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1 Division of Virology, Department of Pathology, University of Cambridge, Tennis Court Road, Cambridge CB2 1QP, UK
2 Medical Research Council Virology Unit, Glasgow G11 5JR, UK
Correspondence
Stacey Efstathiou
se{at}mole.bio.cam.ac.uk
| ABSTRACT |
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These authors contributed equally to this work. ![]()
Present address: Department of Molecular Microbiology and Immunology, Oregon Health Sciences University, Portland, OR 92701, USA. ![]()
| INTRODUCTION |
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It has been established that post-translational modifications of the N-terminal tails of histones are involved in the regulation of transcription (Jenuwein & Allis, 2001
; Kouzarides, 2002
). Thus, hyperacetylation of histones is associated with an open chromatin conformation and transcriptional activity, whilst histone hypoacetylation is associated with condensed chromatin and gene silencing. Recent work on HSV-1 suggests that chromatinization of the virus genome and certain accompanying histone modifications offer a means of regulating virus gene expression during lytic infection (Herrera & Triezenberg, 2004
; Kent et al., 2004
). In the context of latency, it is of significance that studies utilizing chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) assays have shown the LAT promoter to be enriched with acetylated histone H3, whilst representative lytic cycle promoters exhibit a decreased association with acetylated histones (Kubat et al., 2004a
, b
). The demonstration that acetylated histones are enriched on the ICP0 promoter following the application of a ganglionic reactivation stimulus supports the view that genome de-repression is linked to the acetylation status of histones positioned on lytic cycle promoters (Amelio et al., 2006
). Furthermore, data showing that a LAT-deficient mutant exhibits enrichment of histone modifications associated with transcriptional activation suggests that virus functions expressed during latency facilitate maintenance of a repressed genome (Wang et al., 2005
).
In order to facilitate studies of histones associated with transcriptionally repressed HSV-1 genomes, we have utilized a fibroblast model of latency based on previously described systems (Harris & Preston, 1991
; Preston & Nicholl, 1997
; Samaniego et al., 1998
). In these systems, replication-defective mutants of HSV-1 are used to infect tissue culture cells and establish a quiescent infection. Repressed virus genomes are retained in a non-linear configuration and, although resistant to a variety of reactivation stimuli, they can be efficiently de-repressed by superinfection with HSV or provision of ICP0 in trans (Harris et al., 1989
; Zhu et al., 1990
; Preston & Nicholl, 1997
; Hobbs et al., 2001
). These studies and the fact that ICP0 null mutants exhibit reactivation deficits in animal model systems (Leib et al., 1989
; Halford & Schaffer, 2001
) has led to interest in the properties and function of ICP0 that may be of relevance to the process of reactivation from latency (reviewed by Everett, 2000
; Hagglund & Roizman, 2004
; Efstathiou & Preston, 2005
). In the current study, we show that virus genomes in quiescently infected MRC-5 cells adopted a repressed histone-associated structure marked by the enrichment of deacetylated histones and histone H3 lysine 9 (K9) methylation at a variety of HSV-1 promoters. In addition, we report that genome de-repression mediated by virus superinfection or delivery of ICP0 using a recombinant adenovirus resulted in the enrichment of acetylated histones on HSV DNA. These data indicate that ICP0-mediated genome de-repression is intimately linked to enrichment of acetylated histones at virus promoters.
| METHODS |
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Establishment of quiescently infected MRC-5 cells.
MRC-5 cells were infected with in1382 or in1383 at an m.o.i. of 1 and incubated at the non-permissive temperature of 39 °C. At 5–6 days post-infection (p.i.), cells were harvested for ChIP assays of repressed virus genomes or induced to reactivate by superinfection with HSV-2 strain 333. Prior to superinfection, cells were incubated for 1 h with 100 µg phosphonoacetic acid (PAA) ml–1 and then superinfected with 5 p.f.u. HSV-2 per cell in the presence of PAA. Adenovirus vectors used in this study were kindly provided by Dr Anna Salvetti (INSERM, France) and comprised Ad.TRE.ICP0 containing the HSV-1 strain 17 ICP0 gene under the control of the tetracycline-responsive (TRE) promoter, Ad.TRE.FXE containing a non-functional RING finger deletion of the HSV-1 strain 17 ICP0 gene, and Ad.CMV.rtTA encoding the reverse tetracycline transactivator under the control of the HCMV IE promoter. In these three recombinants, the transgene was inserted in place of the E1 gene in an E1/E3-deficient backbone.
