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Journal of Virology, December 2000, p. 11413-11417, Vol. 74, No. 23
University of Cambridge Department of
Medicine, Addenbrooke's Hospital, Cambridge CB2 2QQ, United
Kingdom
Received 10 April 2000/Accepted 8 September 2000
Genomic RNA sorting between translation and packaging was examined
for human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) and HIV-2 using
actinomycin D and leptomycin B treatment. Both viruses behaved differently from a simple retrovirus under actinomycin D treatment. With leptomycin B, the lack of apparent functional separation between
translation and packaging functions in lentiviruses was confirmed.
HIV-2 RNA levels were more stable, but reverse transcriptase production
declined similarly to HIV-1.
Assembly of infectious retroviral
particles requires encapsidation of the RNA genome by the structural
protein Gag (2). Since Gag is translated from the genomic
transcript, this RNA species provides both assembly components. It is
of interest to determine whether an individual genomic RNA can fulfill
both destinies or whether a functional separation exists between viral
RNA molecules committed to different roles.
In simple retroviruses this question has been addressed by time course
studies using Rauscher and AKR murine leukemia viruses (MLV)
(10-12). Treatment of chronically infected cells with the transcription inhibitor actinomycin D revealed two nonequilibrating pools of genomic RNA: encapsidated RNA is not detectable at late time
points of treatment, though message capable of protein production persists in the cytoplasm.
No studies of RNA sorting have been reported for complex retroviruses.
Because of the relevance to vector and antiviral design, we applied
this analysis to human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1). We
studied HIV-2 due to evidence of a close association of translation and
packaging (7). We included the simple retrovirus Moloney
murine leukemia virus (MMLV) to validate our system and as a basis for comparison.
Chronically infected cultures of MMLV in NIH 3T3 cells and of HIV-1 and
HIV-2 in Jurkat T cells were used in time course assays. Figure
1 shows the manipulations conducted at
each time point. The time course length was longer for HIV-1 and HIV-2
because of the longer half-life observed for the HIV RNA (data not
shown). This difference also necessitated a fivefold-higher
concentration (5 µg/ml) of actinomycin D. These differing
concentrations inhibit transcription comparably in the two cell types
(1, 10).
0022-538X/00/$04.00+0
Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Comparison of Viral Genomic RNA Sorting Mechanisms
in Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 (HIV-1), HIV-2, and Moloney
Murine Leukemia Virus
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FIG. 1.
Organization of the time course assays. MMLV infection
was initiated by transfection of the proviral clone pNCA (a gift of S. Russell), and the Jurkat cells were infected with stocks of HIV-1 IIIB
or HIV-2 ROD. After 2 to 3 weeks of culture, cells were used in time
course assays. Chronically infected cells were split into an
appropriate number of flasks or dishes, half of which were treated with
antibiotic. At each time point, all cells were washed and either
harvested or resuspended with or without drug treatment. Since all
cells were washed whether or not they were harvested at the next time
point, later-time-point cells undergo more washes. The practice of
expressing values relative to control cells washed in parallel
compensates for this disparity.
As previously (11), supernatant reverse transcriptase (RT)
activity acted as a surrogate for translation of genomic RNA; levels
were measured as previously described (8, 13). Figure 2 shows RT levels plotted as a percentage
of the untreated control RT reading and represents the average of two
to three experiments. Plots of RT decline from independent experiments
were superimposable for HIV-1 and HIV-2. Although MMLV values varied
more, the absence of a marked decline in MLV RT activity is consistent
with published activities of 30 to 80% of control values at 6 h
posttreatment (10, 11). RT activity reductions are not an
artifact of actinomycin D concentration, since time courses performed
at 1 µg/ml for HIV-1 and HIV-2 showed decreases of 47 and 70% from 2 to 8 h, respectively, while the MMLV decrease was just 12% (data
not shown). Actinomycin D interferes with strong-stop and DNA-dependent
DNA synthesis by HIV-1 RT (5, 6). However, the concentration
used our assays is 17- to 25-fold lower than the 50% inhibitory
concentrations (IC50) given for inhibition of these
processes. Strand transfer is inhibited at concentrations lower than
those used here (5, 6), but a decrease in new infections
would not be apparent in chronically infected cultures over the time
period examined.
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To investigate viral RNA, cytoplasmic and virion RNA samples were
extracted for use in RNase protection assays (RPA) as previously described (8). Riboprobes distinguished between viral DNA, full-length RNA, and spliced RNA. HIV-1 and HIV-2 probes were produced
from KSII
CS (9) and KS2HIV-2 (7),
respectively. MMLV riboprobes were generated from Bluescript KS II
(Stratagene) containing SacI (position 414) to
SpeI (position 731) (provirus numbering). Prior titrations
established the quantity of cytoplasmic and virion RNA, ensuring a
molar excess of probe (data not shown). RPA contained constant input
amounts of cytoplasmic RNA, and virion RNA was normalized for RT
activity. The HIV experiments included controls containing twice the
usual input of RNA to confirm probe excess. Jurkat RNA was spiked into
the virion samples so that
-actin mRNA or 28S rRNA probes (Ambion)
could be used to detect loading variation; the latter probe also
permitted normalization of cytoplasmic RNA.
A representative RPA of two to three independent time course
experiments is shown (Fig. 3A to C), with
plots of RNA level as a percentage of that in an untreated sample (Fig.
