The multi-functional NS1 protein of influenza A virus is a viral virulence determining factor. The last four residues at the C-terminus of NS1 constitute a type I PDZ domain binding motif (PBM). Avian influenza viruses currently in circulation carry an NS1 PBM with consensus sequence ESEV, whereas human influenza viruses bear an NS1 PBM with consensus sequence RSKV or RSEV. The PBM sequence of the influenza A virus NS1 is reported to contribute to high viral pathogenicity in animal studies. Here, we report the identification of PDlim2 as a novel binding target of the highly pathogenic avian influenza virus H5N1 strain with an NS1 PBM of ESEV (A/Chicken/Henan/12/2004/H5N1, HN12-NS1) by yeast two-hybrid screening. The interaction was confirmed by in vitro GST pull-down assays, as well as by in vivo mammalian two-hybrid assays and bimolecular fluorescence complementation assays. The binding was also confirmed to be mediated by the interaction of the PDlim2 PDZ domain with the NS1 PBM motif. Interestingly, our assays showed that PDlim2 bound specifically with HN12-NS1, but exhibited no binding to NS1 from a human influenza H1N1 virus bearing an RSEV PBM (A/Puerto Rico/8/34/H1N1, PR8-NS1). A crystal structure of the PDlim2 PDZ domain fused with the C-terminal hexapeptide from HN12-NS1, together with GST pull-down assays on PDlim2 mutants, reveals that residues Arg16 and Lys31 of PDlim2 are critical for the binding between PDlim2 and HN12-NS1. The identification of a selective binding target of HN12-NS1 (ESEV), but not PR8-NS1 (RSEV), enables us to propose a structural mechanism for the interaction between NS1 PBM and PDlim2 or other PDZ-containing proteins.
The multi-functional NS1 protein of influenza A virus is a viral virulence determining factor. The last four residues at the C-terminus of NS1 constitute a type I PDZ domain binding motif (PBM). Avian influenza viruses currently in circulation carry an NS1PBM with consensus sequence ESEV, whereas human influenza viruses bear an NS1PBM with consensus sequence RSKV or RSEV. The PBM sequence of the influenza A virusNS1 is reported to contribute to high viral pathogenicity in animal studies. Here, we report the identification of PDlim2 as a novel binding target of the highly pathogenic avian influenza virusH5N1 strain with an NS1PBM of ESEV (A/Chicken/Henan/12/2004/H5N1, HN12-NS1) by yeast two-hybrid screening. The interaction was confirmed by in vitro GST pull-down assays, as well as by in vivo mammalian two-hybrid assays and bimolecular fluorescence complementation assays. The binding was also confirmed to be mediated by the interaction of the PDlim2 PDZ domain with the NS1PBM motif. Interestingly, our assays showed that PDlim2 bound specifically with HN12-NS1, but exhibited no binding to NS1 from a humaninfluenzaH1N1 virus bearing an RSEV PBM (A/Puerto Rico/8/34/H1N1, PR8-NS1). A crystal structure of the PDlim2 PDZ domain fused with the C-terminal hexapeptide from HN12-NS1, together with GST pull-down assays on PDlim2 mutants, reveals that residues Arg16 and Lys31 of PDlim2 are critical for the binding between PDlim2 and HN12-NS1. The identification of a selective binding target of HN12-NS1 (ESEV), but not PR8-NS1 (RSEV), enables us to propose a structural mechanism for the interaction between NS1PBM and PDlim2 or other PDZ-containing proteins.
The influenza A virus has long posed a threat to human health. The avian influenzaH5N1 virus exhibits significantly higher pathogenicity than other strains, with
nearly 60% lethality in humaninfections (WHO, 2010). Previous studies have
shown that pigs infected with a recombinant humanH1N1influenza virus in which the
NS1 gene is replaced with that from the H5N1 strain experienced significantly more
serious fever, weight loss and viremia than those infected by the wild-type humaninfluenzaH1N1 virus [1]. The NS1 protein was consequently identified as an
important factor determining the virulence of the influenza virus. As a
multifunctional protein, NS1 predominantly impacts host immune response during viral
infection by reducing the induction of IFN-β [2], [3], inhibiting the RNA sensor
activity of humanretinoic acid-inducible gene product I (RIG-I) [4], suppressing the
dsRNA dependent protein kinase (PKR) induced protein synthesis termination [5] and limiting
the activation of 2′-5′-oligoadenylate synthase (OAS) [6], as well as
disrupting interferon signaling by reducing the tyrosine phosphorylation of STAT
proteins [7]. Other
studies have demonstrated that NS1 is able to integrate with
phosphatidylinositol-3-kinase (PI3K) and prevent apoptosis during infection [8], [9].Obenauer and colleagues noted that the C-terminal four amino acids of NS1 constitute
a type I PDZ binding motif (PBM) [10], [11]. PDZ (PSD-95/Dlg-A/ZO-1) domains contain approximately 80
amino acids and act to mediate interaction with other proteins [12]. Therefore, PDZ-containing
proteins are widely considered to act as scaffold proteins. Due to their affinity to
the cytoskeleton, they are thought to regulate cell migration, adhesion and polarity
depending on the cellular localization of the protein [13]. In a previous study, 30 human
PDZ-domain-containing proteins were identified to be able to bind to a PBM with the
sequence ESEV, which is commonly found in the NS1 protein from avian influenza
viruses, including those with the H5N1 subtype [10]. A large scale analysis
demonstrated that 92% of NS1 proteins sourced from avian influenza viruses
contain a PBM bearing the sequence ESEV, while NS1 proteins sourced from human
influenza viruses mostly bear PBM with the sequence RSKV or RSEV. Only about
8% of humaninfluenza virusNS1 proteins bear a H5N1-like PBM (with sequence
EPEV or ESEV), and these viruses are linked to high-mortality outbreaks of influenza
[10]. A
subsequent study showed that substituting the humanNS1PBM with a PBM derived from
highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) H5N1 viruses (either ESEV or EPEV) did not
affect the growth of virus but significantly increased its virulence and
pathogenicity in mice [14]. Therefore, the NS1PBM is suspected to be a
virulence-determining ligand in a host- and species-dependent manner [15], [16].One of the functions of the ESEV PBM was recently discovered to be in apoptosis
limitation during viral infection via direct interaction with the cellular
PDZ-containing protein Scribble [17]. The relationship between the precise amino acid
composition in the PBM and its binding ability with certain PDZ-containing proteins
has been reported [18]. However, the detailed structural basis for their
interaction remains to be identified. In this study, we identified PDlim2, another
PDZ-containing protein, as a binding target of NS1 encoded by a highly pathogenic
H5N1avian influenza virus, A/Chicken/Henan/12/2004 (HN12-NS1), via the PDZ-PBM
interaction in vitro and at the cell level. We found that the PDZ
domain of PDlim2 binds specifically to the C-terminal PBM sequence ESEV of HN12-NS1
but not to the NS1 protein from an H1N1 strain, A/Puerto Rico/8/34 (PR8-NS1), which
has a corresponding PBM sequence of RSEV. Analysis of the crystal structure of the
PDlim2 PDZ domain in complex with the C-terminal hexapeptide of HN12-NS1 provides a
molecular basis to explain the binding mechanism and selectivity between the two
proteins, and indicates why PDlim2 binds to HN12-NS1 (ESEV) but barely to PR8-NS1
(RSEV). This work, although preliminary, provides a structural basis for the binding
selectivity of PDZ-containing proteins to the ESEV-terminal NS1 of the highly
pathogenic H5N1 strain, and thus leads to further understanding of the mechanism for
the PDZ-PBM interaction.
