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1 Graduate Institute of Life Sciences, National Defense Medical Center, Taiwan, ROC
2 The Department of Life Sciences, National Chung-Hsing University, Taiwan, ROC
3 Institute of Biomedical Sciences, Academia Sinica, Taiwan, ROC
4 The Department of Veterinary Medicine, National Chung-Hsing University, Taiwan, ROC
5 Department of Microbiology and Immunology, National Defense Medical Center, Taiwan, ROC
Correspondence
Ching-Len Liao
chinglen{at}ms1.hinet.net
| ABSTRACT |
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| INTRODUCTION |
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Bcl-2 family members are crucial cellular mediators that modulate the outer-membrane permeability of mitochondria in most apoptotic pathways (Cory & Adams, 2002
). As pro-apoptotic signals to mitochondria, the bcl-2 homologue (BH)-3-containing Bid and Bcl-XS lead to release of apoptogenic factors from the intermembrane space of mitochondria, including Cyto-c, apoptotic-inducing factor, endonuclease G, Smac/Diablo and Omi/HtrA2 (Green & Kroemer, 2004
; Saelens et al., 2004
). In contrast, BH1- and BH2-containing anti-apoptotic proteins, such as Bcl-2 and Bcl-XL, inhibit mitochondrial permeabilization by forming heterodimers with Bak or Bax and thereby stabilize the permeability transition (PT) pore complex on mitochondria (Green & Kroemer, 2004
; Saelens et al., 2004
). Vertebrate bcl-2 was the first cellular gene to be recognized as blocking apoptosis induced by infection of certain RNA viruses (Duncan et al., 1999
; Grandgirard et al., 1998
; Liao et al., 1998
; Rodgers et al., 1997
; Ubol et al., 1994
). Moreover, studies involving Sindbis virus (Levine et al., 1993
), Semliki Forest virus (Scallan et al., 1997
) and influenza virus (Hinshaw et al., 1994
) have demonstrated that constitutive bcl-2 expression can prevent infected cells from undergoing apoptosis and help them to become persistently infected. These observations suggest that Bcl-2 plays a role in forcing an acute cytolytic RNA virus to infect its host cells chronically.
Japanese encephalitis virus (JEV), a mosquito-borne flavivirus, is transmitted to humans through chronically infected mosquitoes. JEV is a positive-sense, single-stranded RNA virus that replicates primarily in the cytoplasm of infected cells. The cytopathic effect (CPE) of this encephalitis may result from the cell death of JEV-infected astrocytes and neuronal cells, or from infiltrated inflammatory cells caused by the cytokines released from infected astrocytes (Chen et al., 2000
, 2004
; Liao et al., 2002
). JEV infection triggers apoptosis in numerous culture cell lines, such as baby hamster kidney (BHK-21) cells, mouse neuronal N18 cells and human neural precursor NT-2 cells (Liao et al., 1997
). Overexpression of bcl-2 can effectively delay JEV-induced cell death and subsequently convert some target cells into persistently infected cells (Liao et al., 1997
, 1998
); as the functional Bcl2 is primarily located on the mitochondrial membrane, these observations suggest that JEV-induced apoptosis may involve the mitochondrial apoptosis pathway. Enforced bcl-2 expression does not, however, affect JEV replication and spread during the early lytic infection. Caspase-3-cleaved Bcl-2 products have been found in apoptotic cells, suggesting that caspase-3 activation may participate in JEV-induced apoptosis (Liao et al., 1998
). In this study, we further characterized caspase activation cascades during JEV-induced apoptosis, focusing on activation of the initiators caspase-8 and -9, and the downstream executioners caspase-3 and -6. We found that JEV infection appeared to activate caspase-8 by a FADD-independent manner and to turn on caspase-9 by the mitochondrion-dependent pathway. Although the addition of caspase inhibitors diminished cell injury, they failed to block JEV replication, illustrating that completion of the JEV life cycle does not require caspase activation.
| METHODS |
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Antibodies, reagents and plasmids.
Anti-Cyto-c antibody was purchased from Pharmingen, anti-CPP32 and anti-PARP antibodies were purchased from Santa Cruz and anti-actin antibody was purchased from Chemicon. All cysteine protease inhibitors were purchased from Clontech and Bachem. Western blotting was performed as described previously (Su et al., 2002
). Cyclosporin A (CsA) and ruthenium red (RR) were obtained from Sigma. Plasmids containing bcl-2 and its mutant D34A were a kind gift from D. E. Griffin and J. M. Hardwick (Cheng et al., 1997
; Clem et al., 1998
). The plasmids carrying c-FLIP (Yeh et al., 1998
) and FADD dominant-negative mutant (FADD-DN) (Chen & Lai, 2001
; Walsh et al., 1998
) were obtained from M.-Z. Lai (Academic Sinica, Taipei, Taiwan) and V. Dixit (Genentech, San Francisco, USA), respectively. bcl-2–IRES–DsRed and D34A–IRES–DsRed were constructed by using the backbone of the pCDNA4-HisMax vector (Invitrogen).
