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Journal of Virology, December 2000, p. 11472-11478, Vol. 74, No. 24
Zentrum für Molekulare Biologie
Heidelberg, 69120 Heidelberg, Germany
Received 15 May 2000/Accepted 19 September 2000
Hepadnaviruses are DNA viruses but, as pararetroviruses, their
morphogenesis initiates with the encapsidation of an RNA pregenome, and
these viruses have therefore evolved mechanisms to exclude nucleocapsids that contain incompletely matured genomes from
participating in budding and secretion. We provide here evidence that
binding of hepadnavirus core particles from the cytosol to their target membranes is a distinct step in morphogenesis, discriminating among
different populations of intracellular capsids. Using the duck
hepatitis B virus (DHBV) and a flotation assay, we found about half of
the intracellular capsids to be membrane associated due to an intrinsic
membrane-binding affinity. In contrast to free cytosolic capsids, this
subpopulation contained largely mature, double-stranded DNA genomes and
lacked core protein hyperphosphorylation, both features characteristic
for secreted virions. Against expectation, however, the selective
membrane attachment observed did not require the presence of the large
DHBV envelope protein, which has been considered to be crucial for
nucleocapsid-membrane interaction. Furthermore, removal of
surface-exposed phosphate residues from nonfloating capsids by itself
did not suffice to confer membrane affinity and, finally,
hyperphosphorylation was absent from nonenveloped nucleocapsids that
were released from DHBV-transfected cells. Collectively, these
observations argue for a model in which nucleocapsid maturation,
involving the viral genome, capsid structure, and capsid
dephosphorylation, leads to the exposure of a membrane-binding signal as a step crucial for selecting the matured nucleocapsid to be
incorporated into the capsid-independent budding of virus particles.
Enveloped viruses acquire their
outer coat by budding at cellular membranes, a step generally thought
to depend on the interaction between the viral envelope proteins and
internal viral matrix and nucleocapsid components (7).
However, some viruses, such as retroviruses and rhabdoviruses, are able
to release membrane-coated particles also in the absence of viral
envelope proteins (5, 9, 23). Moreover, other viruses,
including coronavirus, herpes simplex virus type 1 and, in particular,
the hepadnaviruses, release empty envelope particles devoid of
nucleocapsids, in addition to infectious virus (28, 30).
Hepatitis B viruses (HBVs; hepadnaviruses) are small, enveloped viruses
and a causative agent of acute and chronic viral hepatitis
(6). Their nucleocapsid, or core particle, which is composed
of a single core protein species, contains a largely double-stranded
DNA genome and the covalently attached viral polymerase and is
surrounded by a membrane shell with two or three viral envelope
proteins embedded. In addition to these infectious virus particles,
hepadnavirus-infected cells secrete, in abundant excess,
nucleocapsid-free enveloped particles, suggesting that hepadnavirus
budding may be an envelope protein-driven process. On the other hand,
it has been shown that budding and secretion of complete virus
particles require the presence of the large viral envelope protein
(L-protein) (2, 27). This has led to the assumption that
nucleocapsids enter the export pathway by attaching to cytosolically
exposed preS ectodomains of membrane-anchored L chains at the ERGIC
(endoplasmic reticulum-to-Golgi intermediate compartment) into which
they bud (11, 19).
Hepadnaviruses replicate their genome via reverse transcription of an
RNA intermediate, a process occurring already in the producer cell and
thereby differing from the related retroviral life cycle (17,
25). Intracellular core particles thus contain the viral genome
at various stages of maturation, while secreted virus has been found to
contain only the mature replication end product, a largely
double-stranded DNA molecule. These observations have been taken to
indicate that completion of genome replication is a prerequisite for
capsid envelopment, and they predict that core particles containing a
mature viral DNA genome display signals for selective budding and
export (25). Support for this prediction comes from more
recent experiments demonstrating a block to virus production for
capsids unable to complete DNA synthesis due to mutational inactivation
of the viral polymerase (8, 31). While this model has been
generally accepted, the nature of the predicted maturation signal and
its cellular or viral interaction partner(s) have remained unknown, as
has the mechanism resulting in selective export of mature capsids.
However, it has been extrapolated that genome maturation could lead to
the exposure of L-protein binding sites on the particle surface,
involving changes in the overall nucleocapsid structure (25,
31). Alternatively, or additionally, more-subtle changes have
been considered to signal capsid maturation, such as a change in core
protein hyperphosphorylation (characterized by the complex series of
core protein species detected upon sodium dodecyl
sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis ([SDS-PAGE]) that is
typically observed with intracellular capsids but is absent in the
secreted virion (21, 22).