3D to F). As previously described (10, 11), MMLV showed a
differential decline in cytoplasmic and virion RNA levels. By 6 h
posttreatment, virtually no encapsidated RNA was detectable, while only
a moderate decline in cytoplasmic RNA was evident. By contrast,
although HIV-1 virion RNA declines, it is in direct proportion to the
level of cytoplasmic RNA. HIV-2 RNA levels were more stable but
maintained the same virion/cytoplasmic ratios. Even in a time course
performed at 10 µg of actinomycin D/ml, levels did not fall (data not
shown).
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Actinomycin D can affect ribosomal loading (14), so to
control for such secondary effects, the HIV experiments were repeated with leptomycin B, an inhibitor of Rev-mediated CRM1-dependent nucleocytoplasmic mRNA transport (3, 15). Leptomycin
B-induced changes in RT activity and RNA levels are plotted in Fig.
4. As with actinomycin D treatment, RT
activity and both viral and cytoplasmic RNA levels declined in
HIV-1-infected Jurkat cell cultures. HIV-2 was treated with leptomycin
B at double the concentration used with HIV-1 in an attempt to limit
cytoplasmic RNA levels. However, as before, RNA levels remained more or
less constant, while RT values declined similarly to those for HIV-1.
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The consistency of results obtained with the two antibiotics suggests
that the findings reflect drug-induced changes in cytoplasmic RNA
levels, not reagent-specific side effects. However, both agents are
cytotoxic, resulting in viabilities 63 to 75% of control levels by the
12-h time point (data not shown). Nevertheless, normalizing RT activity
for cell viability demonstrates that the RT reduction is not merely the
result of nonspecific cytotoxicity (Fig.
5A). Furthermore, the measured RT
activity is consistent with a real decline in Gag protein amount.
Supernatant fractions of time course experiments were assayed by
Western blotting with anticapsid monoclonal antibodies. In each case,
there is a decline in Gag levels in treated cells (Fig. 5B). Direct
effects on RT incorporation or release are unlikely and were not
observed in a simple retrovirus (4, 11).
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These data indicate major differences in virion assembly between the simple murine retroviruses and HIV-1. Although a subset of cytoplasmic RNA in MLV appears to be inaccessible to packaging, there is apparently no functional separation of HIV-1 transcripts. When the supply of cytoplasmic RNA is cut off during transcription (actinomycin D) or nucleocytoplasmic transport (leptomycin B), the amount of RNA packaged drops off at the same rate as the amount of viral RNA remaining in the cytoplasm. The level of RT activity declines analogously, reflecting the diminishing amount of RNA available for Gag-Pol translation. Although it is possible that translation and packaging pools exist in HIV-1 but are the same size or decay at the same rate, the simplest explanation is that there is no functional separation of HIV-1 RNA.
The differences between HIV-1 and HIV-2 are less pronounced, but it is apparent that HIV-2 cytoplasmic RNA levels are more stable under actinomycin D or leptomycin B treatment. Although leptomycin B sensitivity has not been examined for HIV-2 Rev-dependent transport, both viruses should be equally sensitive to actinomycin D-mediated transcription inhibition. HIV-2 transcripts may be more stable, the pool of cytoplasmic viral transcripts may be relatively larger, or the virus may have a lower rate of particle release. Although the relationship between particle number and RT activity has not been analyzed here, untreated supernatant RT activities were similar in the HIV-1 and HIV-2 time courses (data not shown), suggesting that a lower rate of virion production is not a likely explanation for the differences seen.
The rates of RT activity decline are similar in HIV-1 and HIV-2 despite the relative stability of HIV-2 RNA, suggesting that a factor needed for translation of HIV-2 Gag-Pol is limited. This agent may be translation-competent RNA or a cofactor necessary for RT production or release. The possible involvement of a labile cellular cofactor was not addressed in earlier MLV studies. Even if HIV-2 and MLV both rely upon a nonviral factor for virion production, their behavior is strikingly different. It is RT production that decays disproportionately in HIV-2, and it is packaging that diminishes in MMLV. Intriguingly, HIV-2 packages RNA predominantly in cis (7), such that the newly synthesized Gag preferentially encapsidates the RNA from which it was produced. This mechanism might sequester RNA in the packaging pathway and, without new RNA appearing in the cytoplasm, cause a decline in RT levels.
Understanding virion assembly better in lentiviruses such as HIV-1 may unveil further targets for antiviral chemotherapy and will aid in the design of efficient and safe lentiviral vectors for gene therapy. This study suggests that, in a lentivirus, genomic RNA is interchangeable between translation and packaging. Additionally, translation of structural proteins in HIV-2 is exquisitely sensitive to agents blocking the appearance of nascent transcripts in the cytoplasm.
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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MMLV proviral plasmid pNCA was a kind gift of S. Russell. We are grateful to M. Yoshida for the gift of leptomycin B. HIV-1 IIIB, HIV-2 ROD, and the p24CA monoclonal antibody were supplied by the NIBSC AIDS Reagent Programme. S. Griffin is thanked for useful discussions.
N.D. is a recipient of a National Science Foundation Graduate Student Fellowship and acknowledges support from the Marshall Aid Commemoration Commission. This work was supported by the Medical Research Council and the Sykes Trust.
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FOOTNOTES |
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* Corresponding author. Mailing address: University of Cambridge Department of Medicine, Level 5, Addenbrooke's Hospital, Cambridge CB2 2QQ, United Kingdom. Phone: 44-1223-336747. Fax: 44-1223-336846. E-mail: amll1{at}mole.bio.cam.ac.uk.
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