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We have reported that the E3 14,700-dalton protein (E3 14.7K protein) protects adenovirus-infected mouse C3HA fibroblasts against lysis by tumor necrosis factor (TNF) (L. R. Gooding, L. W. Elmore, A. E. Tollefson, H. A. Brady, and W. S. M. Wold, Cell 53:341-346, 1988). We have also observed that the E1B 19K protein protects adenovirus-infected human but not mouse cells against TNF lysis (L. R. Gooding, L. Aquino, P. J. Duerksen-Hughes, D. Day, T. M. Horton, S. Yei, and W. S. M. Wold, J. Virol. 65:3083-3094, 1991). We now report that, in the absence of E3 14.7K, the E3 10.4K and E3 14.5K proteins are both required to protect C127 as well as several other mouse cell lines against TNF lysis. The 14.7K protein can also protect these cells from TNF in the absence of the 10.4K and 14.5K proteins. This protection by the 10.4K and 14.5K proteins was not observed in the C3HA cell line. These conclusions are based on 51Cr release assays of cells infected with virus E3 mutants that express the 14.7K protein alone, that express both the 10.4K and 14.5K proteins, and that delete the 14.7K in combination with either the 10.4K or 14.5K protein. The 10.4K protein was efficiently coimmunoprecipitated together with the 14.5K protein by using an antiserum to the 14.5K protein, suggesting that the 10.4K and 14.5K proteins exist as a complex in the infected mouse cells and consistent with the notion that they function in concert. Considering that three sets of proteins (E3 14.7K, E1B 19K, and E3 10.4K/14.5K proteins) exist in adenovirus to prevent TNF cytolysis of different cell types, it would appear that TNF is a major antiadenovirus defense of the host.  相似文献   

4.
The 14.7-kilodalton protein (14.7K protein) encoded by the adenovirus (Ad) E3 region inhibits tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha)-mediated lysis of cells in tissue culture experiments, but the relevance of this effect in vivo is incompletely understood. To examine the effect of the ability of the Ad 14.7K protein to block TNF lysis upon viral pathogenesis in a murine model, we cloned the 14.7K protein-encoding gene into vaccinia virus (VV), permitting its study in isolation from other Ad E3 immunomodulatory proteins. The gene for murine TNF-alpha was inserted into the same VV containing the 14.7K gene to ensure that each cell infected with the VV recombinant would express both the agonist (TNF) and its antagonist (14.7K). VV was utilized as the vector because it accommodates large and multiple inserts of foreign DNA with faithful, high-level expression of the protein products. In addition, infection of mice with VV induces disease with quantifiable morbidity, mortality, and virus replication. The results of intranasal infections of BALB/c mice with these VV recombinants indicate that the Ad 14.7K protein increases the virulence of VV carrying the TNF-alpha gene by reversing the attenuating effect of TNF-alpha on VV pathogenicity. This was demonstrated by increased mortality, pulmonary pathology, and viral titers in lung tissue following infection with VV coexpressing the 14.7K protein and TNF-alpha, compared with the control virus expressing TNF-alpha alone. These results suggest that the 14.7K protein, which is nonessential for Ad replication in tissue culture, is an immunoregulatory protein which functions in vivo to help counteract the antiviral effects of TNF-alpha.  相似文献   

5.
We have previously described a 14,700 m.w. protein (14.7K) encoded by the E3 region of adenovirus that prevents TNF-mediated cytolysis of adenovirus-infected C3HA mouse fibroblasts. In the studies described here we have extended our analysis of TNF cytolysis of C3HA cells and the circumstances under which 14.7K protects these cells from cytolysis. C3HA cells were killed by TNF in the presence of inhibitors of protein synthesis, in the presence of cytochalasin E (which disrupts the microfilaments), and when adenovirus E1A was expressed. As described for other cell types, pretreatment of C3HA cells with TNF prevented cytolysis by TNF plus cycloheximide or TNF plus cytochalasin E, indicating that TNF induces a response that protects against these treatments. Remarkably, when 14.7K was expressed in virus-infected cells, it also prevented TNF-induced lysis whether sensitivity to TNF was induced by inhibition of protein synthesis, disruption of the cytoskeleton by cytochalasin E, or expression of adenovirus E1A. The 14.7K protein also prevented TNF lysis of cells that are spontaneously sensitive to TNF lysis. Thus, 14.7K appears to be a general inhibitor of TNF cytolysis, and as such should be an important tool in unraveling the mechanism of TNF cytolysis. There was one exception; NCTC-929 cells were spontaneously sensitive to TNF lysis and that lysis was not affected by 14.7K even though the protein was made in large quantities and was metabolically stable in these cells. This suggests that there is heterogeneity among TNF-sensitive cell lines. The 14.7K protein was found in both the nuclear and cytosol fractions of TNF resistant as well as all spontaneously sensitive cells suggesting that 14.7K may have more than one site of action within the cell.  相似文献   

