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Short Communication |
Department of Cellular and Molecular Medicine, University Walk, University of Bristol, Bristol BS8 1TD, UK
Correspondence
David A. Matthews
d.a.matthews{at}bristol.ac.uk
| ABSTRACT |
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| MAIN TEXT |
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The icosahedral adenovirus particle contains a double-stranded DNA genome approximately 36 kbp in size. Replication in the cell nucleus results in nucleolar disruption (Castiglia & Flint, 1983
) and redistribution of nucleolar antigens, including B23.1 (Lutz et al., 1996
; Matthews, 2001
; Walton et al., 1989
) and upstream binding factor (UBF) (Lawrence et al., 2006
). Previous research showed that B23.1 and B23.2 stimulate adenovirus DNA replication independently (Okuwaki et al., 2001
) and concluded that the two proteins are essentially equivalent in their activities, perhaps acting as molecular chaperones. Three viral proteins are central to adenovirus DNA replication: the viral polymerase (Adpol), preterminal protein (pTP), which primes DNA synthesis (Liu et al., 2003
), and DNA-binding protein (DBP), which binds single-stranded DNA displaced during genome replication and is required for initiation and elongation of replication (de Jong et al., 2003b
). During infection, a virally encoded protease cleaves pTP (653 aa) to produce mature TP via an intermediate known as iTP, eventually removing 350 aa from the N terminus (Webster et al., 1994
).
Here, we show that B23.1 interacts with both pTP and DBP, whereas B23.2 interacts with DBP only in in vitro pull-down assays. Early in infection, DBP accumulates in discrete areas in the nucleus and recruits B23.2 only. Later, pTP becomes detectable in separate centres adjacent to DBP. At this stage, both B23.1 and B23.2 are recruited to the pTP-rich centres only.
A pull-down assay was used to identify adenovirus DNA replication proteins that interact with human B23.1 and B23.2. Both sequences were amplified from pGFP-B23 (Chen & Huang, 2001
), inserted into pRSETA (Invitrogen) and expressed with an N-terminal His6 tag. Constructs were transformed into BL21-Gold (DE3) pLysS competent Escherichia coli and, following induction with 0.1 mM IPTG, proteins were purified by using Ni–NTA agarose (Qiagen) and eluted with 250 mM imidazole. Purified proteins were coupled onto CNBr-activated Sepharose (Sigma) following the manufacturer's instructions. Approximately 107 HeLa cells were infected with human adenovirus serotype 2 (Ad2) at an m.o.i. of 5. At 18 h post-infection, duplicate cell extracts were prepared by sonication of the cells in PBS/1 % NP-40 (v/v) and passed over equivalent amounts (50 µg) of immobilized B23.1 or B23.2. Following PBS washes, bound proteins were eluted in 2x SDS-PAGE loading buffer and subjected to Western blotting with antibodies against the viral replication proteins pTP [mouse 3D11 (Webster et al., 1997
); Fig. 1a
] and DBP (a kind gift of Professor W. Russell, University of St Andrews, UK; Fig. 1b
). We found that B23.1 (but not B23.2) interacted with pTP; there was reduced interaction with iTP and essentially none with TP in this experiment. Relative to iTP and TP, pTP has a higher affinity for viral DNA and it has been proposed that pTP helps to stabilize the interaction between the viral polymerase and partially unwound viral DNA at the origin (de Jong et al., 2003a
). As pTP interacts with viral DNA at the origins of replication, this may indicate a direct stimulatory role for B23.1 at this step in viral DNA replication (de Jong et al., 2003a
, b
; Webster et al., 1994
). B23.1 and B23.2 interacted with DBP, but neither isoform bound Adpol (data not shown). For a reverse pull-down, pTP and DBP were baculovirus-expressed and purified as described previously (Monaghan et al., 1994
; Temperley & Hay, 1992
), then immobilized on Sepharose columns. The columns were used to bind proteins from uninfected cell lysates and the bound proteins were probed in a Western blot with anti-B23.1 (Zymed) or anti-B23 (Santa Cruz), which detects both isoforms. In the absence of other viral proteins and/or DNA, B23.1 associated with pTP, but not DBP (Fig. 1c
). We saw no association of DBP with B23.1 or B23.2 (data not shown), indicating that this interaction may be dependent upon additional viral factors. Fig. 1(d)
shows a Coomassie stain of the purified B23.1 and B23.2 used in these experiments. Confirmation that the interaction between B23.1 and pTP was direct was gained by means of an immunoprecipitation assay in which anti-B23.1 and anti-pTP antibodies, in combination with protein G–agarose (Sigma), both precipitated B23.1 from a mixture containing only recombinant B23.1 and pTP (Fig. 1e
). However, when pTP was omitted from the mixture, the anti-pTP antibody did not precipitate B23.1.
