in HCV entry (20). The development of an infectious cell culture model based on the production of infective HCV particles (cell culture-derived HCV particles [HCVcc]) (34) and the generation of HCV pseudotyped retroviral particles (HCVpp) (4) have provided powerful tools to study the HCV cycle. HCV entry is a complex multistep process that requires the presence of several factors. There are multiple pieces of evidence for the involvement of host cell proteins in HCV entry, including glycosaminoglycans, the low-density lipoprotein receptor, scavenger receptor class B type I (SR-BI), and the tetraspanin CD81 (11). Recently, claudin-1, a tight junction (TJ) component, has been identified as a coreceptor required for a late step in HCV entry (13).TJs are major components of cell-cell adhesion complexes and are composed of integral membrane proteins, including occludin and claudins, which associate with actin cytoskeleton-interacting proteins, such as zonula occludens protein 1 (ZO-1) (2). These structures maintain cell polarity, separating apical from basolateral membrane domains, and form a paracellular barrier that allows the selective passage of certain solutes (2). In hepatocytes, TJs seal the bile canaliculi and form the intercellular barrier between bile and blood (12). Recently, we have shown that TJ-associated proteins occludin and claudin-1 disappeared from their normal localization in both HCV-infected and genomic HCV replicon-containing Huh7 cells. Furthermore, TJ function was also altered in these cells (5). In this matter, we have reported an intracellular interaction between E2 and occludin (5). Moreover, it has been reported that claudin-1 and several TJ-associated proteins, such as coxsackievirus and adenovirus receptor (35) and junctional adhesion molecule (JAM) (3), act as virus (co)receptors. Since coxsackievirus entry across epithelial TJs requires occludin (10), we have explored the role of occludin in HCV infection.  相似文献   

12.
Hepatitis C virus (HCV) entry occurs via a pH- and clathrin-dependent endocytic pathway and requires a number of cellular factors, including CD81, the tight-junction proteins claudin 1 (CLDN1) and occludin, and scavenger receptor class B member I (SR-BI). HCV tropism is restricted to the liver, where hepatocytes are tightly packed. Here, we demonstrate that SR-BI and CLDN1 expression is modulated in confluent human hepatoma cells, with both receptors being enriched at cell-cell junctions. Cellular contact increased HCV pseudoparticle (HCVpp) and HCV particle (HCVcc) infection and accelerated the internalization of cell-bound HCVcc, suggesting that the cell contact modulation of receptor levels may facilitate the assembly of receptor complexes required for virus internalization. CLDN1 overexpression in subconfluent cells was unable to recapitulate this effect, whereas increased SR-BI expression enhanced HCVpp entry and HCVcc internalization, demonstrating a rate-limiting role for SR-BI in HCV internalization.Hepatitis C virus (HCV) is an enveloped positive-strand RNA virus, classified in the genus Hepacivirus of the family Flaviviridae. Worldwide, approximately 170 million individuals are persistently infected with HCV, and the majority are at risk of developing chronic liver disease. Hepatocytes in the liver are thought to be the principal reservoir of HCV replication. HCV pseudoparticles (HCVpp) demonstrate a restricted tropism for hepatocyte-derived cells, suggesting that virus-encoded glycoprotein-receptor interactions play an important role in defining HCV tissue specificity.Recent evidence suggests that a number of host cell molecules are important for HCV entry: the tetraspanin CD81; scavenger receptor class B member I (SR-BI) (reviewed in reference 11); members of the tight-junction protein family claudin 1 (CLDN1), CLDN6, and CLDN9 (12, 34, 48, 52); and occludin (OCLN) (2, 33, 40). HCV enters cells via a pH- and clathrin-dependent endocytic pathway; however, the exact role(s) played by each of the host cell molecules in this process is unclear (4, 8, 21, 34, 45).CD81 and SR-BI interact with HCV-encoded E1E2 glycoproteins, suggesting a role in mediating virus attachment to the cell (reviewed in reference 44). In contrast, there is minimal evidence to support direct interaction of CLDN1 or OCLN with HCV particles (12). Evans and colleagues proposed that CLDN1 acts at a late stage in the entry process and facilitates fusion between the virus and host cell membranes (12). We (13, 19) and others (9, 48) have reported that CLDN1 associates with CD81, suggesting a role for CLDN1-CD81 complexes in viral entry. Cukierman et al. recently reported that CLDN1 enrichment at cell-cell contacts may generate specialized membrane domains that promote HCV internalization (9). In this study, we demonstrate that cellular contact modulates SR-BI and CLDN1 expression levels and promotes HCV internalization. CLDN1 overexpression in subconfluent cells was unable to recapitulate this effect, whereas increased SR-BI expression enhanced HCVpp entry and HCVcc internalization rates, demonstrating a critical and rate-limiting role for SR-BI in HCV internalization.  相似文献   

13.
Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV-1) entry into cells is mediated by a trimeric complex consisting of noncovalently associated gp120 (exterior) and gp41 (transmembrane) envelope glycoproteins. The binding of gp120 to receptors on the target cell alters the gp120-gp41 relationship and activates the membrane-fusing capacity of gp41. Interaction of gp120 with the primary receptor, CD4, results in the exposure of the gp120 third variable (V3) loop, which contributes to binding the CCR5 or CXCR4 chemokine receptors. We show here that insertions in the V3 stem or polar substitutions in a conserved hydrophobic patch near the V3 tip result in decreased gp120-gp41 association (in the unliganded state) and decreased chemokine receptor binding (in the CD4-bound state). Subunit association and syncytium-forming ability of the envelope glycoproteins from primary HIV-1 isolates were disrupted more by V3 changes than those of laboratory-adapted HIV-1 envelope glycoproteins. Changes in the gp120 β2, β19, β20, and β21 strands, which evidence suggests are proximal to the V3 loop in unliganded gp120, also resulted in decreased gp120-gp41 association. Thus, a gp120 element composed of the V3 loop and adjacent beta strands contributes to quaternary interactions that stabilize the unliganded trimer. CD4 binding dismantles this element, altering the gp120-gp41 relationship and rendering the hydrophobic patch in the V3 tip available for chemokine receptor binding.The entry of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) is mediated by the viral envelope glycoproteins (9, 79). The HIV-1 envelope glycoproteins are synthesized as an ∼850-amino acid precursor, which trimerizes and is posttranslationally modified by carbohydrates to create a 160-kDa glycoprotein (gp160). The gp160 envelope glycoprotein precursor is proteolytically processed in the Golgi apparatus, resulting in a gp120 exterior envelope glycoprotein and a gp41 transmembrane envelope glycoprotein (16, 17, 66, 76). In the mature HIV-1 envelope glycoprotein trimer, the three gp120 subunits are noncovalently bound to three membrane-anchored gp41 subunits (32).HIV-1 entry involves the binding of gp120 in a sequential fashion to CD4 and one of the chemokine receptors, CCR5 or CXCR4 (1, 8, 15, 18, 25, 36). CD4 binding triggers the formation of an activated intermediate that is competent for binding to CCR5 or CXCR4 (29, 69, 73, 78). These chemokine receptors are G protein-coupled, 7-transmembrane segment receptors with relatively short N termini. The choice of chemokine receptors is dictated primarily by the sequence of a gp120 region, the third variable (V3) loop, that exhibits variability among HIV-1 strains and becomes exposed upon CD4 binding (4, 8, 10, 33, 37, 38, 49, 59, 75). X-ray crystal structures of CD4-bound HIV-1 gp120 have revealed that the gp120 “core” consists of a gp41-interactive inner domain, a surface-exposed and heavily glycosylated outer domain, and a conformationally flexible bridging sheet (38, 43, 79). In the CD4-bound state, the V3 loop projects 30 Å from the gp120 core, toward the chemokine receptor (38). The V3 loop in these structures consists of three elements: (i) conserved antiparallel β strands that contain a disulfide bond at the base of the loop; (ii) a conformationally flexible stem; and (iii) a conserved tip (37, 38). During the virus entry process, the base of the gp120 V3 loop and elements of the bridging sheet interact with the CCR5 N terminus, which is acidic and contains sulfotyrosine residues (12-14, 23, 24). Sulfotyrosine 14 of CCR5 is thought to insert into a highly conserved pocket near the V3 base, driving further conformational rearrangements that result in the rigidification of the V3 stem (37). The conserved β-turn at the tip of the V3 loop, along with some residues in the V3 stem, is believed to bind the “body” of CCR5, i.e., the extracellular loops and membrane-spanning helices. CCR5 binding is thought to induce further conformational changes in the HIV-1 envelope glycoproteins, leading to the fusion of the viral and target cell membranes by the gp41 transmembrane envelope glycoproteins.CCR5 binding involves two points of contact with the gp120 V3 loop: (i) the CCR5 N terminus with the V3 base and (ii) the CCR5 body with the V3 tip and distal stem (12-14, 23, 24, 37, 38). The intervening V3 stem can tolerate greater conformational and sequence variation, features that might decrease HIV-1 susceptibility to host antibodies (30). Despite amino acid variation, the length of the V3 loop is well conserved among naturally occurring group M (major group) HIV-1 strains (30, 42). This conserved length may be important for aligning the two CCR5-binding elements of the V3 loop. In addition to allowing optimal CCR5 binding, the conserved V3 length and orientation may be important for CCR5 binding to exert effects on the conformation of the HIV-1 envelope glycoproteins. We examine here the consequences of introducing extra amino acid residues into the V3 stem. The residues were introduced either into both strands of the V3 loop, attempting to preserve the symmetry of the structure, or into one of the strands, thereby kinking the loop. The effects of these changes on assembly, stability, receptor binding, and the membrane-fusing capacity of the HIV-1 envelope glycoproteins were assessed. In addition to effects on chemokine receptor binding, unexpected disruption of gp120-gp41 association was observed. Further investigation revealed a conserved patch in the tip of the V3 loop that is important for the association of gp120 with the trimeric envelope glycoprotein complex, as well as for chemokine receptor binding. Apparently, the V3 loop and adjacent gp120 structures contribute to the stability of the trimer in the unliganded HIV-1 envelope glycoproteins. These structures are known to undergo rearrangement upon CD4 binding, suggesting their involvement in receptor-induced changes in the virus entry process.  相似文献   

14.
15.