We addressed the issues of how hepadnavirus nucleocapsids are selected
for secretion using duck HBV (DHBV) and an adapted flotation assay that
had been previously used to study other viral systems (1,
5). The data we obtained indicate that (i) an initial selection
of mature nucleocapsids by membrane attachment does not require an
interaction with the large envelope protein and, furthermore, that (ii)
extensive dephosphorylation of capsid protein subunits, although
correlating with membrane attachment, is by itself not sufficient to
confer membrane affinity to free cytosolic nucleocapsids.
Virus, plasmids, and antibodies.
DHBV subtype 16 (15) was used throughout the study. pD1.3 contains 1.3 copies of the DHBV 16 genome in tandem arrangement (starting and
terminating at genome positions 1847 and 2816, respectively) inserted
into a minimal pUC vector for bacterial amplification. Plasmid pD1.3
L( Cell culture and transfection.
DHBV-positive livers were
obtained from 4- to 6-week-old ducks, infected congenitally or
experimentally. Primary duck hepatocytes (PDHs) were prepared and
cultivated as described previously (10). For transfection
experiments, the LMH cells (13) were seeded into a six-well
culture dish (about 5 × 105 cells) 24 h before
transfection. To prepare the calcium phosphate precipitate, 20 µg of
plasmid DNA was ethanol precipitated and dissolved in 500 µl of 0.25 M CaCl2. After the addition of 500 µl of 2× HBS (280 mM
NaCl, 50 mM HEPES, 1.5 mM Na2HPO4; pH 7.1), samples were incubated for 20 min at room temperature and 100 µl of
the sample was added dropwise into the medium. At 16 h
posttransfection, cells were washed and fresh medium was added. After 5 days, cells were harvested as described below.
DHBV density flotation assay.
DHBV-infected PDHs or
transfected LMH cells were harvested 5 days after plating or
transfection, respectively, and fractionated essentially as described
previously (1), with some modifications: plates were first
rinsed with phosphate-buffered saline and then scraped into ice-cold
10% (wt/wt) sucrose homogenization buffer containing 10 mM Tris
hydrochloride (Tris-HCl; pH 7.4), 1 mM EDTA, and 100 U of kallikrein/ml
of aprotinin. PDHs, transfected LMH cells, or infected liver were
disrupted on ice with 60 strokes in a Dounce homogenizer. Nuclei and
debris were removed from the cell lysate by centrifugation at 1,000 rpm
at 4°C for 4 min. The resulting postnuclear supernatant was made to
60% (wt/wt) sucrose, placed at the bottom of a Beckman SW60 centrifuge
tube, and overlaid with 48% (2 ml) and 10% (1 ml) sucrose. The step
gradient was then centrifuged at 40,000 rpm at 20°C for 3 h (or
occasionally at 4°C for 16 h, no difference in the results being
observed). Fractions were collected from the top. The membrane
fraction, corresponding to the 10 to 48% sucrose interface, and the
cytosolic fraction, corresponding to the 60% sucrose fraction at the
bottom of the gradient, were analyzed for DHBV DNA or were
trichloroacetic acid (TCA) precipitated and analyzed for DHBV core
protein. Total nucleic acids were extracted from membrane or cytosolic
fractions as described previously (26). Membrane and
cytosolic fraction were digested by addition of 1 ml of lysis buffer
(50 mM Tris-HCl [pH 8.0], 10 mM EDTA, 150 mM NaCl, 1% SDS, and 0.5 mg of pronase/ml) at 37°C for 1 h. The digested lysate was
extracted one time with each an equal volume of phenol and chloroform,
and nucleic acids were precipitated by the addition of 2 volumes of
absolute ethanol. After precipitation nucleic acids were pelleted by
centrifugation, washed once with ethanol 70% (vol/vol), dried,
dissolved in TE buffer (10 mM Tris-HCl [pH 7.5], 1 mM EDTA), and
analyzed by 1% agarose gel electrophoresis and Southern blotting.