For β-galactosidase staining, infected MRC-5 cells, either before or after de-repression, were fixed with 0.5 % glutaraldehyde in PBS and then overlaid with 5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolyl β-D-galactopyranoside (X-gal) solution (0.01 % sodium deoxycholate, 0.02 % NP-40, 2 mM MgCl2, 1 mg X-gal ml–1, 5 mM potassium ferricyanide and 5 mM potassium ferrocyanide) and incubated at 37 °C for 6 h.
ChIP assays.
Cell monolayers were fixed with 1 % formaldehyde for 10 min at 37 °C before removal into ice-cold PBS containing EDTA-free protease inhibitor cocktail (Roche) and 1 mM PMSF (Roche). Cell pellets (4x106 cells) were resuspended in 1.2 ml lysis buffer [50 mM Tris/HCl (pH 8.0), 1 % SDS, 10 mM EDTA] containing protease inhibitors and incubated on ice for 10 min. The cell lysate was sonicated (Vibracell; Jencons Scientific Ltd) at 40 % output twice for 2 min each to shear the chromatin into a median size range of 500–1000 bp. Aliquots (250 µl) of cell lysate were diluted 10-fold in dilution buffer [20 mM Tris/HCl (pH 8.0), 1 % Triton X-100, 2 mM EDTA, 150 mM NaCl]. Each aliquot was pre-cleared with 100 µl protein A–Sepharose beads [0.5 g protein A–Sepharose (Sigma) in 5 ml dilution buffer containing 1 mg salmon sperm DNA ml–1, 1 mg BSA ml–1 and 0.02 % sodium azide] for 1 h at 4 °C. Volumes of chromatin (250 µl) were incubated overnight with anti-pan-acetylated histone H3 (acetyl K9 and K14) (06-599; Upstate Biotechnology), anti-histone H3 trimethyl K9 (ab8898; Abcam), anti-HP1-
(ab9057; Abcam), anti-C-terminal histone H3 (ab1791; Abcam), anti-pan-acetylated histone H4 (acetyl K4, K7, K11 and K15) (06-866; Upstate Biotechnology) or anti-pan-acetylated histone H4 (raised against chemically acetylated histone H4) (ab193; Abcam). Antibody–antigen complexes were isolated with protein A–Sepharose beads and eluted by incubation with 1 % SDS in 0.1 M NaHCO3. Eluted DNA–protein complexes were incubated with 0.2 M NaCl at 65 °C overnight to reverse the formaldehyde cross-linking and the DNA was purified by treatment with proteinase K followed by phenol/chloroform extraction. The DNA was isolated by ethanol precipitation following the addition of glycogen and tRNA as carrier.
Standard PCR analyses.
The genomic region of interest was subjected to a maximum of 35 cycles of PCR amplification using AmpliTaq Gold Polymerase (Roche) using the following primer sets: ICP0: 5'-TATACCCCACGCCTTTCCCC-3' [forward primer (FP), nt 2089–2070] and 5'-CCTTGTTCCGCTTCCCGGTA-3' [reverse primer (RP), nt 1553–1572]; glycoprotein C (gC): 5'-GTTTTCCGAGGTTGTCGTGT-3' (FP, nt 95830–95849) and 5'-GGTCTTCGGGACTAATGCCT-3' (RP, nt 96088–96069); LAT promoter: 5'-CCCAGAGTCATTGTTTATGTGG-3' (FP, nt 118519–118540): 5'-AGCAAAAACAGGCCACAGC-3' (RP, nt 118759–118741). PCRs on input DNA and bound ChIP fractions were performed simultaneously and sampled after 20, 25 and 30 cycles. The PCR conditions were as follows: initial denaturation for 5 min at 95 °C, cycles of 1 min at 94 °C, 1 min at 55 °C (gC and LAT primers) or 65 °C (ICP0 primers) and 1 min at 72 °C, and a final elongation of 10 min at 72 °C. PCR products were resolved by agarose gel electrophoresis and analysed by Southern blot hybridization using radiolabelled probes specific for each amplicon.
Quantitative real-time PCR.