Replication of hepatitis C virus (HCV) RNA occurs on intracellular membranes, and the replication complex (RC) contains viral RNA, nonstructural proteins, and cellular cofactors. We previously demonstrated that cyclophilin A (CyPA) is an essential cofactor for HCV infection and the intracellular target of cyclosporine''s anti-HCV effect. Here we investigate the mechanism by which CyPA facilitates HCV replication. Cyclosporine treatment specifically blocked the incorporation of NS5B into the RC without affecting either the total protein level or the membrane association of the protein. Other nonstructural proteins or viral RNAs in the RC were not affected. NS5B from the cyclosporine-resistant replicon was resistant to this disruption of RC incorporation. We also isolated membrane fractions from both naïve and HCV-positive cells and found that CyPA is recruited into membrane fractions in HCV-replicating cells via an interaction with RC-associated NS5B, which is sensitive to cyclosporine treatment. Finally, we introduced point mutations in the prolyl-peptidyl isomerase (PPIase) motif of CyPA and demonstrated a critical role of this motif in HCV replication in cDNA rescue experiments. We propose a model in which the incorporation of the HCV polymerase into the RC depends on its interaction with a cellular chaperone protein and in which cyclosporine inhibits HCV replication by blocking this critical interaction and the PPIase activity of CyPA. Our results provide a mechanism of action for the cyclosporine-mediated inhibition of HCV and identify a critical role of CyPA''s PPIase activity in the proper assembly and function of the HCV RC.Hepatitis C virus (HCV), of the family Flaviviridae, is an enveloped, positive-stranded RNA virus. Spread mostly by blood-borne transmission, HCV infects more than 170 million people worldwide. The viral genome is composed of a single open reading frame (ORF) plus 5′- and 3′-nontranslated regions. The ORF encodes a large polyprotein that is cleaved by cellular and viral proteases into 10 viral proteins. The structural proteins, including the capsid protein (core), two glycoproteins (E1 and E2), and a small ion channel protein (p7), reside in the N-terminal half of the polyprotein. The rest of the ORF encodes six nonstructural (NS) proteins: NS2, NS3, NS4A, NS4B, NS5A, and NS5B. NS3 through NS5B assemble into a replication complex (RC) and are necessary and sufficient for HCV RNA replication in cell culture (8, 42). NS3 is a multifunctional protein with both a serine protease and an RNA helicase activity. The protease activity is responsible for cleavage at the NS3-NS4A, NS4A-NS4B, NS4B-NS5A, and NS5A-NS5B junctions (5), and the helicase activity is probably required to unwind the double-stranded RNA intermediates formed during replication (38). NS4A serves as an essential cofactor for the NS3 protease and anchors the NS3 protein to intracellular membranes (25, 36, 39). NS4B induces the formation of a “membranous web” that is probably the site of HCV replication (16). It also contains a GTP-binding motif that is required for replication (17). The web is derived from the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) compartment, although proteins of early-endosome origin have also been found to locate to the web (62). NS5A is a phosphoprotein and an integral component of the viral RC. The precise function of NS5A in replication is still unknown but appears to be regulated by phosphorylation and its interaction with several cellular proteins (19, 22, 24, 51, 52, 59, 63, 67). In addition, it may be involved in the transition from replication and particle formation (4, 45, 64). NS5B is the RNA-dependent RNA polymerase that is responsible for copying the RNA genome of the virus during replication. Several cellular cofactors interact with NS5B and modulate its activity in the context of the viral RC (22, 24, 35, 69, 71).Positive-stranded RNA viruses alter the intracellular membranes of host cells to form an RC in which RNA replication occurs. Modifications include the proliferation and reorganization of certain cellular membranes (1). HCV forms an RC associated with altered cellular membranes (16, 23), and crude RCs (CRCs) that maintain the replicase activity in vitro can be isolated by membrane sedimentation or flotation techniques (2, 3, 18, 27, 37).Cyclosporine is a widely used immunosuppressive and anti-inflammatory drug for organ transplant patients. It functions by forming an inhibitory complex with cyclophilins (CyPs) that inhibits the phosphatase activity of calcineurin, which is important for T-cell activation. In recent years, cyclosporine and its derivatives have been shown to be highly effective in suppressing HCV replication in vitro (44, 49, 53, 68) and in vivo (30). The mechanism of this inhibition is independent of its immunosuppressive function and distinct from that of interferon (IFN) (44, 53, 56, 68).We recently showed that HCV infection in vitro is inhibited when CyPA, a major intracellular target of cyclosporine, is downregulated by RNA interference, and mutations in NS5B that confer cyclosporine-resistant binding to CyPA contribute to the cyclosporine resistance of the replicons harboring these mutations (56, 71). Here we report that CyPA is recruited into the HCV RC together with NS5B in HCV replicon or in HCV-infected cells. Cyclosporine disrupts the association between RC-incorporated NS5B and CyPA and results in an exclusion of the polymerase from the viral RC. We also show that the prolyl-peptidyl isomerase (PPIase) motif of CyPA is essential for HCV replication.  相似文献   

16.
