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Characterization of Determinants Important for Hepatitis C Virus p7 Function in Morphogenesis by Using trans-Complementation
Authors:Christiane Brohm  Eike Steinmann  Martina Friesland  Ivo C. Lorenz  Arvind Patel  Francois Penin  Ralf Bartenschlager  Thomas Pietschmann
Abstract:Hepatitis C virus (HCV) p7 is an integral membrane protein that forms ion channels in vitro and that is crucial for the efficient assembly and release of infectious virions. Due to these properties, p7 was included in the family of viroporins that comprises proteins like influenza A virus M2 and human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) vpu, which alter membrane permeability and facilitate the release of infectious viruses. p7 from different HCV isolates sustains virus production with variable efficiency. Moreover, p7 determinants modulate processing at the E2/p7 and the p7/NS2 signal peptidase cleavage sites, and E2/p7 cleavage is incomplete. Consequently, it was unclear if a differential ability to sustain virus production was due to variable ion channel activity or due to alternate processing at these sites. Therefore, we developed a trans-complementation assay permitting the analysis of p7 outside of the HCV polyprotein and thus independently of processing. The rescue of p7-defective HCV genomes was accomplished by providing E2, p7, and NS2, or, in some cases, by p7 alone both in a transient complementation assay as well as in stable cell lines. In contrast, neither influenza A virus M2 nor HIV-1 vpu compensated for defective p7 in HCV morphogenesis. Thus, p7 is absolutely essential for the production of infectious HCV particles. Moreover, our data indicate that p7 can operate independently of an upstream signal sequence, and that a tyrosine residue close to the conserved dibasic motif of p7 is important for optimal virus production in the context of genotype 2a viruses. The experimental system described here should be helpful to investigate further key determinants of p7 that are essential for its structure and function in the absence of secondary effects caused by altered polyprotein processing.Hepatitis C virus (HCV) is a highly variable enveloped virus. It is the sole member of the genus Hepacivirus within the family Flaviviridae (36). Based on sequence homology, patient isolates are classified into seven genotypes and more than 100 subtypes (17, 52).The genome of HCV is a single-stranded RNA molecule of positive polarity with a size of ∼9.6 kb. It encodes a polyprotein of ca. 3,000 amino acids and contains nontranslated regions (NTRs) at both the 5′ and 3′ termini that are required for translation and RNA replication (33). Cellular and two viral proteases, NS2-3 and NS3-4A, liberate the individual viral proteins. The N-terminal portion of the polyprotein contains the structural proteins core and envelope glycoproteins 1 and 2 (E1, E2), which constitute the virus particle. These proteins are cleaved from the polyprotein by the host cell signal peptidase (18, 24). In the case of the core protein, an additional cleavage step mediated by the signal peptide peptidase liberates its mature C terminus (41). Further downstream of the structural proteins the polyprotein harbors p7, a short membrane-associated polypeptide required for virus assembly and release (27, 55), and the nonstructural (NS) proteins NS2, NS3, NS4A, NS4B, NS5A, and NS5B. Proteins NS3 to NS5B are the minimal components of the membrane-bound replication complexes that catalyze RNA replication (16, 38).Using the novel JFH1-based HCV infection model (35, 61, 65), it has been demonstrated recently that besides the canonical structural proteins core, E1, and E2, NS5A, p7, NS3, and NS2 also are crucial for the production of infectious HCV particles (1, 26, 27, 39, 40, 55, 57). These data highlight that HCV assembly and release is a coordinated process involving both structural and nonstructural proteins. However, how the aforementioned proteins contribute to the production of infectious virus particles remains poorly understood.HCV p7 comprises two helical domains connected by a polar loop. Studies with epitope-tagged p7 variants indicate that both termini of the protein are resident in the lumen of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) (4) or that, in addition, a second alternative topology with the C terminus exposed to the cytoplasm can be adopted (25). Using such constructs for fluorescent microscopy, a complex localization of p7 was revealed. While most prominent staining generally was observed at the ER (4, 19, 23), pools of p7 also were detected at mitochondria (19) and at the plasma membrane (4). These data suggest that p7 influences virus replication at various sites within infected cells, and that the function and/or localization of p7 is regulated by different trafficking signals that could be exposed in a topology-dependent manner. However, caution is warranted since, due to the lack of antibodies, epitope-tagged p7 variants had to be employed for most analyses, and since localization studies of virus-producing cells with functional p7 still are lacking.One hallmark of p7 is its ability to form cation-selective channels in artificial membranes (20, 46, 49), a property that likely depends on the oligomerization of the protein (7, 21). There are intriguing correlations that link p7''s function as an ion channel protein in vitro to its role in the assembly and release of infectious HCV particles in tissue culture. First, the mutation of the conserved dibasic motif in the polar loop of p7 abrogates ion channel activity and interferes with virus production in tissue culture (20, 27, 55). Second, iminosugars coupled to long alkyl chains like N-nonyl deoxygalactonojirimycin (NN-DGJ) not only interfere with ion channel activity but also repress the release of infectious particles from transfected Huh-7 cells (46, 56). Taken together, these data suggest that the ion channel activity of p7 is crucial for its role in the late steps of the HCV replication cycle, and that this function is amenable to the development of selective inhibitors for antiviral therapy. However, presently it is unknown how mechanistically p7, as an ion channel protein, facilitates HCV assembly and release or if p7 also is a component of virus particles and participates in entry.Besides its function as an ion channel, p7 harbors a signal-like sequence in its C-terminal domain that directs the insertion of the N terminus of NS2 into the lumen of the ER (4). Strikingly, due to structural determinants within the C terminus of E2, p7, and the N terminus of NS2, signalase cleavages at the E2/p7 and the p7/NS2 sites are incomplete, thus yielding E2-p7-NS2 and E2-p7 precursor proteins (3, 18, 34, 42). Although these precursors are not absolutely essential for the production of infectious HCV particles (26, 27), a defined ratio between mature and precursor proteins might play a role to orchestrate optimal virus assembly. Given these circumstances, genetic studies of p7 function are complicated, since mutations may, on the one hand, affect ion channel activity, and on the other hand influence processing at the E2-p7 and p7-NS2 junctions.To circumvent this problem, in this study we developed a complementation system that permits the rescue of genomes with defects in p7 by the ectopic expression of p7 in trans. This enabled us to directly assess the function of p7 in the absence of secondary effects caused by aberrant polyprotein cleavage. Using this approach, we analyzed the role of the native signal sequence of p7 and p7-containing precursor proteins. In addition, we investigated key determinants that are essential for the optimal function of p7 in the course of HCV infectious particle production.
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