Preparation of subcellular fractions.
Preparation of cytosolic fractions from N18 and BHK-21 cells was as described previously (Pastorino et al., 1998
) with modifications. Briefly, cells were disrupted and the nuclei pellets were centrifuged to separate the mitochondrial fraction. Supernatants were collected by centrifugation at 100 000 g for 60 min at 4 °C to obtain the cytosolic S-100 fraction.
Apoptotic cell death analysis.
Cells grown to approximately 80 % confluence were infected by JEV at an m.o.i. of 5, and flow cytometry using propidium iodide and Annexin V staining was performed to distinguish apoptosis from necrosis. Only the Annexin V-positive population was recognized as apoptotic cells. In some experiments, BHK-21 cells were transfected with bcl-2–IRES–DsRed, D34A–IRES–DsRed or control DsRed. Alternatively, cells were co-transfected with the given genes plus the reporter plasmid pEGFP-C1 (Clontech) at a DNA concentration ratio of 5 : 1 and then infected with JEV (m.o.i. of 1) at 12 h post-transfection. Apoptotic cells with green fluorescence were analysed by flow cytometry. In some experiments, the infected, GFP-positive, rounded-up BHK-21 and N18 cells were examined microscopically for the apoptotic hallmarks of cell shrinkage and nuclear condensation (Yu et al., 2002
) at the indicated times post-infection (p.i.).
Caspase activity assay.
JEV-infected cells (2x106) were lysed at various times p.i. and the supernatants were incubated with fluorescent caspase substrate (Clontech): 1 mM Ac-DEVD-fac for caspase-3, 2 mM Ac-IETD-fac for caspase-8 or Ac-LEHD-fac for caspase-9. Results were obtained using a spectrophotometer (TopCount; Tecan) with excitation at 400 nm and absorption at 505 nm.
| RESULTS |
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m), thereby blocking cell death in several systems by stabilizing the PT pores (Halestrap et al., 2002
m and thus stabilizes the PT pores (Kessel et al., 2005
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JEV-induced apoptosis does not require caspase-3 activation in MCF-7 cells
Given that JEV-induced apoptosis can be mediated by caspase-8 activation, we further explored the connection between the activation cascade of the mitochondrial/caspase-9 and FADD/caspase-8 pathways. Oligomerization of the death receptors or activation of the downstream caspase-3 can promote the autocleavage of procaspase-8 (Muzio et al., 1998
; Slee et al., 1999
). In JEV-infected cells, the activation of caspase-8 is concomitant with that of caspase-3 (see Fig. 1a
). To elucidate the hierarchy of initiator caspases and to eliminate the interfering influence from the downstream effector caspase-3, a mammary cancer cell line, MCF-7, with no caspase-3 activity (Yang et al., 2001
) was used to study JEV infection. As shown in Fig. 7(a)
by a virus one-step growth curve, MCF-7 cells appeared to support productive JEV replication, with titres peaking at around 40 h p.i. Apparent apoptosis (55.4±4.8 %) induced by JEV could be detected in infected MCF-7 cells at 60 h p.i. by flow cytometry using Annexin V plus propidium iodide staining (Fig. 7b
). This JEV-induced apoptosis in MCF-7 cells also triggered the gradual release of Cyto-c from mitochondria, beginning at 24 h p.i. (Fig. 7c
). Caspase-9 was activated at 36 h p.i. and downstream caspase-6 was activated at 36 h p.i.; another apical caspase-8 was also activated at 24 h p.i. (Fig. 7d
). These results indicated that JEV does not require caspase-3 activity to induce apoptosis in MCF-7 cells. As both apical caspase-8 and -9 were activated, JEV appeared to simultaneously trigger the death receptor and the mitochondrial pathways in parallel in the caspase-3-deficient MCF-7 cells.
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-induced apoptosis, failed to block JEV-induced apoptosis (Fig. 8b
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| DISCUSSION |
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Virus replication can cause mitochondrial injury by the generation of secondary toxic metabolites, such as ROS, nitric oxide and superphysiological Ca2+ concentrations, which may serve as the upstream signals to modulate the mitochondrial PT pores, leading progressively to 
m collapse, Cyto-c release and caspase-9 activation (Cai & Jones, 1998
; Green & Kroemer, 2004
; Tan et al., 1998
). In an early stage of JEV-induced apoptosis, we found a change in mitochondrial potential and the generation of ROS in N18 cells (Lin et al., 2004
), and even cells treated with UV-inactivated JEV caused ROS-dependent mitochondrial injury and a decrease in 
m (Lin et al., 2004
). Alternatively, we have shown previously that a high level of JEV replication on the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) membrane triggers classical ER stress and an unfolding protein response (Su et al., 2002
), which may lead to depletion of the storage of Ca2+ in the ER lumen, causing an elevation of Ca2+ concentrations to abnormal levels and activating ER-associated caspase-12, which in turn triggers the mitochondrial pathway. It was therefore not unexpected to see in this study that stabilizing the mitochondrial PT pores by CsA or blocking the influx of Ca2+ into the mitochondria by RR could delay the progression of JEV-induced apoptosis. The ectodomain of the M protein of JEV has been shown to be an apoptotic inducer (Catteau et al., 2003a
), probably by triggering 
m collapse, but not by generating ROS or activating caspase-9 (Catteau et al., 2003b
). Conceivably, JEV infection may also cause disruption of 
m by producing certain toxic secondary metabolites, such as ROS, nitric oxide or abnormal Ca2+ concentrations in the target cells.