Materials and Methods
Cells, Plasmids and Antibodies
HeLa (ATCC:CCL-2) cells were cultured in Dulbecco's Modified Eagle Medium
(DMEM) supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum. The plasmid containing
the coding sequence of NS1 of A/Puerto Rico/8/34 /H1N1 (Accession No.:CY009448,
GenBank), pCAGGS-P7-PR8-NS1, and total RNA of H5N1influenza virus
(A/Chicken/Henan/12/2004/H5N1), Accession No.:AY950260, GenBank) were kindly
provided by Z. Chen (College of Life Sciences, Huhan Normal University, China).
For GST pull-down assays, cDNA encoding NS1s and His-tagged PDlim2 (Accession
No.: AAH21556.1, GenBank) were respectively inserted into pGEX-4T-1 (GE) and
pET-28a (Novagen). PDlim2 mutations were derived from the constructed wild type
PDlim2 plasmid using the Easy Mutagenesis System kit (Transgen). For the two
hybridization assays, the commercial vectors, pGBT9 and pACT2 (Clontech), and
pACT, pBind and pG5luc (Promega) were constructed according to
the manufacturer's instructions. For purification and crystallization, a
DNA fragment encoding 89 amino acid residues, including the PDlim2 PDZ domain
(residues 1–83) fused with a C-terminal hexapeptide extension (sequence:
TIESEV) corresponding to residues 220–225 of HN12-NS1, was constructed
into pGEX-6P-1 (GE Healthcare) [19], [20]. Anti-GST (#2622) and
anti-His (sc8036) antibodies were purchased from Cell Signaling and Santa Cruz,
respectively; Anti-HA (H9658) and anti-Flag (F1804) antibodies were brought from
Sigma; Anti-STAT1 (AHO0832) and anti-phospho-STAT1 (33–3400) were from
Invitrogen.
Yeast Two-Hybrid Screening
In yeast two-hybrid assays, pGBT9-HN12-NS1 and pACT2 into which a human spleen
library gene was inserted were transfected into yeast (Y190).
After auxotrophic and X-gal double selection, the plasmids of positive clones
were extracted and sequenced following the protocol in the commercialized kit
(Clontech).
Mammalian Two-Hybrid Assays
pACT-NS1, pBind-PDlim2 and pG5luc were co-transfected into HeLa
cells with a molar ratio of 1∶1∶1 as suggested (Promega), with
Polyethylenimine (PBI) (1mg/ml) [21], [22]. After 48 h, cells were harvested and lysed, and the
firefly and Renilla luciferase activities were quantified by the Dual-Luciferase
Reporter Assay (Promega). The relative luciferase activity was indicated by the
ratio of firefly to Renilla florescence intensities.
GST Pull-Down Assays
GST-tagged NS1 or associated mutants and His-tagged PDlim2 or associated mutants
were expressed in Escherichia coli BL21 (DE3), respectively.
The bacterial lysates containing NS1 were incubated with Glutathione Sepharose
4B (GE) beads with gentle rolling in lysis buffer (50mM Tris-Cl, 150mM NaCl,
0.5% NP-40 and protease inhibitor cocktail) at 4°C for 1 h. After
discarding the supernatant, the lysate containing His-PDlim2 was added to the
beads and incubated for 2 h with gentle rolling. The resultant beads were washed
with the lysis buffer four times and the eluants were subjected to SDS-PAGE and
Western blot analysis with antibodies against His-tag and GST respectively.
The BiFC method was adopted to investigate protein binding in HeLa cells [23]. PDlim2
proteins were fused to the carboxyl-terminal fragment (YC, aa155–238) of
yellow fluorescence protein (YFP). The HN12-NS1wt or HN12-NS1ΔPBM coding
region was fused with the N-terminal fragment (YN, aa1–154) of YFP [23].
YC-PDlim2 and the YN-HN12-NS1wt or YN-HN12-NS1ΔPBM proteins were
co-transfected into HeLa cells grown on glass cover slips using the PBI method
as described above. 24 hours after transfection, cell culture dishes were
transferred to room temperature for 4 hours and stained with
4′,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI) prior to microscopic analysis. The
fluorescence emission was examined in living cells by confocal microscopy and
images were processed using an Olympus Fluoview FV1000. The YFP fluorescence of
living cells was also subjected to FACS analysis with an excitation wavelength
at 488 nm and emission wavelength at 513 nm.
Protein Purification and Crystallization
The GST-tagged PDlim2 PDZ domain fused with a C-terminal hexapeptide extension
(sequence: TIESEV) corresponding to residues 220–225 of HN12-NS1 was
expressed in E. coliBL21 (DE3). The harvested bacterial cells
were lysed by sonication and a standard GST affinity purification procedure was
performed using glutathioneagarose beads. The GST-tag was removed with
PreScission Protease, and the resultant fusion protein was further purified with
a Superdex 200 10/300 GL gel-filtration column (GE Healthcare) and condensed at
20 mg/ml concentration in a buffer composed with 20 mM Tris-Cl (pH 8.0) and 100
mM NaCl. The protein was crystallized using the sitting drop vapor diffusion
method in 0.1M HEPES (pH 8.2), 0.2 M NaCl, and 22.5% polyethylene glycol
(PEG) 3350 at 20°C.
Data Collection, Phasing, and Model Refinement
Diffraction data from the crystals were collected on an in-house Rigaku MM-007HF
X-ray source equipped with an R-AXIS HTC image plate detector. The diffraction
images were integrated and scaled using HKL2000 [24]. The structure was
solved by the molecular replacement method using the program PHASER [25] and a native
structure of the PDlim2 PDZ domain (1–82), previously solved in our
laboratory (unpublished), as the search model. The structure was built with the
program COOT [26] and refined with REFMAC5 [27]. Figures were drawn
with the program PYMOL (DeLano Scientific, San Carlos, CA).
Results
Identification of PDlim2 as an HN12-NS1 binding protein by yeast two-hybrid
screening
In order to search for potential functional targets of the influenza virusNS1
protein, we performed a yeast two-hybrid screen of a human spleen cDNA library
using the HN12-NS1 protein as bait. After several rounds of panning, we obtained
five positive clones. Sequence analysis of them subsequently identified one of
the clones encoding part of the PDlim2. Based on sequence alignments, this clone
contains a coding region of 238 amino acid residues, of which residues
1–228 were 100% identical with the N-terminal of PDlim2. PDlim2 is
a protein containing both PDZ and LIM domains and is reportedly expressed in
epithelial cells and lymphocytes [28], [29]. To date, three isoforms of
PDlim2 have been discovered in human cells. The poorly studied isoform 1 has low
transcription levels in lung and is expressed only in the cytoskeleton and
nucleus [30]. Isoform 3, which is abundant in the heart and brain
[30],
lacks the LIM domain (the functional region of PDlim2) and is also expressed
mainly in the cytoskeleton and nucleus. Previous studies with mouse tissue have
indicated that isoform 2 of PDlim2 is transcribed in the spleen, lymphocyte and
most highly in the lung [30], [31], which is considered to be the site of infection for
influenza virus. Therefore, we aimed to explore the interaction between NS1 and
isoform 2 of PDlim2 in all subsequent experiments in this paper.