The variability of the hepatitis C virus (HCV), which likely contributes to immune escape, is most pronounced in hypervariable region 1 (HVR1) of viral envelope protein 2. This domain is the target for neutralizing antibodies, and its deletion attenuates replication in vivo. Here we characterized the relevance of HVR1 for virus replication in vitro using cell culture-derived HCV. We show that HVR1 is dispensable for RNA replication. However, viruses lacking HVR1 (ΔHVR1) are less infectious, and separation by density gradients revealed that the population of ΔHVR1 virions comprises fewer particles with low density. Strikingly, ΔHVR1 particles with intermediate density (1.12 g/ml) are as infectious as wild-type virions, while those with low density (1.02 to 1.08 g/ml) are poorly infectious, despite quantities of RNA and core similar to those in wild-type particles. Moreover, ΔHVR1 particles exhibited impaired fusion, a defect that was partially restored by an E1 mutation (I347L), which also rescues infectivity and which was selected during long-term culture. Finally, ΔHVR1 particles were no longer neutralized by SR-B1-specific immunoglobulins but were more prone to neutralization and precipitation by soluble CD81, E2-specific monoclonal antibodies, and patient sera. These results suggest that HVR1 influences the biophysical properties of released viruses and that this domain is particularly important for infectivity of low-density particles. Moreover, they indicate that HVR1 obstructs the viral CD81 binding site and conserved neutralizing epitopes. These functions likely optimize virus replication, facilitate immune escape, and thus foster establishment and maintenance of a chronic infection.Hepatitis C virus (HCV) is a single-stranded positive-sense RNA virus of the family Flaviviridae that has infected an estimated 130 million people worldwide (1). Acute HCV infection is mostly asymptomatic; however, virus persistence can lead to severe liver disease, and within 20 years ca. 20% of chronically infected adults develop cirrhosis (46). In fact, morbidity associated with chronic HCV infection is the most common indication for orthotopic liver transplantation (7). The mechanisms that permit the virus to establish chronic infection in ca. 55 to 85% of cases (24) despite vigorous immune responses are incompletely understood.A number of studies have highlighted the pivotal role of strong, multispecific, and sustained T-cell responses for control of HCV infection (summarized in reference 53). Although resolution of acute HCV infection can occur in the absence of antibodies (47), mounting evidence indicates that neutralizing antibodies also contribute to protective immunity (summarized in reference 62). Nevertheless, HCV often successfully evades cellular and humoral immune pressure likely at least in part via the constant generation of variants created by an error-prone RNA replication machinery. In line with this notion, a high degree of HCV sequence evolution is associated with chronic disease, while a comparatively static pool of variants correlates with resolution (13, 15, 43).Virus isolates from patients are classified into at least 7 different genetic groups (genotypes [GTs]), which differ from each other by ca. 31 to 33% at the nucleotide level (20, 48). However, genetic variability is not equally distributed across the HCV genome, which encodes a large polyprotein of ca. 3,000 amino acids and contains 5′- and 3′-terminal nontranslated regions (NTR) required for RNA replication. More specifically, the 5′ NTR and the terminal 99 bases of the 3′ NTR are most conserved, while the N-terminal 27 amino acids of the envelope glycoprotein 2 (E2), called HVR1, are most divergent among HCV isolates (48). Notably, HVR1 contains epitopes which are recognized by patients'' antibodies (28, 29, 51, 59) and by antibodies that neutralize infection of chimpanzees (14). Moreover, during an acute infection, sequence changes occur almost exclusively within this region, and these are temporally correlated with antibody seroconversion (13). Therefore, the pronounced variability of this portion of E2 is likely due to strong humoral immune pressure, which drives its rapid evolution. However, variability of HVR1 is not random, as the chemicophysical properties and the conformation of this basic domain are well conserved (39). These findings suggest functional constraints for the evolution of HVR1, and the exposure of this epitope on the surface of HCV particles argues for an important role of this domain during virus entry.In line with this assumption, Forns et al. observed that an HCV mutant lacking HVR1 (ΔHVR1) was infectious for chimpanzees but clearly attenuated (17). Interestingly, an increase in titers of the ΔHVR1 virus coincided with emergence of two mutations in the ectodomain of E2, suggesting that these changes may have compensated for a putative functional impairment of the mutant (17).The development of retroviral particles which carry HCV glycoproteins on their surfaces (HCV pseudoparticles [HCVpp]) and, more recently, cell culture-derived HCV (HCVcc) based on the JFH1 strain provides robust models for dissecting the mechanisms of HCV entry in vitro (3, 25, 35, 58, 64). By means of these systems, the tetraspanin CD81, the lipoprotein receptor SR-BI, and tight junction proteins claudin-1 and occludin were identified as essential host factors for HCV infection (3, 5, 12, 25, 41, 42, 45).Moreover, it was recognized that there is a complex interplay between HCV and lipoproteins. Specifically, high-density lipoprotein (HDL) and oxidized low-density lipoprotein (oxLDL), both ligands of SR-BI, modulate HCVpp infection in an SR-BI-dependent fashion (4, 56, 57). Of note, HVR1 seems to be involved in SR-BI-mediated entry of HCVpp (5), since deletion of this domain ablated stimulation of HCVpp infection by HDL and rendered the virus resistant to inhibition by SR-BI-specific antibodies (4, 5), which prevent infection of HCVpp carrying wild-type HCV glycoproteins. Finally, HCVpp lacking HVR1 are more susceptible to neutralization by patient serum-derived immunoglobulins (4). Thus, altogether these results indicated an important role for HVR1 in viral fitness, likely due to an involvement in HCV entry via SR-BI, and in the interaction of HCV with the humoral immune system. Despite these important observations in the HCVpp system, the role of HVR1 in infection by authentic HCV particles was not defined. In addition, it was unclear if HCVpp produced in 293T cells that are unable to produce lipoproteins reflect natural HCV particles with regard to HVR1 function.Therefore, to better understand the role of HVR1 for virus replication and immune evasion, in this study we analyzed the importance of HVR1 for virus replication and neutralization using authentic, cell culture-derived HCV. We dissected the influence of this domain on HCV receptor interactions and membrane fusion and investigated compensatory mechanisms that permit the virus to regain fitness after deletion of HVR1.  相似文献   

17.