Real-time PCR was carried out using a Rotor-Gene (Corbett Research) in triplicate for each reaction. The primer sets and Taqman probes employed for amplification of each virus promoter, given as HSV-1 sequence co-ordinates, were as follows: ICP0: nt 2072–2090 (FP), nt 2209–2139 (RP), nt 2115–2134 (probe); ICP4: nt 131522–131538 (FP), nt 131747–131730 (RP), nt 131700–131678 (probe); ICP27: nt 113238–113259 (FP), nt 113384–113367 (RP), nt 113328–113308 (probe); VP16: nt 105408–105436 (FP), nt 105712–105695 (RP), nt 105439–105462 (probe); gC: nt 95689–95707 (FP), nt 95800–95783 (RP), 95756–95777 (probe); LAT promoter: nt 118248–118267 (FP), nt 118374–118351 (RP), nt 118323–118303 (probe); LAT enhancer: nt 119314–119334 (FP), nt 119425–119405 (RP), nt 119336–119360 (probe). The transcription start sites for the HSV promoters were as follows: ICP0, nt 2115; ICP4, nt 131429; VP16, nt 105259; ICP27, nt 113596; gC, nt 96170; LAT, nt 118801. The following primers were also used: human GAPDH: nt 1725–1744 (FP), nt 1913–1894 (RP), nt 1749–1773 (probe) (relative to the transcription start site of nt 1874; GenBank accession no. AY340484
[GenBank]
); human tumour necrosis factor (TNF)-
: nt 1768–1789 (FP), nt 2262–2241 (RP), nt 1878–1904 (probe) (Nitsche et al., 2001
); human
-globin: nt 1999–2020 (FP), nt 2185–2166 (RP), nt 2147–2121 (probe) (Bottardi et al., 2003
). Primers and HPLC-purified probes were manufactured by TIB-Molbiol. PCR products were quantified using a Rotor-Gene and associated software as the copy number per PCR, calculated from triplicate results from each PCR. A standard curve for each gene region was generated using dilutions of appropriate plasmids. The level of association of modified histones in the original chromatin sample was expressed as the ratio of immunoprecipitated DNA (IP-DNA) (bound) to the total amount of DNA in the chromatin sample (input). Fold changes in the association of histones in uninduced latently infected material in comparison with associations observed following induction of reactivation were calculated as the ratio of IP-DNA/input (induced) to IP-DNA/input (uninduced). The level of association of modified histones at the human GAPDH region was quantified and expressed as an IP-DNA/input ratio from which fold changes relative to uninduced chromatin were calculated. To normalize the fold changes against human GAPDH, each fold change occurring at a viral promoter was divided by the fold change occurring at GAPDH in the corresponding chromatin sample.
| RESULTS |
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Changes in histone modifications associated with the HSV-1 genome during quiescence and de-repression mediated by HSV-2 superinfection
To examine the nature of modified histones associated with HSV DNA during quiescence and de-repression following HSV-2 superinfection, histone modifications were examined using ChIP assays. Our initial attention focused on the association at the ICP0 promoter of pan-acetylated histone H4 (AcH4), a marker of transcriptionally active chromatin, and trimethylation of lysine 9 of histone H3 (TMK9H3), a marker of repressed chromatin (Jenuwein & Allis, 2001
). An increase in association of AcH4 was observed at the ICP0 promoter 6 h after HSV-2 superinfection relative to quiescent genomes (Fig. 2a
, lanes 3 and 5). Conversely, during quiescence, there was a clear association of the repressive TMK9H3 marker and a detectable decrease in this modified histone at the ICP0 promoter following genome de-repression (Fig. 2a
, lanes 4 and 6). These results indicated that acquisition of a repressed state during quiescence of HSV in MRC-5 cells is associated with a repressed histone marker (TMK9H3) and that de-repression following superinfection is associated with histone H4 acetylation at the ICP0 promoter, a representative IE gene promoter. In order to determine whether the observed increased association of acetylated histones at the ICP0 promoter following de-repression reflected changes occurring at other genomic loci, we examined the gC late promoter and the LAT promoter. ChIP analyses revealed an increased association of AcH4 with antibodies raised against either H4 acetylated at K4, K7, K11 and K15 (AcH4) (Fig. 2b
, lanes 1 and 2), chemically acetylated H4 (Fig. 2b
, lanes 3 and 4) or pan-acetylated histone H3 (AcH3; Fig. 2b
, lanes 5 and 6). Although differences in immunoprecipitation efficiencies were observed with these antibodies, in all cases an increased association of acetylated histones at virus promoters was evident following de-repression. The results shown in Fig. 2
(b) (right panel) confirmed that equivalent amounts of input chromatin from latently infected or superinfected cells were analysed. No increase in association of acetylated histones was observed at the human GAPDH promoter following superinfection, suggesting that the acetylation status of this transcriptionally active housekeeping promoter is not altered by the de-repressive activity of the superinfecting virus.