Verification of the interaction between HN12-NS1 and PDlim2 via PDZ
domain
In order to verify the binding result from the yeast two-hybrid screening assay,
GST pull-down assays were performed using GST-tagged HN12-NS1 and His-tagged
PDlim2. GST-HN12-NS1 or GST was immobilized with Glutathine-conjugated agarose
to pull down His-PDlim2. As shown in Fig. 1A, His-PDlim2 can be detected in the
precipitation by GST-HN12-NS1, but not by GST. The input of lysate containing
His-PDlim2 and the expression of GST or GST-NS1 are shown in the upper panel of
Fig. 1A. This binding
assay confirms that HN12-NS1 and PDlim2 interact in vitro. We
also repeated the pull-down assay with a PDlim2 variant in which the PDZ domain
was deleted. Figure 1C shows
that the wild-type PDlim2 precipitated HN12-NS1 while PDlim2ΔPDZ did not,
indicating that the PDZ domain of PDlim2 is required for the interaction with
NS1.
Figure 1
Interaction between PDlim2 and HN12-NS1.
(A) GST pull-down assay. Bacterially expressed GST-HN12-NS1 or GST were
pre-bound to Glutathione conjugated agarose and then incubated with
lysates containing His-PDlim2. The eluates were subjected to SDS-PAGE
and Western blot analyses with anti-His or anti-GST antibodies (left),
and the input proteins in lysates were also analyzed (right). The arrows
indicated the relevant bands. (B) Mammalian two hybrid assay. Reporter
plasmid pG5luc was co-transfected into HeLa cells with
a combination of pACT-or pBind-based constructs as indicated. At 48 h
post-transfection, cells were harvested and firefly (from
pG5luc) and renilla (from pBind) fluorescence unit
were measured by luminomitor. The relative luciferase activity
(Y-axis) = the unit of firefly luciferase/the unit
of Renilla luciferase, and is presented as the mean calculated from
three independent experiments. (C) GST pull-down assay for the PDlim2
PDZ domain deletion mutant (PDlim2-ΔPDZ) and HN12-NS1. The
experiments were performed as described in (A).
Interaction between PDlim2 and HN12-NS1.
(A) GST pull-down assay. Bacterially expressed GST-HN12-NS1 or GST were
pre-bound to Glutathione conjugated agarose and then incubated with
lysates containing His-PDlim2. The eluates were subjected to SDS-PAGE
and Western blot analyses with anti-His or anti-GST antibodies (left),
and the input proteins in lysates were also analyzed (right). The arrows
indicated the relevant bands. (B) Mammalian two hybrid assay. Reporter
plasmid pG5luc was co-transfected into HeLa cells with
a combination of pACT-or pBind-based constructs as indicated. At 48 h
post-transfection, cells were harvested and firefly (from
pG5luc) and renilla (from pBind) fluorescence unit
were measured by luminomitor. The relative luciferase activity
(Y-axis) = the unit of firefly luciferase/the unit
of Renilla luciferase, and is presented as the mean calculated from
three independent experiments. (C) GST pull-down assay for the PDlim2
PDZ domain deletion mutant (PDlim2-ΔPDZ) and HN12-NS1. The
experiments were performed as described in (A).To test the intracellular interaction between HN12-NS1 and PDlim2, we adopted a
mammalian two hybrid (M2H) assay [32], [33]. PDlim2 and NS1 (or mutations) were cloned into pBind
and pACT vectors respectively to generate fusion proteins with the DNA-binding
domain (GAL4) or transcription activation domain (VP16). When co-transfected
with the reporter plasmid pG5luc containing a GAL4 binding
site, the positive interactions can be quantified by firefly luciferase in
cells. Renilla luciferase was expressed by the pBind vector itself for
monitoring the transfection stability. The ratio between firefly and Renilla
luciferase activities was used as the relative activity unit (RLU) for the
binding. As indicated in Fig.
1B, the reporter luciferase activity reaches 160 RLU (the
5th bar from left) whereas HN12-NS1 lacking PBM exhibits only
limited reporter activity (the most right bar) as the negative controls
(1–4th bar from left). The mammalian two hybrid analysis
demonstrated that the binding of HN12-NS1 to PDlim2 occurred intracellularly via
its ESEV sequenced PBM. The deletion of the ESEV PBM of NS1 completely abolished
its binding ability with PDlim2.To further confirm the interaction in vivo and visualize the
subcellular localization of the binding, we employed more sensitive bimolecular
fluorescence complementation (BiFC) assays [23]. As described in Materials and Methods, we constructed
plasmids encoding YN-fused HN12-NS1, namely YN-HN12-NS1 wt, or an NS1 mutant
lacking the PBM (YN-HN12-NS1ΔPBM), as well as YC fused with PDlim2
(YC-PDlim2), respectively. The pair of plasmids encoding YN- and YC-fusion
proteins were co-transfected into HeLa cells, and the cells were then examined
by fluorescence microscopy (Fig.
2, left panels) and analyzed by FACS (Fig. 2, right panels). The interaction
indicated by the generation of YFP signals was only observed in cells
transfected with full-length wild-type HN12-NS1 and PDlim2 (Fig. 2, top row). An NS1 mutant lacking the
PBM exhibited no signal (Fig.
2, 2nd row from the top), indicating that the PBM of NS1
is required for interaction with PDlim2. As expected, the control samples with
combinations of the YC or YN fragments and their respective fusion proteins
showed barely detectable YFP signals (Fig. 2, the bottom three rows). In addition,
the interaction of NS1 with PDlim2 exhibited a punctuate distribution in
cytoplasmic space.
Figure 2
Bifluorescence complementation assay.
HeLa cells were co-transfected with constructs encoding the fusion
proteins of C- and N-terminal fragments of YFP as indicated. At 24 h
post transfection, cultured cells were kept at room temperature for 4
hours and stained by DAPI and detected by Confocal laser scanning
microscopy. A portion of each transfected cells were analyzed by
fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS) with the MFI (mean
fluorescence identity) listed in the right column.
Bifluorescence complementation assay.