0022-538X/00/$04.00+0
Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Intracellular Hepadnavirus Nucleocapsids Are
Selected for Secretion by Envelope Protein-Independent Membrane
Binding
and
![]()
ABSTRACT
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References
![]()
INTRODUCTION
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References
![]()
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References
) bears a G-to-A mutation at nucleotide position 1165 leading to a
stop codon in the preS open reading frame at amino acid (aa) 122. A
polyclonal rabbit serum raised against DHBV core protein purified from
infected duck liver (D087) was used as the primary antibody in Western
blot analysis.
Analysis of cell culture supernatants.
To determine the
yield of enveloped virions versus nonenveloped core particles secreted
from transfected cells, 1 ml of the supernatant was centrifuged into a
CsCl step gradient (1.5, 1.4, and 1.3 g/ml, overlaid with 20%
sucrose), and DHBV DNA in each fraction was quantified relative to a
standard by dot blot hybridization as described previously
(18). The proteins present in the cell supernatant or in
membrane and cytosolic fractions were TCA precipitated (10% final) for
30 min. After centrifugation (10 min at 13,000 rpm), the pellet was
resuspended in 30 µl of sample buffer (200 mM Tris-HCl [pH 8.8],
10% sucrose, 5 mM EDTA, 0.1% bromophenol blue, 3% SDS, 2%
-mercaptoethanol). Proteins were separated by SDS-PAGE (10%
acrylamide) and transferred to nitrocellulose membrane (Schleicher & Schuell) using a Trans-Blot SD semidry transfer cell (Bio-Rad).
Membranes were blocked for 1 h with 5% skim milk in TBST (100 mM
Tris-HCl, pH 7.4; 150 mM NaCl; 0.3% Tween 20). Membranes were probed
with a polyclonal anti-core antiserum (D087) for 2 h in 5% skim
milk-TBST, washed three times (10 min each time) with TBST, and probed
with goat anti-rabbit immunoglobulin-horseradish peroxidase (Amersham)
in 5% skim milk-TBST for 1 h. After three 10-min washes in TBST,
protein bands were visualized by enhanced chemiluminescence (Amersham)
according to the manufacturer's manual. For quantification of the
signals, the secondary antibody was alkaline phosphatase conjugated,
and enhanced chemifluoresence (ECF; Amersham) was performed with a
Fluoroimager (Molecular Dynamics) according to the manufacturer's instructions.
Dephosphorylation of the core particles. Prior to refloating, purified membrane-associated and cytosolic capsids were dephosphorylated by alkaline phosphatase treatment as described previously (21). In brief, the capsids were incubated with alkaline phosphatase (4 U/ml; type III from Escherichia coli; Sigma) in 50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.5)-5 mM dithiothreitol-10 mM MgCl2-100 mM Na2SO4 for 18 h at 25°C. Protease inhibitors were added as CLAP cocktail (Boehringer Mannheim). The capsids were pelleted and resuspended in the homogenization buffer as described above.
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RESULTS |
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A large fraction of intracellular core particles have the intrinsic
property to bind to cellular membranes.
Membrane-associated DHBV
capsids were detected and isolated using a flotation assay in which
cellular homogenates were subjected to density centrifugation into an
overlaid sucrose step gradient (see Materials and Methods). In this
assay system, membrane-bound viral proteins are comigrating with
membranes to the 10 to 48% sucrose interface and separated from free,
cytosolic components which remain at the bottom of the centrifuge tube.
When material from DHBV-infected duck liver was subjected to this
procedure, a large fraction of the DHBV core protein was detected in
the membrane fraction. The amounts of core protein in both membrane and
bottom (cytosolic) fraction were compared by Western blotting of
dilution series and found to be about equal (Fig.
1A). Since the core protein from either
fraction was pelletable by ultracentrifugation in the presence of
detergent (see below), these results indicate that about half of the
intracellular core particles are associated with cellular membranes in
the liver of a DHBV-infected duck.
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Membrane-associated capsids lack core protein hyperphosphorylation. In the initial Western blots analyzing the distribution of intracellular capsids (Fig. 1A and B), a characteristic difference was observed with respect to the number of core protein bands resolved and detected. In SDS-PAGE, intracellular DHBV core protein molecules are known to display a complex mobility pattern, related to the variable extent of phosphorylation at least four distinct serine and threonine residues in their C-terminal portion (22, 32). In membrane-bound capsids, the several slower-migrating bands representing the various phosphorylated protein species were much reduced or absent (Fig. 1A), a result indicating that the great majority of core protein subunits were not phosphorylated at sites affecting their electrophoretic mobility. In contrast, core protein from cytosolic capsids showed the heterogeneous pattern characteristic of the mixture of hyperphosphorylated intracellular core gene products.