6.
Group C human adenovirus (Ad) serotypes (e.g., Ad2 and Ad5) cause persistent infections in man. One proposed mechanisms to explain human adenovirus persistence is an ineffective CTL response due to reduced cell surface expression of class I MHC Ag on virally infected cells, an effect mediated by the 19-kDa glycoprotein encoded by Ad early region 3 (E3). In the present study, the generality of this phenomenon was tested by analyzing E3 19-kDa glycoprotein down-regulation of cell surface class 1 MHC Ag on a variety of human cell types. With the exception of the Ad5 early region 1 (E1) transformed cell line, 293, Ad2/5 infection of fibroblastic, epithelial, and lymphoid cells did not cause major decreases in surface class I Ag until the terminal stages of infection when cell death is imminent. Furthermore, newly synthesized class I Ag continued to be surface expressed on most cell types at times when infected cells contained large amounts of Ad E3 19-kDa glycoprotein. These data indicate that most types of human cells are resistant to the E3 19-kDa glycoprotein effect, suggesting that virus-specific CTL recognition and lysis of most Ad2/5-infected human cells should not be limited by E3 19-kDa-mediated reduction in class I MHC Ag expression.  相似文献   

7.
The Ag specificity and MHC restriction of the CTL response to adenovirus 5 (Ad5) in three strains of mice, C57BL/10 (H-2b), BALB/c (H-2d), and C3H/HeJ (H-2k), were tested. Polyclonal Ad5-specific CTL were prepared by priming mice in vivo with live Ad5 virus followed by secondary in vitro stimulation of the spleen cells with virus-infected syngeneic cells. The Ad5-specific CTL were Db restricted in C57BL/10 and Kk restricted in C3H/HeJ. In BALB/c mice both Kd- and Dd/Ld-restricted CTL were detected. The polyclonal Ad5-specific CTL response in C57BL/10 mice is directed exclusively against the products of the E1A region, which comprises only 5% of the Ad5 genome. In BALB/c mice E1A is at best a very minor target Ag and in C3H/HeJ mice E1A is not recognized at all. Using the H-2 congenic mouse strains B10.BR (H-2k) and C3H.SW (H-2b) it was shown that the immunodominance of E1A is H-2 dependent. The 19-kDa glycoprotein encoded in the E3 region of Ad5, which binds to class I MHC in the endoplasmic reticulum and prevents its translocation to the cell surface, does not affect the specificity of the CTL response in C57BL/10 mice toward E1A. However, it affects the MHC restriction of the Ad5-specific response in BALB/c mice, selectively inhibiting generation of Kd-restricted CTL.  相似文献   

8.
A 14.7-kilodalton protein (14.7K protein) encoded by the E3 region of group C adenoviruses has been shown to protect virus-infected fibroblasts from lysis by tumor necrosis factor (TNF) (L.R. Gooding, L.W. Elmore, A.E. Tollefson, H.A. Brady, and W.S.M. Wold, Cell 53:341-346, 1988). In this study we show that adenoviruses of other groups are also protected from TNF-induced cytolysis. Representative serotypes of groups A, B, D, and E produce a protein analogous to the 14.7K protein found in human group C adenoviruses. Deletion of this protein in group C viruses permits virus infection to induce cellular susceptibility to TNF killing. As with group C adenoviruses, cells infected with wild-type adenoviruses of other serotypes are not killed by TNF and are protected from lysis induced by TNF plus cycloheximide. However, cells are susceptible to TNF-induced lysis when infected with adenovirus type 4 mutants from which the 14.7K gene has been deleted. Although all known adenovirus serotypes infect epithelial cells, adenoviruses cause several diseases with various degrees of pathogenesis. Our findings suggest that the 14.7K protein provides a function required for the in vivo cytotoxicity of many adenoviruses independent of the site of infection or degree of pathogenesis.  相似文献   