HeLa cells were co-transfected with constructs encoding the fusion
proteins of C- and N-terminal fragments of YFP as indicated. At 24 h
post transfection, cultured cells were kept at room temperature for 4
hours and stained by DAPI and detected by Confocal laser scanning
microscopy. A portion of each transfected cells were analyzed by
fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS) with the MFI (mean
fluorescence identity) listed in the right column.The underlying principle of this assay, namely that the N-terminal (YN) and
C-terminal (YC) domains of YFP are brought into close proximity to form an
intact fluorescent protein once protein binding occurs, allows us to measure the
affinity of the binding partners [23]. In this study, the
percentage of cells yielding fluorescence and the mean fluorescence intensity
(MFI) were determined by FACS analysis, reflecting the binding affinity of
HN12-NS1 and PDlim2. As shown in Fig. 2 (the first two panels from the right), 10.94% of cells
expressing both HN12-NS1wt and PDlim2 fall into the high fluorescence zone with
a mean florescence intensity (MFI) of 1123.8. In comparison, cells expressing an
HN12-NS1ΔPBM mutant displayed a low number of cells with negligible YFP
signal, as observed in the control groups with expression of only one of the
effective binding components. Consistent with the M2H assay results above, the
BiFC data strongly demonstrated that the viral HN12-NS1 protein interacts with
PDlim2 in the cytoplasm, and that the binding is dependent on the PDZ binding
motif of NS1.
PDlim2 binds specifically to HN12-NS1 but not PR8-NS1
The C-terminal PBM of the NS1 protein differs in sequence between influenza virus
strains, and the NS1 protein with ESEV PBM as commonly found in H5N1 avian
influenza viruses is linked with high pathogenicity [10]. As the only difference
between the two PBMs is the amino acid residue in the −3 position, we
therefore “swapped” the PBMs of HN12-NS1 wt and PR8-NS1 wt by simply
mutating the −3 position Arg of PR8-NS1 to a Glu, designated PR8-NS1
(R-3E), and the E (-3) of HN12-NS1 to Arg, designated HN12-NS1 (E-3R), as shown
in Fig. 3A. GST pull-down
assays using these constructs showed that the HN12-NS1 (E-3R) mutant lost its
binding ability to PDlim2 (Fig.
3B, lane 3), whereas the PR8-NS1 (R-3E) mutant acquired binding
ability (Fig. 3B, lane 4)
comparable to that of the wild-type GST-HN12-NS1 wt (Fig. 3B, lane 1). The pull-down by GST alone
was used as a negative control. It was noted that a trace amount of NS1 was
detected in the pull-down assays with wild-type PR8-NS1 and PR8-NS1 (R-3E)
(Lanes 2 and 3). Considering the comparable amounts of input in each pull-down
assay, the association of wild-type PR8-NS1 with PDlim2 was not as favorable as
wild-type HN12-NS1wt. The mammalian two-hybrid assays further validated the
selectivity of PDlim2 for a Glu residue in the −3 position, since
replacing the −3 Arg with Glu raised the activity of the reporter promoter
to the same level as wild-type HN12-NS1 (Fig. 3C).
Figure 3
NS1 mutations and PDlim2 binding analyses.
(A) Schematic depiction of NS1 mutations. Wild-type NS1 of the H5N1
subtype influenza virus (A/Chicken/Henan/12/2004) is annotated as
HN12-NS1wt, and NS1 from the H1N1 subtype (A/Puerto Rico/8/34) as
PR8-NS1wt (top two rows). The amino acid in the −3 position of the
NS1 PBM was indicated by box. The −3 amino acid swapped to R or E
were named as HN12-NS1 (E-3R) or PR8-NS1 (R-3E) respectively (the lower
two rows). The PBM deleted mutation of NS1 from the H5N1 subtype was
named HN12-NS1ΔPBM (last row). (B) The interaction of PDlim2 with
HN12-NS1wt, PR8-NS1wt, HN12-NS1 (E-3R) or PR8-NS1 (R-3E) was analyzed by
GST-pull down assays, as described in Experimental Procedures, with GST
alone as a control. Elution (top panel) and the amount of input lysate
(bottom panel) were performed by SDS-PAGE and Western blot. The arrows
indicated the relevant bands after detected by anti-His or anti-GST
antibodies. (C) Mammalian two hybrid assay. NS1 or its mutations and
PDlim2 were constructed into pACT and pBind, respectively. This pair of
plasmids, together with pG5luc, were transfected into
HeLa cells. The relative luciferase unit of cell lysates was quantified
by the Dual-Luciferase Reporter Assay System (Promega). The data
represent three independent experiments.
NS1 mutations and PDlim2 binding analyses.
(A) Schematic depiction of NS1 mutations. Wild-type NS1 of the H5N1
subtype influenza virus (A/Chicken/Henan/12/2004) is annotated as
HN12-NS1wt, and NS1 from the H1N1 subtype (A/Puerto Rico/8/34) as
PR8-NS1wt (top two rows). The amino acid in the −3 position of the
NS1PBM was indicated by box. The −3 amino acid swapped to R or E
were named as HN12-NS1 (E-3R) or PR8-NS1 (R-3E) respectively (the lower
two rows). The PBM deleted mutation of NS1 from the H5N1 subtype was
named HN12-NS1ΔPBM (last row). (B) The interaction of PDlim2 with
HN12-NS1wt, PR8-NS1wt, HN12-NS1 (E-3R) or PR8-NS1 (R-3E) was analyzed by
GST-pull down assays, as described in Experimental Procedures, with GST
alone as a control. Elution (top panel) and the amount of input lysate
(bottom panel) were performed by SDS-PAGE and Western blot. The arrows
indicated the relevant bands after detected by anti-His or anti-GST
antibodies. (C) Mammalian two hybrid assay. NS1 or its mutations and
PDlim2 were constructed into pACT and pBind, respectively. This pair of
plasmids, together with pG5luc, were transfected into
HeLa cells. The relative luciferase unit of cell lysates was quantified
by the Dual-Luciferase Reporter Assay System (Promega). The data
represent three independent experiments.The above in vitro and in vivo assays involving
PBM-swapping mutations in NS1 demonstrated that the −3 position amino acid
residue is a critical site for the binding selectivity of PDlim2.
Structure Determination and Refinement
In order to investigate the mechanism of the interaction between HN12-NS1 and
PDlim2, we first crystallized the native form of the PDlim2 PDZ domain [34] and chemically
synthesized a hexapeptide (sequence: TIESEV) derived from the C-terminal of
HN12-NS1. Unfortunately, however, we failed to successfully crystallize the
PDZ-peptide complex either by soaking or co-crystallization. Therefore,
following a strategy employed for solving PDZ-peptide complex structures in
several other studies [19], [20], we fused the PDZ
domain (1–83) of PDlim2 and the C-terminal hexapeptide of HN12-NS1
together, as described in Materials and
Methods. This approach yielded crystals in the space group I23 with
unit cell parameters
a = b = c = 81.9
Å,
α = β = γ = 90°.
The complex structure was solved at 2.2 Å resolution using the molecular
replacement method. Refinement of the fusion protein structure resulted in a
final model with crystallographic R-factor (Rcryst) of 0.200 and a
free R-factor (Rfree) of 0.249. Crystallographic statistics are
summarized in Table 1 and
Table 2.
Table 1
Data collection statistics.
Parameters
Statistics
Space group
I23
Unit cell parameters
a = b = c = 81.9
Å,
α = β = γ = 90°
Wavelength (Å)
1.5418
Resolution (Å)
2.20
Measured reflections
49704
Unique reflections
4769
Completeness (%)
99.8 (100)a
Rmergeb
0.062 (0.374)
Redundancy
10.4 (10.4)
I/σI
32.6 (6.2)
Numbers in brackets refer to the statistical data for the outer
resolution shell.