|
10–28-fold change in AcH3 bound to virus promoters 2 h after superinfection, consistent with genome de-repression (Fig. 4a
2.5–3-fold change occurring 2 h post-superinfection (Fig. 4b
3.2–5-fold change observed compared with uninduced cells (Fig. 4c
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and
-globin was examined. Delivery of functional ICP0 did not impact the level of AcH3 at either transcriptionally active (GAPDH) or transcriptionally silent (TNF-
,
-globin) genes and had no impact on nucleosome occupancy as assessed using a histone H3 C-terminal-specific antibody (Fig. 5b
or
-globin genes. In contrast to the inability of ICP0 to increase the association of AcH3 with the cellular genes examined, ICP0 expression resulted in a marked increase in the IP-DNA/input ratios across a range of virus promoters (Fig. 5c
The delivery of functional ICP0 to quiescently infected cells resulted in an enrichment of AcH3 at all virus promoters examined and, with the exception of the ICP0 promoter, the fold change in acetylation increased between 16 and 24 h following adenovirus transduction (Fig. 6a
). The enrichment of AcH3 at virus promoters was dependent on the RING finger of ICP0, as transduction of quiescently infected cells with Ad.TRE.FXE did not result in an increased association of AcH3 at virus promoters, consistent with the inability of this adenovirus vector to induce β-galactosidase expression from resident in1382 genomes. In contrast to the modest but reproducible enrichment of HP1 at virus promoters following HSV-2 superinfection, delivery of ICP0 using an adenovirus vector did not result in an obvious enrichment of HP1 at virus promoters (Fig. 6b
). However, a reduction in association of TMK9H3 was observed at virus promoters following ICP0-mediated de-repression (Fig. 6c
). The overwhelming conclusions from these experiments are that: (i) there is the existence of a direct correlation between histone acetylation at virus promoters and HSV genome de-repression; (ii) there is a dependency on an intact ICP0 RING finger for this effect; (iii) delivery of ICP0 in isolation does not lead to an obvious recruitment of HP1; and (iv) de-repression is associated with a reproducible decrease in association of TMK9H3.
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| DISCUSSION |
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The inability to de-repress quiescent genomes following superinfection with the HSV-1 ICP0 mutant dl1403 or an adenovirus containing a non-functional ICP0 gene is consistent with earlier studies demonstrating a crucial role for ICP0 in genome de-repression (reviewed by Preston, 2000
). The precise mechanism by which ICP0 mediates its effect is unclear. However the observation that ICP0 expression converts quiescent genomes from a repressed state characterized by an under-representation of acetylated histone H3 and H4 to a transcriptionally permissive form of chromatin enriched with acetylated histones suggests that a key response to ICP0 is the reversal of histone-mediated gene silencing.
Our initial studies focused on the association of modified histones at the ICP0 promoter. ChIP analyses revealed a relative lack of association of AcH3 and AcH4 at this promoter during quiescence, with a marked increase in association of these acetylated histones following HSV-mediated de-repression. Conversely, during quiescence, there was a strong association of the repressive TMK9H3 marker and a decrease in association of this modified histone at the ICP0 promoter following genome de-repression. Examination of the ICP27, gC and LAT promoters revealed a similar pattern of association of acetylated and methylated histone markers during both quiescence and de-repression, suggesting a global silencing mechanism associated with an enrichment of repressive histone markers at promoters, independent of their kinetic class. Examination of HP1, which is recruited to TMK9H3 and is a characteristic marker of heterochromatic gene silencing during HCMV latency (Murphy et al., 2002
; Reeves et al., 2005
), revealed an association of HP1 with representative virus promoters during quiescence. However, de-repression mediated by HSV-2 superinfection resulted in an increase in association of HP1, with a 2.5–3-fold enrichment observed 2 h after superinfection. De-repression mediated by superinfection with Ad.TRE.ICP0 resulted in an enrichment of AcH3 at all virus promoters examined, but did not result in an increased association of HP1, suggesting that the recruitment of HP1 to a range of virus promoters following HSV-2 superinfection could be the consequence of delivery and/or expression of HSV-2-encoded gene products. Such a view is not without precedent, as recent studies of HCMV major IE promoter regulation have shown that IE86-mediated autorepression is the result of IE86-mediated changes in chromatin structure of the viral major IE promoter characterized by HP1 recruitment (Reeves et al., 2006
).