These initial observations with material from duck liver were confirmed in experiments analyzing capsids from either DHBV-infected PDHs or from LMH cells that had been productively transfected with a plasmid (pD 1.3) carrying a replication-competent DHBV genome (Fig. 1C). In these experimental systems, hyperphosphorylated core protein subunits were produced in higher proportions than in DHBV-infected liver. Again about half of the intracellular core protein was detected as either membrane bound (mb, lanes 2 and 4) or free in the cytosolic fraction (cyt, lanes 3 and 5), respectively. As already observed in Western blots of cell extracts from duck liver, only the fastest-migrating core protein band was detected in the membrane fraction (Fig. 1C, lanes 2 and 4), comigrating with nonphosphorylated, recombinant DHBV core protein produced from E. coli (Fig. 1C, lane M). In contrast, the slower-migrating, hyperphosphorylated species were selectively enriched among the free cytosolic capsids (Fig. 1C, lanes 3 and 5). Similar results were observed when the analysis was performed in a phosphate buffer to inhibit a potential removal of phosphate residues by cellular phosphatases present in the crude cell extracts used (data not shown). Based on data from three different experimental systems used, we deduce that the membrane-associated capsids represent a distinct subpopulation of intracellular capsids that are characterized by a much-reduced level of core protein phosphorylation.Core protein dephosphorylation is not sufficient to induce the
membrane binding of capsids.
The data presented so far would be
compatible with a model in which surface-exposed phosphate residues are
used as a signal on the capsid surface to trigger membrane attachment
of core particles. This hypothesis was challenged by testing whether
cytosolic phosphorylated core particles would gain membrane affinity
after enzymatic removal of surface-exposed phosphate residues. As shown
in Fig. 2 and as described previously
(21), treatment of cytosolic capsids with phosphatase
resulted in a complete disappearance of the slowly migrating bands of
core protein, indicating extensive capsid dephosphorylation (Fig. 2A,
lanes 1 and 2). However, such modified capsids were still unable to
bind to membranes (Fig. 2B, lanes 3 and 4). In a parallel control
experiment, phosphatase pretreatment did not interfere with the
rebinding of membrane-derived nucleocapsids to liver membranes (Fig.
2B, lanes 5 and 6), excluding two counteracting effects of the
phosphatase treatment. In this experiment, a minor, slower-migrating
band was additionally detected in the Western blot shown (marked
"×" in Fig. 2B). However, since it is present in comparable
strength in membrane-rebound and nonbound fractions and also
irrespective of the initial fractionation, this signal of unknown
origin appears to be irrelevant for the above interpretation of the
data.
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Membrane association of core particles does not require the
presence of the large viral envelope protein.
The results of the
refloating experiment with cellular membranes from noninfected duck
liver (Fig. 1B) had already raised doubts as to whether the membrane
binding of core particles depended upon the presence of the L-protein.
To further explore this issue, we assayed for membrane association of
capsids that were produced from a DHBV genome carrying a stop codon at
aa 122 in the preS-coding sequence. This construct, pD 1.3 L(
), is
unable to produce L-protein and, furthermore, immunoblot studies showed
that it did not produce any detectable amounts (<2 to 5% of a
wild-type L control) of the 121-aa preS fragment predicted to be
produced and potentially functioning in the preS-mediated membrane
association of capsids (B. Zachmann-Brand and H. Schaller, unpublished
data). Capsids produced in LMH cells transfected with this construct
were still found to be membrane associated (Fig. 3, lanes 3 and
4), although to somewhat reduced levels
(ca. 30%) compared to the wild-type control (ca. 50%, Fig. 3, lanes 1 and 2), as revealed by ECF quantification. Furthermore, there was the
same correlation between membrane association and the much-reduced core
protein hyperphosphorylation as observed for wild-type DHBV (Fig. 3,
lanes 1 and 3, respectively).
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)-transfected cells implies, however,
that the L-protein may nonetheless contribute the core
particle-membrane interaction.