Hepatitis C virus (HCV) is a liver-tropic pathogen with severe health consequences for infected individuals. Chronic HCV infection can progress to cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma and is a leading indicator for liver transplantation. The HCV core protein is an essential component of the infectious virus particle, but many aspects of its role remain undefined. The C-terminal region of the core protein acts as a signal sequence for the E1 glycoprotein and undergoes dual processing events during infectious virus assembly. The exact C terminus of the mature, virion-associated core protein is not known. Here, we performed genetic analyses to map the essential determinants of the HCV core C-terminal region, as well as to define the minimal length of the protein that can function for infectious virus production in trans.Hepatitis C virus (HCV) is a major contributor to the development of human liver diseases, infecting approximately 2% of the population, or 130 million people, worldwide (2). Up to 80% of HCV infections progress to chronic hepatitis and can lead to cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma (38). No vaccine exists to prevent HCV infection, and current treatments are frequently inadequate.HCV is an enveloped virus of the genus Hepacivirus in the family Flaviviridae (30). The single-stranded, positive-sense RNA genome encodes a polyprotein of about 3,000 amino acids, which is processed by viral and host proteases into three structural proteins (the core protein, E1, and E2) and seven presumed nonstructural proteins (p7, NS2, NS3, NS4A, NS4B, NS5A, and NS5B). The core protein is thought to encapsidate the RNA genome within the virion, forming a complex that is surrounded by a host cell-derived lipid bilayer displaying the envelope glycoproteins, E1 and E2. Although not thought to be components of the virion, p7 and NS2 have recently been implicated in the production of infectious virus (5, 12, 29, 33, 39). The remaining nonstructural proteins, NS3 to NS5B, are essential for genome replication and have additional emerging roles in virus assembly. NS3 possesses RNA helicase/NTPase activities and together with its cofactor, NS4A, forms the major viral protease. NS5B is the RNA-dependent RNA polymerase (reviewed in references 16 and 27).The core protein is the first protein produced during translation of the incoming viral genome. A signal sequence in its C-terminal region targets the nascent E1 glycoprotein to the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) membrane and is the substrate for processing by two host proteases. Cleavage by signal peptidase (SP) following core amino acid 191 (31) is thought to precede processing by signal peptide peptidase (SPP) (20, 26), an integral membrane aspartyl protease that cleaves within transmembrane segments (37). The C terminus of the mature, infectious-virion-associated core protein has not been determined, but it is speculated to lie between amino acids 173 and 182 (24, 31). SPP processing has been shown to mobilize the core from the ER membrane and enable it to traffic to lipid droplets (20). These triglyceride-rich storage organelles have recently been shown to be the sites of HCV particle assembly (21). Consistent with this finding, impaired SPP activity leads to decreased HCV infectious titers (34). Dual processing of the core proteins is a common feature of the Flaviviridae family. GB virus B, a hepacivirus, and classical swine fever virus, a related pestivirus, encode core proteins that undergo SP and SPP processing during maturation (8, 35). In the genus Flavivirus, the capsid protein undergoes regulated cleavage by the viral NS2B-3 protease and SP; this stepwise processing has been shown to be essential for proper encapsidation of genomes into infectious particles (3).The development of an infectious cell culture system for HCV has been a major breakthrough in the field (7). Many details of virus morphogenesis and infectivity, however, are still unknown. In this study, we examined the role of the C-terminal portion of the HCV core protein and identified individual amino acids that are essential for infectious virus assembly and core protein stability. Findings from alanine-scanning and transcomplementation studies suggest that at least 177 residues of the core protein are needed to produce infectious particles.  相似文献   

18.
Naturally occurring hepatitis C virus (HCV) subgenomic RNAs have been found in several HCV patients. These subgenomic deletion mutants, mostly lacking the genes encoding envelope glycoproteins, were found in both liver and serum, where their relatively high abundance suggests that they are capable of autonomous replication and can be packaged and secreted in viral particles, presumably harboring the envelope proteins from wild type virus coinfecting the same cell. We recapitulated some of these natural subgenomic deletions in the context of the isolate JFH-1 and confirmed these hypotheses in vitro. In Huh-7.5 cells, these deletion-containing genomes show robust replication and can be efficiently trans-packaged and infect naïve Huh-7.5 cells when cotransfected with the full-length wild-type J6/JFH genome. The genome structure of these natural subgenomic deletion mutants was dissected, and the maintenance of both core and NS2 regions was proven to be significant for efficient replication and trans-packaging. To further explore the requirements needed to achieve trans-complementation, we provided different combinations of structural proteins in trans. Optimal trans-complementation was obtained when fragments of the polyprotein encompassing core to p7 or E1 to NS2 were expressed. Finally, we generated a stable helper cell line, constitutively expressing the structural proteins from core to p7, which efficiently supports trans-complementation of a subgenomic deletion encompassing amino acids 284 to 732. This cell line can produce and be infected by defective particles, thus representing a powerful tool to investigate the life cycle and relevance of natural HCV subgenomic deletion mutants in vivo.Hepatitis C virus (HCV) is an enveloped virus belonging to the family Flaviviridae. The virus genome is a positive-stranded RNA of about 9,600 nucleotides, which contains a single open reading frame (ORF) encoding both structural (core, E1, E2, and p7) and nonstructural (NS2, NS3, NS4A, NS4B, NS5A, and NS5B) proteins (47). Two highly conserved untranslated regions (UTRs) are found at the 5′ and 3′ ends, which play critical roles in both viral translation and replication (13, 14, 23).HCV is estimated to infect 170 million people worldwide (1, 43) and in a high percentage of individuals causes a chronic liver infection that frequently evolves into an array of diseases, including cirrhosis (12, 15, 38) and hepatocellular carcinoma (4, 7, 17, 30, 38, 49).The HCV RNA-dependent RNA polymerase (NS5B) has