The fold change in association of AcH3 following Ad.TRE.ICP0-mediated de-repression consistently revealed promoter-specific variation, with the greatest changes (>50-fold) being observed at the LAT promoter and enhancer regions. ChIP analyses using an antibody specific to the C terminus of histone H3 as a measure of nucleosome occupancy revealed little variability in nucleosome occupancy at the various HSV promoters. This observation suggests that acetylation of histone H3 in response to ICP0 expression is more efficiently targeted to regulatory regions of LAT than other representative virus promoters. Consistent with our observations for AcH3, examination of the association of AcH4 at the LAT promoter and enhancer following ICP0-mediated de-repression has revealed 22- and 17-fold changes, respectively (unpublished observations), and experiments are in progress to evaluate the pattern of acetylation of this histone at distinct virus promoters following de-repression mediated by ICP0.
Previous in vivo studies have revealed that, during latency, HSV DNA is retained in a repressed chromatinized state characterized by the association of hypoacetylated histones (Kubat et al., 2004a
, b
) and that LATs may function to facilitate maintenance of a repressed chromatinized genome (Wang et al., 2005
). Furthermore, following ganglionic explantation, genome de-repression is linked to an enrichment of acetylated histones at lytic cycle promoters and a decrease in LAT enhancer histone acetylation and LAT RNA abundance (Amelio et al., 2006
). The decrease in histone acetylation at the LAT enhancer following explant culture of trigeminal ganglia reported by Amelio et al. (2006)
contrasts with the high level of acetylation at the LAT regulatory region observed following ICP0-mediated de-repression observed in the current study. The most likely explanation for this apparently contradictory result is that analyses of sensory ganglia at early times post-explant (1–2 h) facilitates an examination of primary changes in the acetylation of histones at LAT regulatory regions prior to the expression of ICP0. In the current study, which utilized a non-neuronal in vitro latency model system, the acetylation of histones at virus promoters was dependent on ICP0 expression and may therefore reflect events that occur at later stages of virus reactivation following the expression of ICP0. The increased acetylation observed at the LAT promoter/enhancer in response to ICP0 protein expression could function to activate LAT transcription in order to antagonize lytic phase transcription and provide an additional checkpoint in the regulation of reactivation.
Our studies have utilized an in vitro model system to examine the nature of modified histones associated with virus genomes during quiescence and have revealed that, in the absence of virus gene expression, input genomes are effectively silenced and associated with histone markers characteristic of inactive chromatin. These results accord with recent data reporting an association of rapid gene silencing and the formation of inactive chromatin of HSV amplicon-based vectors (Suzuki et al., 2006
). The observation that ICP0-mediated de-repression of quiescent genomes is associated with enrichment of active histone markers at virus promoters is consistent with reports demonstrating an interaction of ICP0 with histone deacetylases (HDACs) (Lomonte et al., 2004
) and its ability to dissociate HDAC 1 and 2 from the CoREST/REST complex (Gu et al., 2005
). It would therefore appear that the ICP0 gene product plays a key role in antagonizing genomic silencing in the in vitro model system described. Whether ICP0 plays a similar crucial role at the earliest stages of reactivation from latency in sensory neurones is less clear. Unlike non-neuronal model systems of HSV quiescence, which are dependent on ICP0 for genome de-repression, reactivation from sensory neurones can be mediated by a wide variety of external stimuli. Furthermore, the observation that ICP0-deficient mutants can initiate virus gene expression in a proportion (<0.1 %) of latently infected neurones in vivo suggests that an ICP0-independent mechanism of de-repression operates in this subset of neurones (Thompson & Sawtell, 2006
). Further studies are clearly warranted to determine the requirement for ICP0 in genome de-repression and induction of reactivation in the majority of latently infected neurones that are refractory to external stimuli.
| ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
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Received 26 June 2007;
accepted 5 September 2007.
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