Nonenveloped virus particles released from DHBV-transfected cells are related to intracellular, membrane-bound nucleocapsids. There have been many reports describing, but not further investigating, the release of apparently "naked" core particles from hepatoma cell lines that had been transfected with replication-competent HBV or DHBV genomes. These particles were characterized as nonenveloped by their sensitivity to protease digestion and their increased buoyant density in cesium chloride density gradients (12, 14, 24), as well as by their ability to incorporate radiolabeled deoxyribonucleotides in the absence of detergents (Zachmann-Brand and Schaller, unpublished). It has been generally assumed that production of these naked capsids was a result of cell lysis; however, a release by an unknown secretion pathway had not been ruled out (17).
To study a possible correlation of this unconventional process to the membrane association of intracellular hepadnaviral capsids, LMH cells were transfected with DHBV-expressing plasmid pD 1.3 or with the corresponding L(
) mutant plasmid. Figure
4A shows the DNA dot blot analysis of
cesium chloride density gradients analyzing the cell culture
supernatants at day 4 posttransfection. As mentioned above, cells
transfected with DHBV wild-type genomes produced enveloped virus
particles (banding in fractions 7 and 8), as well as naked
nucleocapsids banding at the higher density (fractions 1 to 3); in the
case of the L-stop construct, naked (DNA-containing) particles were
produced in larger amounts (up to a five-fold increase, compared to
wild type) and were the only product.
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Membrane binding selects for core particles containing mature
genomes.
Another hallmark of secreted hepadnaviruses is that their
nucleocapsids contain the mature, largely double-stranded DNA genome, whereas all stages of genome maturation can be found in intracellular capsids (25). Since membrane-bound nucleocapsids resembled
those of secreted virus with regard to the phosphorylation state of their protein subunits, we wanted to assess whether they also contain a
matured viral genome. Membrane-bound and free cytosolic particles were
examined for the maturation state of the encapsidated viral nucleic
acid by Southern blot analysis following the floating separation
procedure (Fig. 5). In capsids associated
with the membrane fraction of homogenates from infected duck liver,
only the mature, relaxed circular form (RC) of the DHBV genome was detectable, as characterized by comigration with a DHBV DNA from serum
virions. In contrast, preparations of free cytosolic nucleocapsids displayed a pattern indicative of the presence of the faster-migrating, immature replicative intermediates (RI). Similar results were obtained
with capsids from cultured duck hepatocytes derived from DHBV-infected
animals (data not shown). The quantification of the radioactive signals
in the PhosphorImager showed that in both cases the great majority of
the RC DNA genomes were present in the membrane fraction (ca. 90%),
confirming a strong enrichment for mature nucleocapsids at cellular
membranes. Thus, a mature viral genome and dephosphorylated capsid
protein subunits, two characteristics of secreted virus, are already
present at the stage of membrane association.
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DISCUSSION |
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This study reveals a novel aspect in hepadnaviral morphogenesis by identifying an intrinsic membrane-binding affinity as a characteristic property of a distinct subpopulation of intracellular core particles, which seemingly represents those destined to be enveloped and secreted. In contrast to the free cytosolic species, membrane-bound nucleocapsids were found to lack core protein hyperphosphorylation and to contain the mature form of the viral DNA genome, thus resembling the nucleocapsid as present in secreted virus particle.
Since the large envelope protein has been indicated to be essential for virion formation and secretion of hepadnaviruses (2, 27), the assumption prevails that the matured nucleocapsid is recognized by and bound to L chains at the membrane of the cellular compartment into which it buds, i.e., the ERGIC (11, 19). However, by demonstrating that cellular membranes maintain their selective affinity for matured capsids in the absence of L, our data are incompatible with such a simple model. Instead, we conclude that the mature capsid interacts at the target membrane primarily with nonviral components, such as phospholipids or cellular membrane proteins, which we expect to be enriched in the compartment where hepadnavirus budding is initiated. The L-protein seems nonetheless to be needed to direct membrane-bound nucleocapsids to the budding membrane structures formed by the sole interaction of viral envelope proteins, independent of capsid attachment. Accordingly, our finding that the fraction of membrane-associated nucleocapsids was reduced in the absence of L suggests that the L-protein contributes to the stability of membrane-capsid binding, in keeping with the notion of a capsid-L interaction constituting a matrix-like function (3). A general significance of these data from DHBV for hepadnaviral morphogenesis is further supported by results from initial cofloating experiments with HBV core particles and mouse liver microsomes in which half of the nucleocapsids was found to membrane associate, without any major contribution of HBV L-protein (our unpublished data).