9.
The adenovirus E3-14.7K protein, expressed early in the life cycle of human adenoviruses to protect the virus from the antiviral response of host cells, inhibits cell death mediated by TNF-alpha and FasL receptors. To better understand its role in cell death inhibition, we have sought to characterize the biophysical properties of the protein from adenovirus serotype 5 (Ad5 E3-14.7K, or simply 14.7K) through a variety of approaches. To obtain sufficient quantities of recombinantly expressed protein for biophysical characterization, we explored the use of various expression constructs and chaperones; fusion to MBP was by far the most effective at generating soluble protein. Using limited proteolysis, mass spectrometry, and protein-protein interaction assays, we demonstrate that the C-terminal two-thirds of the protein, predicted to be composed of five beta-strands and one alpha-helix, is highly structured and binds its putative cellular receptors. Furthermore, using atomic absorption and ultraviolet/visible spectroscopies, we have studied the metal binding properties of the protein, providing insight into the observation that cysteine/serine mutants of 14.7K lack in vivo antiapoptotic activity. Lastly, results from size exclusion chromatography, dynamic light scattering, sucrose gradient sedimentation, chemical crosslinking, and electron microscopy experiments revealed that 14.7K exists in a stable high-order oligomeric state (nonamer) in solution.  相似文献   

10.
A 14,700-kDa protein (14.7K) encoded by the E3 region of adenovirus has been shown to protect adenovirus-infected mouse C3HA cells from lysis by tumor necrosis factor (TNF) (L. R. Gooding, L. W. Elmore, A. E. Tollefson, H. A. Brady, and W. S. M. Wold, Cell 53:341-346, 1988). These infected cells are sensitized to TNF by expression of the adenovirus E1A proteins (P. Duerksen-Hughes, W. S. M. Wold, and L. R. Gooding, J. Immunol. 143:4193-4200, 1989). In this study we show that 14.7K suppresses TNF cytolysis independently of adenovirus infection. Mouse C3HA and C127 cells were transfected with the 14.7K gene controlled by the mouse metallothionein promoter, and permanent 14.7K-expressing cell lines were tested for sensitivity to TNF cytolysis. Transfected cells which were sensitized to TNF either by inhibitors of protein synthesis, microfilament-destabilizing agents, or adenovirus infection were found to be resistant to TNF cytolysis. Two monoclonal antibodies were isolated and used to quantitate 14.7K in transfected and infected cells. Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) analysis with these monoclonal antibodies and 14.7K immunoblots showed that 14.7K expression can be induced with cadmium in C3HA and C127 transfectants. The 14.7K induction correlated with a dose-dependent decrease in sensitivity to TNF cytotoxicity. The 14.7K protein does not substantially alter cell surface TNF receptor numbers or affinity on C3HA mouse fibroblasts, as determined by Scatchard analysis of 125I-TNF binding. The 14.7K protein also does not alter TNF signal transduction in general, because TNF induction of cell surface class I major histocompatibility complex molecules on 14.7K transfectants was unmodified. Our findings indicate that the adenovirus 14.7K protein functions as a specific inhibitor of TNF cytolysis in the absence of other adenovirus proteins and thus is a unique tool to study the mechanism of TNF cytotoxicity.  相似文献   

11.
Early region E3 of adenovirus type 5 should encode at least nine proteins as judged by the DNA sequence and the spliced structures of the known mRNAs. Only two E3 proteins have been proved to exist, a glycoprotein (gp19K) and an 11,600-molecular-weight protein (11.6K protein). Here we describe an abundant 14.7K protein coded by a gene in the extreme 3' portion of E3. To identify this 14.7K protein, we constructed a bacterial vector which synthesized a TrpE-14.7K fusion protein, then we prepared antiserum against the fusion protein. This antiserum immunoprecipitated the 14.7K protein from cells infected with adenovirus types 5 and 2, as well as with a variety of E3 deletion mutants. Synthesis of the 14.7K protein correlated precisely with the presence or absence of the 14.7K gene and with the synthesis of the mRNA (mRNA h) which encodes the 14.7K protein. The 14.7K protein appeared as a triplet on immunoprecipitation gels and Western blots (immunoblots).  相似文献   

