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Receptor-Dependent and -Independent Axonal Retrograde Transport of Poliovirus in Motor Neurons
Authors:Seii Ohka  Mai Sakai  Stephanie Bohnert  Hiroko Igarashi  Katrin Deinhardt  Giampietro Schiavo  Akio Nomoto
Institution:Department of Microbiology, Graduate School of Medicine, The University of Tokyo, 7-3-1 Hongo, Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo 113-0033, Japan,1. Molecular NeuroPathobiology Laboratory, Cancer Research UK London Research Institute, Lincoln''s Inn Fields Laboratories, 44 Lincoln''s Inn Fields, London WC2A 3PX, United Kingdom2.
Abstract:Poliovirus (PV), when injected intramuscularly into the calf, is incorporated into the sciatic nerve and causes an initial paralysis of the inoculated limb in transgenic (Tg) mice carrying the human PV receptor (hPVR/CD155) gene. We have previously demonstrated that a fast retrograde axonal transport process is required for PV dissemination through the sciatic nerves of hPVR-Tg mice and that intramuscularly inoculated PV causes paralytic disease in an hPVR-dependent manner. Here we showed that hPVR-independent axonal transport of PV was observed in hPVR-Tg and non-Tg mice, indicating that several different pathways for PV axonal transport exist in these mice. Using primary motor neurons (MNs) isolated from these mice or rats, we demonstrated that the axonal transport of PV requires several kinetically different motor machineries and that fast transport relies on a system involving cytoplasmic dynein. Unexpectedly, the hPVR-independent axonal transport of PV was not observed in cultured MNs. Thus, PV transport machineries in cultured MNs and in vivo differ in their hPVR requirements. These results suggest that the axonal trafficking of PV is carried out by several distinct pathways and that MNs in culture and in the sciatic nerve in situ are intrinsically different in the uptake and axonal transport of PV.In humans, paralytic poliomyelitis results from the invasion of the central nervous system by circulating poliovirus (PV), probably via the blood-brain barrier. This conclusion is supported by the finding that circulating PV after intravenous inoculation in mice appears to cross the blood-brain barrier at a high rate in a human PV receptor (hPVR/CD155)-independent manner (44). After the virus enters the central nervous system, it replicates in neurons, especially in motor neurons (MNs), inducing the cell death that causes paralytic poliomyelitis. Along with this route of dissemination, a neuron-specific pathway has been reported in humans (31), monkeys (18), and PV-sensitive transgenic (Tg) mice carrying the hPVR gene (34, 37). This neuron-specific pathway appears to be important in causing “provocation poliomyelitis,” which is triggered by injuries after PV ingestion (11). Using differentiated PC12 cells and a PV-sensitive Tg mouse line, we have shown that intramuscularly inoculated PV is taken up by endocytosis at synapses.hPVR is a member of the immunoglobulin (Ig) superfamily, with three linked extracellular Ig-like domains, followed by a membrane-spanning domain and a cytoplasmic domain. Two membrane-bound forms (α and δ) and two secreted forms (β and γ) of hPVR derived by alternative splicing are likely to be expressed in human cells (23). Membrane-bound hPVRs are considered to play important roles in the early steps of infection, such as the binding of the virus to the cell surface, its entry into the cell, and the uncoating of the virus. The N-terminal Ig-like domain harbors the sites for PV binding, and anti-hPVR monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) directed against this region block PV infection (9, 24, 39).hPVR has the ability to alter the conformation of PV from the 160S intact infectious particle to a 135S particle from which the viral capsid protein VP4 is missing (2, 29). PV-related materials recovered from the sciatic nerves of PV-sensitive Tg mice after intramuscular inoculation with PV were mainly composed of intact 160S virions. The amount of 160S particles recovered was greatly reduced by coinjection with MAb p286, which specifically recognizes hPVR (34). Thus, most of the intramuscularly inoculated PV is incorporated into the sciatic nerves of PV-sensitive Tg mice as intact particles in an hPVR-dependent manner. This surprising finding might be due to either of two alternative, yet not mutually exclusive, possibilities: (i) a small number of PVRs bound per virion does not result in a conformational change in the viral capsid with a loss of VP4, but it is sufficient to induce endocytosis of the virus on the cell surface, or (ii) a cellular inhibitor(s) of PV uncoating may exist in the endocytic pathway responsible for PV uptake and transport in Tg mice (34).This mouse strain also allowed us to demonstrate that PV inoculated into the calf was incorporated into the sciatic nerve and retrogradely transported through the axons as intact virion particles. Furthermore, PV dissemination via the neural pathway has been found to rely on a fast retrograde axonal transport system and was inhibited by MAb p286 (34). Moreover, the efficient direct interaction of the hPVR cytoplasmic domain with Tctex-1, a light chain of cytoplasmic dynein (21), has been suggested to play an important role in retrograde transport, together with microtubule integrity (33). Cytoplasmic dynein, a minus-end-directed microtubule-based motor complex (13, 14, 17, 43), is implicated in the transport of early and late endosomes, lysosomes, synaptic vesicles, and endoplasmic reticulum along microtubules (1, 8, 13, 14, 17, 43). Notwithstanding the recent progress in the understanding of PV trafficking, the molecular determinants of the axonal transport of PV in MNs have not yet been elucidated.Despite the importance of axonal retrograde transport in health and disease, the direct visualization of retrograde transport and its quantitative analysis have been hampered by the lack of a reliable assay for living MNs. Such an assay was established in MNs by using a nontoxic fluorescent fragment of tetanus toxin (TeNT HC), which binds to MNs and is retrogradely transported (28). Here, we applied this assay to the visualization of PV in living MNs.We employed hPVR-Tg and non-Tg mice, together with cultured MNs isolated from these mice, to clarify the mechanisms of axonal retrograde transport of PV. Experiments involving cultured MNs showed that the entry and axonal transport of PV are strictly hPVR dependent. However, hPVR-independent axonal transport of PV can be observed in non-Tg as well as in hPVR-Tg mice, suggesting that multiple axonal transport routes for PV are present in vivo.
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