Several RNA viruses have been shown to readily activate the caspase-8-associated apoptotic pathway (Bitzer et al., 1999
; Clarke & Tyler, 2003
; Liu et al., 2006
). In the case of reovirus, the induced apoptosis involves the activation of death receptors DR5 or DR4 with TNF-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (TRAIL, also called Apo2L), which depends mainly on the intracellular FADD association with procaspase-8 (Clarke & Tyler, 2003
). On the other hand, although caspase-8 is often activated through the death-receptor pathway in many systems, Sendai virus can activate apical caspase-8 without involvement of the upstream death receptors during the apoptotic process (Bitzer et al., 1999
), but whether this caspase-8 activation is dependent or not on association with FADD to form DISC remains unclear. Our results provide a similar example in that JEV infection was shown to induce apical caspase-8 activation in a FADD-independent manner, leading to apoptosis, even without caspase-3 (Figs 7
and 8
). Suppression of the mitochondrial apoptotic pathway by CsA treatment failed to inhibit JEV-induced caspase-8 activation (Fig. 3d
), indicating these were two separate apoptotic pathways occurring in infected cells. This observation also differs from a previous study of rhinovirus-induced apoptosis via the mitochondrial pathway without caspase-8 activation (Deszcz et al., 2005
). As overexpression of NS3 protein derived from West Nile virus or dengue virus has been shown to initiate caspase-8-dependent apoptosis in neural cells (Ramanathan et al., 2006
; Shafee & AbuBakar, 2003
), it is of interest to identify which of the protein(s) of JEV may be responsible for triggering apoptosis in infected cells in a caspase-8-dependent manner.
FADD is the final common link between the death-domain-containing receptors and caspase-8. How can procaspase-8 undergo autocleavage without the involvement of FADD in an apoptotic process? Anticancer drug-mediated caspase-8 activation has been documented as an FADD-independent process (Wesselborg et al., 1999
), but its activation mechanism remains largely unidentified. Although the activation of caspase-8 by caspase-3 has been reported occasionally (Slee et al., 1999
), we have shown in the present study that JEV-induced caspase-8 activation was able to occur without caspase-3 in infected MCF-7 cells (Fig. 7
), indicating that effector caspase-3 is not always essential for the caspase-8-mediated apoptotic pathway in JEV-infected cells. Using the same FADD-DN approach as we did in this study, it has been shown previously (Schrantz et al., 2001
) that transforming growth factor-β induces FADD-independent activation of caspase-8 in the apoptotic pathway regulated by p38 MAP kinase. In our previous study (Su et al., 2002
), we demonstrated that JEV replication triggers the unfolding protein response in infected cells as indicated by induction of certain chaperones, resulting in apoptotic cell death. Moreover, JEV infection also activates the expression of transcription factor CHOP/GADD153 and triggers the activation of p38 MAP kinase. Ectopic expression of CHOP could enhance JEV-induced apoptosis, whereas treatment with a p38-specific inhibitor, SB203580, appeared to attenuate JEV-induced apoptosis. Conceivably, it could be the activated p38 MAP kinase that triggers FADD-independent activation of caspase-8 in JEV-induced apoptosis. Alternatively, the possibility that the TRAIL pathway might also participate in JEV-induced cell death cannot be excluded, as the cytokine TRAIL has previously been reported to activate the caspase cascade by an FADD-independent mechanism (Pan et al., 1997
; Sheridan et al., 1997
).
In summary, we found that JEV replication induced a caspase-mediated apoptosis and that caspase inhibitors, although able to alleviate the apoptotic process, had no effect on virus replication, consistent with a previous observation from West Nile virus-induced apoptosis (Kleinschmidt et al., 2007
). These observations therefore suggest that flavivirus replication does not require caspase activation to complete the virus life cycle. JEV infection not only triggers caspase-9 activation via the mitochondrial pathway but also induces caspase-8 activation separately through a FADD-independent death-receptor pathway. Taken together, our results suggest that caspase cascades triggered by JEV infection may start from activation of the apical caspase-8 and -9, probably through a FADD-independent but mitochondrial-dependent pathway.
| ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
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Received 9 January 2008;
accepted 10 April 2008.
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