Rmerge = ΣhΣi|Ii
(h)−|/ΣhΣi, where Ii (h) is the intensity of an individual
measurement of the reflection, and is the
mean intensity of the reflection.
Table 2
Structure refinement statistics.
Parameters
Statistics
Rcrysta
0.200
Rfreeb
0.249
Bond rms deviation (Å)
0.008
Angle rms deviation (°)
1.187
Average B factor (Å2)
27.5
Ramachandran plot (%)c
98.81/1.19/0
Rcryst = Σ
(||Fobs|−|Fcalc||) /
Σ|Fobs|, where Fobs and
Fcalc are the observed and calculated
structure-factor amplitudes, respectively.
Rfree was calculated as Rcryst using the
reflections in a test set not used for structure refinement, which
is a randomly selected subset containing 4.5% of unique
reflections.
Calculated using MolProbity. Numbers reflect the percentage of
residues in the preferred, allowed, and disallowed regions,
respectively.
Numbers in brackets refer to the statistical data for the outer
resolution shell.Rmerge = ΣhΣi|Ii
(h)−|/ΣhΣi, where Ii (h) is the intensity of an individual
measurement of the reflection, and is the
mean intensity of the reflection.Rcryst = Σ
(||Fobs|−|Fcalc||) /
Σ|Fobs|, where Fobs and
Fcalc are the observed and calculated
structure-factor amplitudes, respectively.Rfree was calculated as Rcryst using the
reflections in a test set not used for structure refinement, which
is a randomly selected subset containing 4.5% of unique
reflections.Calculated using MolProbity. Numbers reflect the percentage of
residues in the preferred, allowed, and disallowed regions,
respectively.
Structure of the PDlim2 PDZ domain in complex with the C-terminal hexapeptide
of HN12-NS1
Each asymmetric unit contains one fusion protein with 89 amino acid residues, 47
water molecules and 1 sodium ion. The final model has good stereochemistry with
no amino acid residues located in disallowed regions of the Ramachandran plot.
All side chains were assigned with the exception of Arg53 and Arg77, which were
not placed due to insufficient electron density. Experimental structure factors
and the coordinates of the final refined model have been deposited in the
Protein Data Bank (PDB) with accession number 3PDV.The structure of the PDZ region (1–83) of PDlim2 is consistent with a
classic type I PDZ domain composed of five β-strands (β1–β5)
and three α-helices (α1, α2 and α3), as shown in Fig. 4A. The five
β-strands form an anti-parallel β-sheet with a topological order of
β1-β5-β4-β3-β2. The small α1 helix is localized between
β2 and β3, while α2 lies between β3 and β4, and α3 is
situated between β4 and β5. The three α-helices cap the two open
ends of the partially open β-sheet barrel, with α1 and α3 at the
β2 end and α2 at the β1 end. The interaction site of the PDZ domain
is occupied by the C-terminal HN12-NS1 hexapeptide extension from a neighbouring
PDZ-peptide fusion protein (Fig.
4A and Fig. S1A).
Figure 4
Structure of the PDlim2 PDZ domain in complex with the HN12-NS1
C-terminal hexapeptide extension.
(A) Ribbon diagram of the PDlim2 PDZ domain (yellow) is from one PDZ-PBM
fusion protein. The PBM peptide (green) presented here is from a
neighboring PBM-PDZ fusion protein. (B) Stereo view of the interaction
site. Carbon atoms from the PDlim2 PDZ domain and HN12-NS1 C-terminal
hexapeptide extension are colored yellow and green respectively.
Nitrogen and oxygen atoms are colored blue and red, respectively.
Hydrogen bonds are indicated by red dashed lines.
Structure of the PDlim2 PDZ domain in complex with the HN12-NS1
C-terminal hexapeptide extension.
(A) Ribbon diagram of the PDlim2 PDZ domain (yellow) is from one PDZ-PBM
fusion protein. The PBM peptide (green) presented here is from a
neighboring PBM-PDZ fusion protein. (B) Stereo view of the interaction
site. Carbon atoms from the PDlim2 PDZ domain and HN12-NS1 C-terminal
hexapeptide extension are colored yellow and green respectively.
Nitrogen and oxygen atoms are colored blue and red, respectively.
Hydrogen bonds are indicated by red dashed lines.The detailed mode of interaction between the PDZ domain of PDlim2 and the
C-terminal NS1 hexapeptide extension is consistent with the classical type I PDZ
domain-ligand peptide interaction mode exhibited by other PDZ-ligand structures
solved using the co-crystallization strategy [35] or the PDZ-ligand fusion
strategy [19], [20] as employed in this
study (Fig. 4B and Fig. S1B).
Five residues in the C-terminal HN12-NS1 extension peptide (from positions 0 to
−5) form a β-strand that pairs with strand β2 of the PDZ domain in
an anti-parallel manner. In the PDlim2 PDZ domain, the hydrophobic side chains
of residues Phe15 and Ile17 from β2, Ile69 from α3, and the side chain
of Trp13 compose a hydrophobic pocket which facilitates packing of the side
chain of the valine residue in position 0 of the HN12-NS1 extension. The residue
in the −2 position of the NS1 extension is recognized by residue His62
(from α3) of the PDZ domain by a hydrogen bond between Ser223-Oγ and
His62-Nε, with a distance of 2.6 Å. The two glutamate residues at
positions −1 and −3 of the NS1 extension are stabilized via salt
bridges with the positively charged PDZ residues Arg16 and Lys31. No other
obvious interactions can be observed between the NS1 extension peptide and the
PDZ domain.
Characterization of the roles of Arg16 and Lys31 in PDlim2
To address the importance of the Arg16 and Lys31 residues of PDlim2 in the
interaction between its PDZ domain and HN12-NS1, we constructed a series of
PDlim2 mutations at these two positions in the PDZ domain and examined their
binding ability with HN12-NS1 or PR8-NS1 by GST pull-down assays, as described
previously (Fig. 5A). The
wild-type PDlim2 (WT) showed the strongest binding to HN12-NS1 (Fig. 5A, lane 1), while the
R16A and K31S mutants exhibited reduced affinity with HN12-NS1 (Fig. 5A, lane 2 and 3).
Furthermore, the ability of the PDlim2R16A/K31S double mutant to associate with
HN12-NS1 was completely abolished (Fig. 5A, lane 4), reflecting the disruption of the salt bridges.
Therefore, either one of the basic residues (Arg16 or Lys31) would be sufficient
to stabilize the interaction between PDlim2 and HN12-NS1 via charge
interactions, or the availability of both positively charged residues would
enhance the binding. It is likely that the contribution of Lys31 to the
interaction between PDlim2 and HN12-NS1 is much greater than Arg16, as the
amount of the R16A mutant PDlim2 protein pulled down by HN12-NS1 was higher than
the K31S mutant (Fig. 5A,
lane 2 and 3).
Figure 5
Analysis of the binding interface between PDlim2 and
HN12-NS1.