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Examining B23.2 first, we saw that EGFP–B23.2 was localized mainly in the nucleolus of uninfected cells, as indicated by the nucleolar antigen nucleolin (Fig. 2a
). As adenovirus infection began and significant levels of DBP accumulated, we saw movement of some EGFP–B23.2 from the nucleolus into DBP-rich centres (Fig. 2b
). Fig. 2(c)
shows two infected cells transfected with EGFP–B23.2, the one on the left expressing pTP and DBP and the one on the right expressing DBP only. The left-hand cell represents a later stage in the infection, when there is a greater number of smaller DBP-rich centres alongside newly formed pTP-rich centres. This is typical of the timing of the detection of these antigens in an adenovirus infection when a wider range of times are examined (i.e. DBP detection prior to pTP detection; data not shown) and illustrative that these infections are asynchronous. We saw that, in cells lacking detectable pTP, EGFP–B23.2 colocalized with DBP. However, when cells expressed both DBP and pTP, EGFP–B23.2 co-localized exclusively with pTP adjacent to the DBP-rich centres.
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As endogenous levels of B23.1 and B23.2 are similar in normal cells, we also examined cells in which both Myc–B23.1 and EGFP–B23.2 were overexpressed. In infected cells, the sequestration of EGFP–B23.2 into extranucleolar sites reminiscent of DBP was unaffected by co-expression with Myc–B23.1 (Fig. 2g
).
We also noted that initial co-localization of EGFP–B23.2 with DBP occurred independently of endogenous B23.1, which was still nucleolar at this time (Fig. 2h
). However, once endogenous B23.1 was detected outside the nucleolus, EGFP–B23.2 and endogenous B23.1 both co-localized in centres distinct from DBP (Fig. 2j
).
Based on our finding that B23.2 interacts only with DBP from virally infected cells in pull-down assays, we propose that B23.2 is initially sequestered into DBP/viral DNA-rich centres prior to detectable pTP expression. Once pTP expression becomes detectable, B23.1 can be detected in pTP-rich centres, due to direct interaction with pTP. B23.2 is then drawn into the pTP-rich centres by interaction with the pTP–B23.1–viral DNA complex. Both isoforms have been shown, using in vitro assays, to stimulate viral DNA replication independently (Lawrence et al., 2006
; Okuwaki et al., 2001
); our data indicate that the two isoforms of B23 operate in two distinct replicative environments. The first is B23.2- and DBP-rich, giving way to a second environment rich in pTP, B23.1 and B23.2.
Okuwaki et al. (2001)
presented data showing that the first 160 aa of B23 stimulated adenovirus replication in vitro. We investigated this mutant's ability to interact with pTP and DBP by pull-down assay, as described for B23.1. We found that B23 1–160 bound DBP and pTP (Fig. 3a, b
). Whilst we were unable to clone EGFP–B23 1–160, we were able to generate a Myc-tagged version that also co-localized only with pTP in infected cells (Fig. 3c
). A smaller mutant, 1–116 (which does not stimulate viral DNA replication), was expressed with an N-terminal EGFP tag and it too co-localized only with pTP (data not shown). This implies that the interaction of B23.1 with pTP can be separated from the stimulation of DNA replication. A Coomassie stain of the purified B23 1–160 can be seen in Fig. 3(d)
.
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Although B23.1 and B23.2 form multimeric complexes, we have separated the two proteins in situ in infected cells, reflecting the dynamic interaction between the two (Okuwaki et al., 2002
). However, further conclusions about B23.2 are hampered by the lack of published information on its functions in the cell and the lack of a specific antibody.
B23.1 and B23.2 affect replication of adenovirus genomes in different assays (Lawrence et al., 2006
; Okuwaki et al., 2001
). Our data show that these effects are mediated primarily through interactions with pTP and DBP, that B23.1 and B23.2 act in different replicative environments as the infection progresses and that the two isoforms have different interactions with the replicative machinery.
Three nucleolar antigens are now known to associate with the adenovirus DNA replication machinery: B23.1, B23.2 and UBF (Lawrence et al., 2006
). This report expands the conclusion that the nucleolus is a source of cellular co-factors for adenoviral replication and underlines the significance of B23.2 when examining the role of the nucleolus in viral replication.
| ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
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Received 30 May 2007;
accepted 17 August 2007.
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