a high frequency of incorrect nucleotide insertions, in the range of 10−4 to 10−5 base substitutions per site, which can result in the rapid generation of HCV quasispecies (37, 45). Because of this huge genetic diversity, HCV is currently classified into six major genotypes and more than 80 subtypes (44). Recombination may be another mechanism exploited by HCV to increase genetic diversity: naturally occurring intergenotypic recombinant viruses that often have their recombination points in the trans-membrane domains of NS2 were recently identified (20, 21, 26, 27, 33, 35).Recent publications have reported the presence of natural HCV subgenomic RNAs in serum and liver of infected patients, mostly containing large in-frame deletions from E1 up to NS2, always found together with the full-length wild-type (wt) RNAs (5, 16, 36, 54). These mutant viral genomes persist for a long time (at least 2 years), and sequence analysis suggests that subgenomic (the predominant species during this period) and full-length HCV evolve independently (54). The relative abundance and persistence of such subgenomic RNAs in vivo suggests that (i) they are capable of autonomous replication and (ii) they can be packaged and secreted in infectious viral particles, presumably harboring the envelope proteins from wt virus coinfecting the same cell.Analysis of the genetic structure of 18 independent subgenomic deletion-containing RNAs (5, 16, 36, 54) strongly suggests that the possibility of recombination and/or deletion is restricted to specific regions.As expected, the 5′ UTR, the 3′ UTR, and the region coding from NS3 to NS5B are always conserved, in line with the notion that these regions are the minimal requirements for RNA replication. In addition to the regions required for RNA replication, however, naturally occurring subgenomic HCV RNA invariably contains an intact core region and the protease domain of NS2. In fact, the 5′ deletion boundary falls between the codons for amino acid 189 of core and amino acid 4 of E1 in 33% of cases and between the codons for amino acids 21 and 29 of E1 in 39% of cases, such that in 72% of cases overall, the 5′ boundary is between the codons for amino acid 189 of core and amino acid 29 of E1 (see Fig. S1 in the supplemental material). Likewise, the 3′ boundary shows a distinct localization, occurring between the codons for amino acids 51 and 79 of NS2 in 56% of cases.In the present study, we modified the infectious isolate JFH-1 in order to recapitulate in vitro the genetic structure of two of the most representative in-frame natural subgenomic deletion-containing RNAs found circulating in patients (28, 51, 57). Using this system, we analyzed natural subgenomic variants for their ability to replicate autonomously and demonstrated that the natural subgenomic deletion mutants are replication competent and are trans-packaged into infectious virions when coexpressed together with wt virus. Furthermore, our data suggest that the presence of the NS2 protease domain is required in order to generate the correct NS3 N terminus, required for RNA replication. Unexpectedly, the presence of NS2 generates, in turn, a strict cis requirement for the core region in order to allow efficient trans-packaging of the subgenomic RNA, revealing a complex interplay between the NS2 and the core viral genes. Finally, we performed trans-complementation studies of the subgenomic deletions with different HCV structural proteins to gain insight into the minimal requirements for the assembly and release of HCV virions.  相似文献   

19.
Redirecting the tropism of viral vectors enables specific transduction of selected cells by direct administration of vectors. We previously developed targeting lentiviral vectors by pseudotyping with modified Sindbis virus envelope proteins. These modified Sindbis virus envelope proteins have mutations in their original receptor-binding regions to eliminate their natural tropisms, and they are conjugated with targeting proteins, including antibodies and peptides, to confer their tropisms on target cells. We investigated whether our targeting vectors interact with DC-SIGN, which traps many types of viruses and gene therapy vectors by binding to the N-glycans of their envelope proteins. We found that these vectors do not interact with DC-SIGN. When these vectors were produced in the presence of deoxymannojirimycin, which alters the structures of N-glycans from complex to high mannose, these vectors used DC-SIGN as their receptor. Genetic analysis demonstrated that the N-glycans at E2 amino acid (aa) 196 and E1 aa 139 mediate binding to DC-SIGN, which supports the results of a previous report of cryoelectron microscopy analysis. In addition, we investigated whether modification of the N-glycan structures could activate serum complement activity, possibly by the lectin pathway of complement activation. DC-SIGN-targeted transduction occurs in the presence of human serum complement, demonstrating that high-mannose structure N-glycans of the envelope proteins do not activate human serum complement. These results indicate that the strategy of redirecting viral vectors according to alterations of their N-glycan structures would enable the vectors to target specific cells types expressing particular types of lectins.The ultimate goal of gene therapy is cell- and tissue-specific targeted delivery of therapeutic genes. A targeted system increases the therapeutic effects of transgenes at the site of action while reducing adverse effects in surrounding cells and tissues that commonly occur through nonspecific modes of gene delivery (5-8). Gene therapy vectors that can home to specific cells and tissues after intravenous administration, also known as targeting vectors, are ideal for targeted delivery (62). In the past, many attempts have been made to develop targeting viral vectors by using adenovirus, adeno-associated virus, oncoretrovirus, lentivirus, measles virus, and alphavirus (70, 89).To create targeting viral vectors, the natural tropisms of the viruses must first be eliminated and new binding specificities conferred (89). The binding of envelope viruses, such as oncoretrovirus, lentivirus, measles virus, and alphavirus, is mediated by envelope proteins. To redirect the tropisms of these viruses, the original receptor-binding regions of their envelope proteins must be eliminated. We have developed targeting oncoretroviral and lentiviral vectors by pseudotyping them with modified Sindbis virus envelope proteins and by mutating the receptor-binding regions of the envelope proteins, thereby reducing the nonspecific transduction of untargeted cells (61, 63-66). The mutated regions of the envelope protein originally interact directly with other receptors, including heparan sulfate, laminin receptor, and/or unknown molecules (10, 46, 67, 90). These mutations reduced the nonspecific transduction of the liver and