In an attempt to elucidate the function of dephosphorylation of the DHBV core protein during morphogenesis, Yu and Summers examined in detail the phenotypes of mutants substituting serine and threonine at positions 239, 245, 257, or 259 (33). In that study, only small reductions in virus production compared to wild type (maximally two-fold with the S257 mutant or the S259 mutant) were noted, suggesting that core protein phosphorylation-dephosphorylation at these sites does not play a crucial role in the envelopment process (33; W. Yu and J. Summers, personal comm.). However, since only single amino acid changes were investigated, these data did not rule out more-stringent effects of phosphorylation at multiple sites. As to the nature of the signal for membrane binding eventually presented on the surface of capsids, particle dephosphorylation by itself appears not to be the structural feature selecting mature particles, since removal of exposed phosphate residues was not sufficient to confer membrane affinity to cytosolic nucleocapsids. Nevertheless, by correlating with membrane association, particle dephosphorylation may function as an auxiliary element, contributing to the features recognized by the target membrane.
The unconventional mechanism of membrane targeting of the hepadnavirus nucleocapsids discussed above is also in keeping with the rather efficient secretion of nonenveloped core particles from transfected cells. Although already mentioned in the initial reports describing hepadnavirus production from cells transfected with DNA genomes (12, 24), this process has been generally ignored, since it has been assumed that these capsids may solely originate from lysed cells (17). However, our present finding that these unconventionally liberated naked core particles display the same characteristic dephosphorylation of membrane-bound nucleocapsids (and capsids in secreted virions) strongly argues that these particles originate from the very same membrane-bound subpool of matured capsids that is normally secreted as enveloped virus and thus suggests that capsid secretion without envelope is initiated by membrane binding. Importantly, envelope-free, extracellular hepadnavirus particles are produced only from transfected cells, but are not found in infected hepatocyte cultures or test animals (unpublished observations) or in immunocompromised HBV patients (20). This correlation suggests that secretion of hepadnavirus particles without envelope results from an unbalanced nucleocapsid overproduction in transfected cells, particularly as was done here, if large amounts of intracellular core particles are produced from constructs using a strong heterologous promoter to direct synthesis of the pregenomic RNA and/or in the absence of the large envelope protein.
Secretion of nucleocapsids devoid of envelope proteins has been reported for several other viruses such as rhabdoviruses (16, 23) or retroviruses (5, 9). However, in contrast to the naked hepadnavirus capsids released, the secreted nucleocapsids were found to be fully enveloped by cell surface membranes. It seems likely that this difference reflects the different driving forces for the budding process, which may be attributed in these viruses to their matrix components, whereas hepadnavirus budding appears to be driven by the envelope components alone (19). Thus, the secretion of nucleocapsids without membrane envelope described here appears to be a very special variation of virus particle release, illustrated elsewhere only by the release of poliovirus prior or in absence of lysis (29).
Collectively, our data refine a model of virus secretion wherein maturation of viral genomes proceeds in cytosolic capsids which are initially phosphorylated and incapable of binding to cellular membranes. A change in the capsid structure, induced by genome maturation, triggers membrane association, preceded or followed by core protein dephosphorylation. If present, the large envelope protein then interacts with membrane-bound capsids, incorporating these into preexisting, envelope-driven budding structures, thus leading to the formation and secretion of enveloped virions along with the vast excess of empty enveloped particles produced independent of capsid attachment. In the absence of L-protein, matured capsids appear to be exported without envelope by an alternative, yet-uncharacterized mechanism or else move to the nucleus to serve for genome amplification.
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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We thank Bärbel Glass for the preparation of the PDHs and for providing liver tissue and duck sera, Christa Kuhn for antibodies, Beate Zachmann-Brand for providing the D 1.3 constructs, Marc Hild for helpful discussions, Klaus Breiner for constructive criticism of the manuscript, and Karin Coutinho for expert editorial assistance.
This work was supported by fellowships to H.M. from the Institut National de la Recherche Medicale (INSERM) and the Association Francaise pour la Recherche Therapeutique (AFRT), as well as by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (SFB 229) and the Fonds der Chemischen Industrie.
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FOOTNOTES |
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* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Zentrum für Molekulare Biologie Heidelberg, Im Neuenheimer Feld 282, D-69120 Heidelberg, Germany. Phone: 49-6221-54-68-85. Fax: 49-6221-54-58-93. E-mail: hshd{at}zmbh.uni-heidelberg.de
Present address: Zoologisches Institut, 8057 Zürich, Switzerland.
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