12.
The 14,700-Da protein (14.7K protein) encoded by the E3 region of adenovirus has previously been shown to protect mouse cells from cytolysis by tumor necrosis factor (TNF). Delineating the sequences in the 14.7K protein that are required for this activity may provide insight into the mechanism of protection from TNF by 14.7K as well as the mechanism of TNF cytolysis. In the present study, we examined the ability of 14.7K mutants to protect cells from lysis by TNF. In-frame deletions as well as Cys-to-Ser mutations in the 14.7K gene were generated by site-directed mutagenesis and then built into the genome of a modified adenovirus type 5 (dl7001) that lacks all E3 genes. dl7001, which replicates to the same titers as does adenovirus type 5 in cultured cells, has the largest E3 deletion analyzed to date. 51Cr release was used to assay TNF cytolysis. Our results indicate that most mutations in the 14.7K gene result in a loss of function, suggesting that nearly the entire protein rather than a specific domain functions to prevent TNF cytolysis.  相似文献   

13.
谭维彦  阮力 《病毒学报》1994,10(3):197-208
本文将Ad4基因组相当于73.3-89.2基因图谱单位的DNA片段进行了序列测定及基因结构分析,它包括了Ad4E3区全基因及该区两侧的部分序列。序列分析表明,Ad4 E3区从TATAA box起至该区基因结束共4778bp,编码11个大于6kD的开放读码框架。对Ad4 E3区ORF分析结果表明,Ad4 E3区编码的19.3k,15k,10.4k蛋白,分别与Ad2 E3区的gp19k,14.k和10  相似文献   

14.
Murine cells (L929, MC57G, and P815 mastocytoma) defectively infected with the egg-adapted vaccine strain of mumps virus were found to be susceptible to cytotoxic T-lymphocyte (CTL)-mediated lysis. In vitro secondary, but not in vivo primary, generated CTL caused cytolysis of these targets in an H-2-restricted manner. UV-inactivated-mumps virus-coated murine cells were also found to be susceptible to CTL-mediated lysis. Comparisons of murine CTL-mediated lysis by three paramyxoviruses (mumps, Sendai, and Newcastle disease viruses) indicated that no cross-reactivity occurred. The CTL response with mumps virus exhibited specific unresponsiveness patterns, as influenced by the H-2 K/D regions of the mouse strains, that were partially different from those of Sendai virus and Newcastle disease virus.  相似文献   

15.
Retrovirus infection of murine fibroblasts was found to alter the expression of major histocompatibility complex (MHC) antigens. Fibroblasts infected with Moloney murine leukemia virus (M-MuLV) exhibited up to a 10-fold increase in cell surface expression of all three class I MHC antigens. Increases in MHC expression resulted in the increased susceptibility of M-MuLV-infected cells to lysis by allospecific cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL). M-MuLV appears to exert its effect at the genomic level, because mRNA specific for class I antigens, as well as beta 2-microglobulin, show a fourfold increase. Fibroblasts infected with the Moloney sarcoma virus (MSV):M-MuLV complex show no increase in MHC antigen expression or class I mRNA synthesis, suggesting that co-infection with MSV inhibits M-MuLV enhancement of MHC gene expression. Quantitative differences in class I antigen expression on virus-infected cells were also found to influence the susceptibility of infected cells to lysis by H-2-restricted, virus-specific CTL. Differential lysis of infected cells expressing varied levels of class I antigens by M-MuLV-specific bulk CTL populations and CTL clones suggests that individual clones may have different quantitative requirements for class I antigen expression. The MSV inhibition of MHC expression could be reversed by interferon-gamma. Treatment of MSV:M-MuLV-infected fibroblasts with interferon-gamma increased their susceptibility to lysis by both allogeneic and syngeneic CTL. The data suggest that interferon-gamma may function in the host's immune response to viral infections by enhancing MHC antigen expression, thereby increasing the susceptibility of virus-infected cells to lysis by H-2-restricted, virus-specific CTL.  相似文献   

16.
The 19-kDa glycoprotein (gp 19K) coded by early region E3 of adenovirus is of interest as a model for glycoprotein processing and sorting, as well as for the interaction between viral antigens and class I transplantation antigens. In this paper, we show that gp 19K is a major protein synthesized during early stages of infection of human KB cells. We report the purification of gp 19K to near homogeneity, the preparation of a gp 19K antiserum, and structural analyses on the protein. We have determined the DNA sequence of the gp 19K gene in adenovirus type 5 (Ad5) for comparison with the published sequence (Hérissé, J., Courtois, G., and Galibert, F. (1980) Nucleic Acids Res. 8, 2173-2192) of adenovirus type 2 (Ad2). Fragments produced by cyanogen bromide cleavage of Ad2 gp 19K are in accord with the DNA sequence, as are synthetic peptide antibodies targeted to the NH2 terminus of Ad2 gp 19K and the COOH terminus of Ad5 gp 19K. The Ad2 and Ad5 proteins are quite homologous. Conserved features include an NH2-terminal signal sequence, two potential Asn-linked glycosylation sites, and a 20-residue putative transmembrane hydrophobic domain followed by a 15-residue polar domain at the COOH terminus. We show that cleavage of the signal peptide occurs between the 17th and 18th amino acids on both the Ad2 and Ad5 versions of gp 19K and that both potential sites are glycosylated with exclusively high-mannose (as opposed to complex) oligosaccharides. Secondary structure predictions suggest six alpha-helix regions including the signal peptide and transmembrane domain, two or three beta-sheet regions, and about eight beta-turns including the two glycosylation sites and the regions flanking the transmembrane domain.  相似文献   