spleen when the vectors were administered intravenously (66). By conjugating the virus with targeting ligands, including antibodies and peptides, the virus can transduce specific cells and tissues both in vitro and in vivo (53, 61, 63-66, 71, 72). These results demonstrated that we can eliminate the natural tropism of the Sindbis virus envelope protein while maintaining its fusion activity.However, the N-glycans of the envelope proteins are still intact and possibly interact with cell surface lectins. DC-SIGN is the best-known cell surface lectin expressed on dendritic cells, certain macrophages, and activated B cells (27, 29, 30).Structural and biochemical studies show flexible modes of DC-SIGN binding to cognate saccharides. The trimannose core unit of high-mannose N-glycans is the primary binding site for DC-SIGN (23), while nonreducing alpha1-2-linked terminal mannose moieties contribute to the high avidity seen when DC-SIGN binds the Man8 or Man9 structures common to many viral envelope glycoproteins (22). DC-SIGN traps a wide variety of viruses and viral vectors (HIV [29, 30], simian immunodeficiency virus [50], human T-cell leukemia virus type 1 [12], measles virus [17, 18], dengue virus [86], feline corona virus [77], herpes simplex virus type 1 [16], human cytomegalovirus [36], human herpesvirus type 8 [76], Ebola virus [1], West Nile virus [15], influenza virus [91], Marburg virus [57], and severe acute respiratory syndrome virus [93]) by binding to the N-glycans of the viruses and viral vectors. Binding of DC-SIGN with virus and viral vectors results in enhanced infection and/or transduction of DC-SIGN-positive cells (cis infection/transduction) and/or neighboring cells (trans infection/transduction).If any targeting vector can be trapped by DC-SIGN, it is necessary to eliminate its binding to DC-SIGN to increase the targeting specificity of the virus in vivo (28, 49, 73). In addition to enhanced infection/transduction, binding to DC-SIGN causes signaling that can activate DC-SIGN-expressing antigen-presenting cells (32, 38). Activation of antigen-presenting cells can lead to adverse effects, including systemic inflammation and immune reactions to viral vectors and their transgene products (7, 8, 32, 59, 88). Therefore, investigation of the interactions between viral vectors and DC-SIGN, identification of N-glycans that mediate binding to DC-SIGN, and elimination of interactions with DC-SIGN are important aspects of reducing adverse effects of vector administration and prolonging transgene expression.The envelope protein of our targeting lentiviral vectors, the Sindbis virus envelope protein, contains four N-linked glycans (9, 48). Sindbis virus can replicate in insect and mammalian cells, which have different types of enzymes to process N-glycans (3). Therefore, the structures of N-glycans differ between the virus produced in insect cells and that produced in mammalian cells (40, 58). The N-glycans of the virus produced in insect cells have either the high-mannose or the paucimannosidic structure. Paucimannosidic structure N-glycans, as well as high-mannose structure N-glycans, have terminal mannose residues, and all N-glycans produced in insect cells are predicted to be able to bind DC-SIGN (Fig. (Fig.11 a) (39, 47). On the other hand, two N-glycans of the virus produced in mammalian cells have the high-mannose structure, while two others have the complex structure (40, 58). The two complex structure N-glycans have been shown to be exposed on the surface of the envelope protein, while the two high-mannose structure N-glycans are buried within the center of the trimer of the envelope proteins (74, 94). Therefore, the virus produced in insect cells can access DC-SIGN as its receptor while the virus produced in mammalian cells cannot (47). Because our targeting vectors are produced in mammalian cells, they should not bind DC-SIGN efficiently. However, one group demonstrated that lentiviral vectors pseudotyped with a modified Sindbis virus envelope protein bind to DC-SIGN and target DC-SIGN-positive cells (92), in contrast to the results seen with replication-competent Sindbis virus. Both Sindbis virus and the pseudotyped lentiviral vectors were produced in mammalian cells; Sindbis virus was produced in baby hamster kidney (BHK) cells, chicken embryonic fibroblasts, and hamster fibroblast cells; and the pseudotyped vector was produced in human embryonic kidney fibroblast (293T) cells (69). Because it is known that the N-glycans of the HIV envelope protein produced in lymphocytes have structures different from those produced in macrophages, the different producer cells may account for the differences between the N-glycan structures of the virus and Sindbis virus envelope-pseudotyped lentivectors (54, 55). It is also known that the N-glycan structure of dengue virus can be altered by the presence of viral capsid (35). Thus, the capsid of Sindbis virus and HIV could also affect the structures of the N-glycans of envelope proteins differently.Open in a separate windowFIG. 1.(a) N-glycan structures and processing pathway. All N-glycans are first produced as the high-mannose structure in both mammalian cells and insect cells. In mammalian cells, certain N-glycans are further processed to the complex structure. In insect cells, certain N-glycans are further processed to the paucimannosidic structure. DMNJ inhibits mannosidase I, which is necessary for the formation of the complex structure; thus, all N-glycans have the high-mannose structure when generated in the presence of DMNJ. One representative structure of each N-glycan is shown. Man, mannose; GlcNAc, N-acetylglucosamine; SA, sialic acid; Gal, galactose. (b) Schematic representation of chimeric Sindbis virus envelope proteins. The Sindbis virus envelope protein is first synthesized as a polypeptide and subsequently cleaved by cellular proteases to generate the E3, E2, 6K, and E1 proteins. E1 and E2 are incorporated into the viral envelope, and E3 and 6K are leader sequences for E2 and E1, respectively. The N-linked glycosylation sites of the envelope proteins are shown. 2.2 is a modified Sindbis virus envelope protein in which the IgG-binding domain of protein A (ZZ) was inserted into the E2 region at aa 70. 2.2 1L1L has two flexible linkers (Gly-Gly-Gly-Gly-Ser) at aa 70 of the E2 protein. 2.2 ΔE2-196N does not have the N-glycan at E2 aa 196, 2.2 ΔE1-139N does not have the N-glycan at E1 aa 139, and 2.2 ΔE2-196N E1-139N does not have the N-glycans at either E2 aa 196 or E1 aa 139.In this study, we investigated whether our targeting vector binds DC-SIGN. We found that DC-SIGN does not mediate the transduction of our targeting vectors efficiently. The vectors can be redirected to DC-SIGN by modifying the structures of the N-glycans of the envelope proteins by using the mannosidase I inhibitor deoxymannojirimycin (DMNJ) (25, 47, 51).  相似文献   

20.