(A) GST pull-down assay. PDlim2 and its mutations were His-tagged and
expressed in E. coli. GST- HN12-NS1 or PR8-NS1 were
linked to GST agarose beads, which were added to E.
coli expressed His-PDlim2 or its mutations and incubated
for 2 h. The pellets were washed and eluted by boiling. The elution was
then subjected to SDS-PAGE and Western blot analysis. (B) Sequence
alignment of PDZ domains from different proteins. Scrib-PDZ1 and
Scrib-PDZ2 refer to the first and second PDZ domain of Scribble.
Conserved residues are written in bold letters, and the identical ones
are highlighted with gray background. Basic residues equivalent to Arg16
or Lys31 of PDlim2 are highlighted with black background and the sites
are indicated with arrows. Sequences were aligned by the ClustalX
program, and the alignment was drawn using the online ESPript server
(http://espript.ibcp.fr/).
Analysis of the binding interface between PDlim2 and
HN12-NS1.
(A) GST pull-down assay. PDlim2 and its mutations were His-tagged and
expressed in E. coli. GST- HN12-NS1 or PR8-NS1 were
linked to GST agarose beads, which were added to E.
coli expressed His-PDlim2 or its mutations and incubated
for 2 h. The pellets were washed and eluted by boiling. The elution was
then subjected to SDS-PAGE and Western blot analysis. (B) Sequence
alignment of PDZ domains from different proteins. Scrib-PDZ1 and
Scrib-PDZ2 refer to the first and second PDZ domain of Scribble.
Conserved residues are written in bold letters, and the identical ones
are highlighted with gray background. Basic residues equivalent to Arg16
or Lys31 of PDlim2 are highlighted with black background and the sites
are indicated with arrows. Sequences were aligned by the ClustalX
program, and the alignment was drawn using the online ESPript server
(http://espript.ibcp.fr/).The higher binding of HN12-NS1 by the R16APDlim2 mutant than by the K31S mutant
led us to assume that the R16A mutation may provide a favorable advantage to the
binding, despite its charge. We therefore mutated Arg16 to a glutamine residue,
which also features a long side chain but is charge free, and examined its
binding affinity to HN12-NS1. The results showed that the R16Q mutant was unable
to bind with the NS1 protein, even though Lys31 was still present in the mutant
PDlim2 protein (Fig. 5A,
lane 5). These observations imply that Arg16, in addition to playing a positive
role in providing salt bridges for binding HN12-NS1, may also impose a steric
requirement on the PBM binding. In wild-type PDlim2, the positive effect of
Arg16 is dominant. Lys31 is not as close to the two glutamine residues in the
ESEV PBM (Fig. 4B) and
should inflict little or no steric influence, therefore contributing more than
the bi-functional Arg16 to the interaction between PDlim2 and HN12-NS1.As shown in Fig. 5B, a
sequence alignment of PDlim2 with selected PDZ domain proteins predicted to bind
to the ESEV PBM of NS1 reveals that all except TIP-1 and the first two PDZ
domains of Scribble have a conserved arginine residue equivalent to Arg16 of
PDlim2. A conserved arginine residue can also be found in an equivalent position
to the basic residue Lys31 of PDlim2 in all other PDZ domains, with the
exception of ENH.
Interaction of NS1 and PDlim2 may not affect NF-κB activity, nor STAT1
mediated signal transduction -
The discovery of PDlim2 as a new cellular target for HN12-NS1 prompted us to
investigate the biological significance of this selective interaction and the
mechanism involved in the virulence of H5N1 influenza viruses. Takashi and
colleagues previously reported that PDlim2 has E3 ligase activity for the p65
subunit of NF-κB and controls the transcription activity of NF-κB via
the ubiquitination and degradation of p65 [36]. In order to verify whether
NS1 participates in this pathway, we established an NF-κB reporter assay in
HeLa cells co-transfected with plasmids encoding PDlim2 and wild-type HN12-NS1
or the HN12-NS1ΔPBM mutant. When induced by lipopolysaccharides (LPS), the
PDlim2 transfected group showed no inhibition of the reporter activity (Fig. 6A, lane 4 from the left)
in this assay. As reported in a previous study [3], both the wild-type HN12-NS1
and the HN12-NS1ΔPBM mutant transfected groups could suppress the reporter
activity [3]
(Fig. 6A, lane 2 and 3
from the left), but there was no significant difference between them, even if
PDlim2 was co-transfected or not (Fig. 6A, lane 5 and 6 compared with lane 2 and 3). The expression
levels of PDlim2 and NS1 detected by Western blot indicated the homogeneity of
transfection in each group. This result implies that the binding between PDlim2
and HN12-NS1 may not influence the activity of NF-κB.
Figure 6
Effects of the PDlim2 and HN12-NS1 interaction on NF-κB activity
or STAT1 phosphorylation.
(A) HeLa cells was transfected with the reporter plasmid pNF-κB-luc
and ptk-RL, together with the indicated plasmids. After 24-hour
post-transfection, cells were stimulated by LPS (10 µg/ml) for 5
hours. Cells were harvested and firefly and renilla fluorescence unit
were measured by luminomitor. The relative luciferase activity
(Y-axis) = the unit of firefly luciferase activity
/ the unit of Renilla luciferase activity (to indicat transfection
efficiency, and is presented as the mean calculated from three
independent experiments. The expression of NS1 and PDlim2 were analyzed
by Western blot with indicated antibodies (lower panels). (B) HeLa cells
were transfected with the combination of the plasmids as indicated at
the top of the figure and treated by IFN-α at 50 U/ml for 4 hours.
The cell lysates were analyzed by SDS-PAGE and Western blot, with
antibodies specific for phosphorylated STAT1, STAT1, HA-tag, Flag-tag,
and GAPDH as loading control.
Effects of the PDlim2 and HN12-NS1 interaction on NF-κB activity
or STAT1 phosphorylation.
(A) HeLa cells was transfected with the reporter plasmid pNF-κB-luc
and ptk-RL, together with the indicated plasmids. After 24-hour
post-transfection, cells were stimulated by LPS (10 µg/ml) for 5
hours. Cells were harvested and firefly and renilla fluorescence unit
were measured by luminomitor. The relative luciferase activity
(Y-axis) = the unit of firefly luciferase activity
/ the unit of Renilla luciferase activity (to indicat transfection
efficiency, and is presented as the mean calculated from three
independent experiments. The expression of NS1 and PDlim2 were analyzed
by Western blot with indicated antibodies (lower panels). (B) HeLa cells
were transfected with the combination of the plasmids as indicated at
the top of the figure and treated by IFN-α at 50 U/ml for 4 hours.
The cell lysates were analyzed by SDS-PAGE and Western blot, with
antibodies specific for phosphorylated STAT1, STAT1, HA-tag, Flag-tag,
and GAPDH as loading control.It was also reported that PDlim2 can impact the tyrosine phosphorylation of STAT4
or lead to degradation of STAT1 and STAT4 under stimulation [31]. We also
examined whether HN12-NS1 can affect this PDlim2-STAT1 pathway by
co-transfecting PDlim2 with wild type HN12-NS1 or the HN12-NS1ΔPBM mutant
into HeLa cells. The stimulation of IFN-α induced a strong phosphorylation
of the endogenous STAT1 compared with the un-stimulated sample, as indicated in
Fig. 6B. However,
compared to previously reported data [7], [18], the levels of STAT1
phosphorylation in our experiments were similar in the presence of wild-type
HN12-NS1 and HN12-NS1ΔPBM in combination with PDlim2. These results suggest
that the interaction between NS1 and STAT1 may be complicated and further
studies are required to clarify the function of the interaction between NS1 and
PDlim2 in interferon-induced STAT1 signaling.