17.
Three proteins encoded by murine cytomegalovirus (MCMV) -- gp34, encoded by m04 (m04/gp34), gp48, encoded by m06 (m06/gp48), and gp40, encoded by m152 (m152/gp40) -- act together to powerfully impact the ability of primed cytotoxic CD8 T lymphocytes (CTL) to kill virus-infected cells. Of these three, the impact of m152/gp40 on CTL lysis appears greater than would be expected based on its impact on cell surface major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I. In addition to MHC class I, m152/gp40 also downregulates the RAE-1 family of NKG2D ligands, which can provide costimulation for CD8 T cells. We hypothesized that m152/gp40 may impact CTL lysis so profoundly because it inhibits both antigen presentation and NKG2D-mediated costimulation. We therefore tested the extent to which m152/gp40's ability to inhibit CTL lysis of MCMV-infected cells could be accounted for by its inhibition of NKG2D signaling. As was predictable from the results reported in the literature, NKG2D ligands were not detected by NKG2D tetramer staining of cells infected with wild-type MCMV, whereas those infected with MCMV lacking m152/gp40 displayed measurable levels of the NKG2D ligand. To determine whether NKG2D signaling contributed to the ability of CTL to lyse these cells, we used a blocking anti-NKG2D antibody. Blocking NKG2D signaling did affect the killing of MCMV-infected cells for some epitopes. However, for all epitopes, the impact of m152/gp40 on CTL lysis was much greater than the impact of inhibition of NKG2D signaling. We conclude that the downregulation of NKG2D ligands by MCMV makes only a small contribution to the impact of m152/gp40 on CTL lysis and only for a small subset of CTL.  相似文献   

18.
AKR leukemia cell lines differing in the amount of H-2K and H-2D antigens expressed on the cell surface were used to assess cell-mediated immune responses in syngeneic mice against Gross/AKR murine leukemia virus (MuLV)-induced tumors. Leukemic cells with reduced expression of H-2Kk antigens were inactive as inducers of Gross-MuLV/H-2k-specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL) and resistant to lysis by CTL raised against H-2Kk positive AKR leukemia cells. H-2Kk positive leukemias induced cytotoxic effectors, which upon restimulation in vitro, lysed the stimulating and other H-2Kk positive leukemia cells. In antibody inhibition experiments, T-cell-mediated cytotoxicity to these leukemias could only be inhibited by antisera and monoclonal antibodies specific for the H-2Kk antigens. Due to this specific role of H-2Kk antigens in T-cell cytotoxicity to Gross/AKR MuLV-induced tumors, reduced expression of H-2Kk antigens on spontaneous AKR leukemic cells could have important implications for surveillance of these neoplastic cells.Abbreviations used in this paper CTL cytotoxic T lymphocytes - MuLV murine leukemia virus  相似文献   

19.
Virus specific, major histocompatibility complex-restricted, cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL) generated in Fischer strain rats infected with human adenovirus type 5 (Ad5) were found to recognize antigenic determinants encoded within the Ad5 early region 1A (E1A) gene. Preliminary mapping studies suggest that the E1A CTL epitopes are encoded within the regions between bp 625 to 810 and 916 to 974 in the first exon of this gene. These epitope-coding regions occur within subregions of E1A that are conserved functionally, and to some extent structurally (approximately 50% sequence homology), among adenoviruses of different groups. Nevertheless, Ad5-specific CTL lysed only targets infected with adenoviruses of the same group (group C; e.g., Ad2) and not targets infected with adenoviruses of different groups (groups A, B, and E). These results suggest that virus-specific CTL may limit adenoviral dissemination by destroying virus-infected cells at an early stage in the viral replicative cycle, during E1A gene expression. Expression of other adenovirus genes does not appear to be required to target infected cells for elimination by CTL.  相似文献   

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