Mature glycoprotein spikes are inserted in the Lassa virus envelope and consist of the distal subunit GP-1, the transmembrane-spanning subunit GP-2, and the signal peptide, which originate from the precursor glycoprotein pre-GP-C by proteolytic processing. In this study, we analyzed the oligomeric structure of the viral surface glycoprotein. Chemical cross-linking studies of mature glycoprotein spikes from purified virus revealed the formation of trimers. Interestingly, sucrose density gradient analysis of cellularly expressed glycoprotein showed that in contrast to trimeric mature glycoprotein complexes, the noncleaved glycoprotein forms monomers and oligomers spanning a wide size range, indicating that maturation cleavage of GP by the cellular subtilase SKI-1/S1P is critical for formation of the correct oligomeric state. To shed light on a potential relation between cholesterol and GP trimer stability, we performed cholesterol depletion experiments. Although depletion of cholesterol had no effect on trimerization of the glycoprotein spike complex, our studies revealed that the cholesterol content of the viral envelope is important for the infectivity of Lassa virus. Analyses of the distribution of viral proteins in cholesterol-rich detergent-resistant membrane areas showed that Lassa virus buds from membrane areas other than those responsible for impaired infectivity due to cholesterol depletion of lipid rafts. Thus, derivation of the viral envelope from cholesterol-rich membrane areas is not a prerequisite for the impact of cholesterol on virus infectivity.Lassa virus (LASV) is a member of the family Arenaviridae, of which Lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV) is the prototype. Arenaviruses comprise more than 20 species, divided into the Old World and New World virus complexes (19). The Old World arenaviruses include the human pathogenic LASV strains, Lujo virus, which was first identified in late 2008 and is associated with an unprecedented high case fatality rate in humans, the nonhuman pathogenic Ippy, Mobala, and Mopeia viruses, and the recently described Kodoko virus (10, 30, 49). The New World virus complex contains, among others, the South American hemorrhagic fever-causing viruses Junín virus, Machupo virus, Guanarito virus, Sabiá virus, and the recently discovered Chapare virus (22).Arenaviruses contain a bisegmented single-stranded RNA genome encoding the polymerase L, matrix protein Z, nucleoprotein NP, and glycoprotein GP. The bipartite ribonucleoprotein of LASV is surrounded by a lipid envelope derived from the plasma membrane of the host cell. The matrix protein Z has been identified as a major budding factor, which lines the interior of the viral lipid membrane, in which GP spikes are inserted (61, 75). The glycoprotein is synthesized as precursor protein pre-GP-C and is cotranslationally cleaved by signal peptidase into GP-C and the signal peptide, which exhibits unusual length, stability, and topology (3, 27, 28, 33, 70, 87). Moreover, the arenaviral signal peptide functions as trans-acting maturation factor (2, 26, 33). After processing by signal peptidase, GP-C of both New World and Old World arenaviruses is cleaved by the cellular subtilase subtilisin kexin isozyme-1/site-1 protease (SKI-1/S1P) into the distal subunit GP-1 and the membrane-anchored subunit GP-2 within the secretory pathway (5, 52, 63). For LCMV, it has been shown that GP-1 subunits are linked to each other by disulfide bonds and are noncovalently connected to GP-2 subunits (14, 24, 31). GP-1 is responsible for binding to the host cell receptor, while GP-2 mediates fusion between the virus envelope and the endosomal membrane at low pH due to a bipartite fusion peptide near the amino terminus (24, 36, 44). Sequence analysis of the LCMV GP-2 ectodomain revealed two heptad repeats that most likely form amphipathic helices important for this process (34, 86).In general, viral class I fusion proteins have triplets of α-helical structures in common, which contain heptad repeats (47, 73). In contrast, class II fusion proteins are characterized by β-sheets that form dimers in the prefusion status and trimers in the postfusion status (43). The class III fusion proteins are trimers that, unlike class I fusion proteins, were not proteolytically processed N-terminally of the fusion peptide, resulting in a fusion-active membrane-anchored subunit (39, 62). Previous studies with LCMV described a tetrameric organization of the glycoprotein spikes (14), while more recent data using a bacterially expressed truncated ectodomain of the LCMV GP-2 subunit pointed toward a trimeric spike structure (31). Due to these conflicting data regarding the oligomerization status of LCMV GP, it remains unclear to which class of fusion proteins the arenaviral glycoproteins belong.The state of oligomerization and the correct conformation of viral glycoproteins are crucial for membrane fusion during virus entry. The early steps of infection have been shown for several viruses to be dependent on the cholesterol content of the participating membranes (i.e., either the virus envelope or the host cell membrane) (4, 9, 15, 20, 21, 23, 40, 42, 53, 56, 76, 78, 79). In fact, it has been shown previously that entry of both LASV and LCMV is susceptible to cholesterol depletion of the target host cell membrane using methyl-β-cyclodextrin (MβCD) treatment (64, 71). Moreover, cholesterol not only plays an important role in the early steps during entry in the viral life cycle but also is critical in the virus assembly and release process. Several viruses of various families, including influenza virus, human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1), measles virus, and Ebola virus, use the ordered environment of lipid raft microdomains. Due to their high levels of glycosphingolipids and cholesterol, these domains are characterized by insolubility in nonionic detergents under cold conditions (60, 72). Recent observations have suggested that budding of the New World arenavirus Junin virus occurs from detergent-soluble membrane areas (1). Assembly and release from distinct membrane microdomains that are detergent soluble have also been described for vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) (12, 38, 68). At present, however, it is not known whether LASV requires cholesterol in its viral envelope for successful virus entry or whether specific membrane microdomains are important for LASV assembly and release.In this study, we first investigated the oligomeric state of the premature and mature LASV glycoprotein complexes. Since it has been shown for several membrane proteins that the oligomerization and conformation are dependent on cholesterol (58, 59, 76, 78), we further analyzed the dependence of the cholesterol content of the virus envelope on glycoprotein oligomerization and virus infectivity. Finally, we characterized the lipid membrane areas from which LASV is released.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号