Discussion
The NS1PBM bearing the sequence ESEV (NS1-ESEV) has been found in highly virulent
human virus strains from the 2003–2004 outbreak in Hong Kong, Vietnam, and
Thailand, while NS1PBM bearing the sequence RSKV (NS1-RSKV) were usually found in
milder human viruses [10]. Intensive studies have demonstrated the multiple roles
of influenza virusNS1 in anti-host immune responses, such as interfering in RIG-I
pathways to interrupt interferon production [4], and inhibiting PKR and OAS [5], [6] to halt host
protein synthesis. The mechanisms that distinguish the HPAI NS1 PDZ binding motifs
(ESEV) from the other humaninfluenza virus strains (RSEV or RSKV) were not
understood until the interaction between NS1 and Scribble was reported to regulate
cell apoptosis during influenza virus infection. In a recent study, the PDZ domain
protein Scribble was demonstrated to selectively interact with NS1 bearing an ESEV
PBM via its first two PDZ domains [37]. Other PDZ domain proteins including MAGI-1, -2, -3 and
Dlg-1 were also found to interact with NS1 proteins bearing ESEV-like PBM [18], [37]. In this report,
we performed yeast two-hybrid screening, originally aiming to find potential
target(s) of Avian Influenza virusNS1 that functions in the immune responses.
Considering that human spleen is rich in macrophage, antigen presenting cells, and
lymphocytes, we therefore choose human spleen cDNA library and using full-length
wild type HN12-NS1 and a humanPR8-NS1 as baits respectively, rather than using ESEV
or RSKV peptides as probes [10]. Of the five candidate clones, though ubiquitously
expressed in other tissues as well, PDlim2 is the only one that is highly expressed
in lungs [30],
[31].
Interestingly, PDlim2 contains a PDZ domain and exhibits PBM selectivity towards
HN12-NS1 (ESEV) over PR8-NS1 (RSEV), leading us to speculate that PDlim2 is a
possible cellular target for HN12-NS1 (ESEV). Further investigation is ongoing to
understand the biological relevance of the interaction between PDlim2 and HN12-NS1
(ESEV).PDZ domains exist in numerous proteins as structural scaffolds, linking the
biological activities of the other functional domains. PDlim2 recruits p65 of
NF-κB to the Lim ubiquitin ligase activity [36]. The NS1 proteins of many HPAI
strains differ from those isolated from milder strains by a single amino acid in
their canonical PDZ binding motifs. We established that PDlim2 is able to
distinguish NS1 proteins from different influenza virus strains and binds
selectively to the NS1 protein encoded by a highly pathogenic H5N1 avian influenza
virus, HN12-NS1. As PDlim2 contains only one PDZ domain, it can be considered as a
good model to investigate the binding mechanism between PDZ domains and the NS1PBM.
Our crystal structure reveals that the charge interactions between PDlim2 and
HN12-NS1 are crucial for their binding interaction. In PR8-NS1, the −3
position amino acid residue is an arginine, a positively charged residue with a long
side chain. This residue is expected to be unable to form a salt bridge with either
of the two basic residues (Arg16 and Lys31) in the PDlim2 PDZ domain. Furthermore,
the arginine residue in the −3 position of the PR8-NS1PBM can inflict strong
charge repulsion with Arg16 and Lys31 in the PDZ domain of PDlim2, severely
compromising the binding between the RSEV PBM and the PDlim2 PDZ domain. The K31S or
R16A mutants of PDlim2, which already preclude the steric influence caused by Arg16,
also exhibit no binding affinity with PR8-NS1 (Fig. 5A). Although the −1 position
glutamate residue in RSEV should have been able to form salt bridges with Arg16 or
Lys31, the charge repulsion between the −3 position arginine residue of the
RSEV PBM and either the Arg16 or Lys31 residue of PDlim2 was implied to be
sufficient to disrupt the PDlim2-NS1 interaction. The PDlim2R16A/K31S double
mutant, which failed to stabilize residues in the −1 and −3 positions in
the ESEV PBM, should also be unable to stabilize residues in the −1 and
−3 positions in the RSEV PBM, which is consistent with the lack of binding
observed with PR8-NS1 (Fig. 5A,
lane 4).In human influenza viruses, NS1 proteins bearing RSKV or KSEV PBM have also been
identified [10].
In the case of PDlim2, the RSKV PBM contains not only the −3 position arginine
residue, but also another basic amino acid in the −1 position. Based on our
above analysis, it is reasonable to consider that this PBM should be unable to bind
with the PDZ domain of PDlim2. As we were able to detect only trace amounts of
wild-type PR8-NS1 binding with PDlim2, the RSKV PBM would be expected to have even
lower affinity than the RSEV PBM. In the case of the KSEV PBM, the residue in the
−3 position is positively charged and should exhibit slightly higher affinity
with PDlim2 than the RSEV PBM, although the interaction would still be considerably
weaker than for the ESEV PBM. Although the arginine residue in the −3 position
has a side chain even longer than that of lysine, the Cδ, Nε, Cζ,
Nη1, and Nη2 atoms must lie in the same plane, and thus its flexibility is
considerably lower than the side chain of lysine. When interacting with the PDZ
domain, the flexible lysine residue in KSEV may be driven to a position that
minimizes the charge repulsion. Based on the above analyses, we would expect to rank
the NS1PBM in terms of their binding abilities to PDlim2 as follows:
ESEV>KSEV>RSEV>RSKV. In studies by Jackson and colleagues, recombinant
influenza viruses differing only in their NS1 PBMs were used to infect mice and the
mean lethal dose (MLD50) was measured. The virulence of the viruses,
ranked in decreasing order of MLD50 (from large to small), were viruses
bearing the ESEV, EPEV, KSEV, and RSKV PBM [14]. A recombinant virus in which
the PBM was truncated showed the lowest virulence. Interestingly, the virulence of
the recombinant viruses bearing the above PBMs is consistent with the binding
abilities of those PBMs to PDlim2, as proposed above. EPEV is not a typical PDZ
binding motif, although it has been reported to bind with certain PDZ domains, such
as the PDZ domain of Dsh [10]. As EPEV also contains the same two acidic glutamate
residues as ESEV, we speculate that these two glutamates in EPEV should also be able
to interact with the two basic residues in the PDZ domain, although the proline
residue in the −2 position is expected to alter the conformation of the PBM
and subsequently reduce the affinity of the interaction. Jackson and colleagues
further showed that human influenza viruses containing the three most virulent NS1
PBMs (ESEV, EPEV, and KSEV) correspond to the highly virulent strains discovered
from the 2003–2004 outbreak in Hong Kong, Vietnam, and Thailand; the
1997–1999 outbreaks in Hong Kong; and the 1918 “Spanish flu”
outbreak, respectively [10]. In contrast, influenza viruses containing the RSEV or
RSKV PBMs, which were speculated to exhibit barely detectable binding with PDlim2,
have not been associated with large influenza outbreaks nor with high pathogenicity.
However, in other studies, evidence has indicated that there were minor differences
between the ESEV, RSEV or truncated PBMNS1 proteins in the control of its nuclear
migration and mean lethal dose in infected cells [16]; the human C-terminal RSKV
PBM was found to increase viral replication in human and ducks, while the avian
C-terminal ESEV PBM increased virulence in mice [15]. Furthermore, the nucleic acid
region of the influenza virus that encodes the PBM of NS1 also participates in
encoding another protein, NEP, via a different reading frame [14]. The above findings suggest
that the relationship between the sequence variation in the PBM and the virulence of
influenza virus is complicated and requires further investigation. The selective
binding by NS1 of PDZ containing proteins, such as PDlim2, may provide a key
starting point for future studies of the pathogenic mechanism and virulence
determining factors of influenza viruses.During the course of analysis, a protein called Scribble containing four PDZ domains
was reported to be involved in an NS1-mediated anti-apoptosis process during
influenza virus infection. This protein was also reported to bind with only the ESEV
PBM, but not the RSKV PBM, via its first two PDZ domains [17]. We compared the sequences of the
two PDZ domains of Scribble with the PDZ domain of PDlim2 and observed that each of
the first two PDZ domains of Scribble has a basic residue equivalent to Lys31 of
PDlim2 (Fig. 5B). Although each
of the first two Scribble PDZ domains lacks a basic residue equivalent to Arg16 of
PDlim2, the Ser residues may allow the special selectivity to the NS1 (ESEV). In the
study by Obenauer and colleagues, TIP-1 was also in the list of potential ESEV PBM
binding proteins [10]. Comparing the structures of TIP-1 [35] and our structure of the PDlim2
PDZ domain, TIP-1 also contains an equivalent basic residue (Arg59) to the Lys31
residue of PDlim2, but lacks the other basic residue equivalent to the Arg16 residue
of PDlim2. Thus, TIP-1 could be considered as another “PDlim2-like” PDZ
domain containing protein. Besides PDlim2, there are a series of human PDZ and LIM
domain containing proteins, including actinin-associated LIM protein (ALP, PDlim3),
Elfin (CLP36, PDlim1), Enigma (LMP-1, PDlim7), Enigma homologue (ENH, PDlim5),
reversion-induced LIM protein (RIL, PDlim4), and Z-band associated protein (ZASP,
Cypher, Oracle, PDlim6) [38]. A sequence alignment revealed that the equivalent
residue to Arg16 of PDlim2 is strictly conserved in all of these proteins (Fig. 5B). Theoretically, these
proteins should favor ESEV PBM over RSEV or RSKV PBM, and thus be possible targets
of HPAI NS1. However, the physiological association should also be attested for
deciphering the role of the NS1PBM in determining the virulence of the influenza
virus.The importance of PDlim2 in host innate immune responses has been recognized recently
but not fully investigated. A study by Tanaka and colleagues revealed the
significant roles of PDlim2, as an E3 ubiquitin ligase, in terminating NF-κB
activation through intranuclear sequestration and subsequent degradation [36]. However, in
our reporter assay, equal suppression of NF-κB was seen in cells transfected
with HN12-NS1wt and the HN12-NS1ΔPBM mutant (Fig. 6A), or in cells infected with influenza
viruses lacking the ESEV PBM [39]. Thus, it is likely that the effect on NF-κB by NS1
is independent of its PDZ binding.Transfected NS1 was reported to downregulate the phosphorylation of STAT1 under IFN
stimulation [7],
[18]. However,
in all of our repeated experiments, wild-type HN12-NS1 did not exhibit a marked
impact on the IFN-induced phosphorylation of STAT-1 (Fig. 6B). We cannot rule out the possibility that
the effect of the NS1-PDlim2 interaction on interferon-STAT1 signaling is
strain-specific, as the NS1 of the influenza A virus we employed is different from
the strains used in other studies [7], [18]. Although close inspection shows that a slightly lower
level of STAT-1 phosphorylation could be detected in the wild-type HN12-NS1
transfected group (Fig. 6B, lane
3), it is not evident enough to be used as a readout. In addition, transfected NS1
may behave differently from the NS1 in cells infected with influenza virus or
recombinant variants by reverse genetic modifications [40]. Due to stringent biological safety
restrictions in mainland China, we were unable to test with recombinant viruses
containing a H5N1NS1 fragment. The discrepancy between transiently expressed NS1
and NS1 in infected cells may be more-or-less attributed to the output.We reported here the structural characteristics of NS1PBM with a PDZ-containing
protein, PDlim2, and this feature and selectivity may be applied to a broader range
of PDZ-containing target for the NS1 in Avian influenza virus. The biological
effects of NS1 (ESEV) mediated by PDlim2 are to be explored along with a further
understanding of the function of PDlim2, as well as efficient and available
approaches to analyze the effects of NS1 in more physiological circumstances.Structure of the PDlim2 PDZ domain fused with the HN12-NS1 C-terminal
hexapeptide, and the comparison with similar structures. (A)
Ribbon diagram of two adjacent PDlim2 PDZ-hexapeptide fusion proteins. (B)
Superposition of PDZ-ligand complex structures. The structure of PDlim2 PDZ
domain in complex with its HN12-NS1 C-terminal hexapeptide ligand is shown
in yellow. The structure of the first PDZ domain of the
Na+/H+ exchanger regulatory factor in
complex with a pentapeptide ligand from the carboxyl-terminal of the β2
adrenergic receptor (PDB code: 1GQ4) or cystic fibrosis transmembrane
conductance regulator (PDB code: 1I92) or platelet-derived growth factor
receptor (PDB code: 1GQ5) is showed in red, green, or blue, respectively.
The structure of TIP-1 in complex with c-terminal hexapeptide of Kir2.3 is
shown in magentas. Secondary structures are only assigned to the ligand
peptides.(TIF)Click here for additional data file.
Authors: Anna Katz; Alexander N Freiberg; Vera Backström; Axel R Schulz; Angelo Mateos; Liisa Holm; Ralf F Pettersson; Antti Vaheri; Ramon Flick; Alexander Plyusnin Journal: Virol J Date: 2010-08-10 Impact factor: 4.099
Authors: David Jackson; Md Jaber Hossain; Danielle Hickman; Daniel R Perez; Robert A Lamb Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A Date: 2008-03-11 Impact factor: 11.205
Authors: Danlin Jia; Ramtin Rahbar; Renee W Y Chan; Suki M Y Lee; Michael C W Chan; Ben Xuhao Wang; Darren P Baker; Bing Sun; J S Malik Peiris; John M Nicholls; Eleanor N Fish Journal: PLoS One Date: 2010-11-10 Impact factor: 3.240
Authors: Josef Maryáš; Jakub Faktor; Lenka Čápková; Petr Müller; Petr Skládal; Pavel Bouchal Journal: Cancer Genomics Proteomics Date: 2018 Sep-Oct Impact factor: 4.069