| Literature DB >> 24692638 |
Hawaa M N Al-Mulla, Lauren Turrell, Nicola M Smith, Luke Payne, Surendranath Baliji, Roland Züst, Volker Thiel, Susan C Baker, Stuart G Siddell, Benjamin W Neuman.
Abstract
Positive-stranded viruses synthesize their RNA in membrane-bound organelles, but it is not clear how this benefits the virus or the host. For coronaviruses, these organelles take the form of double-membrane vesicles (DMVs) interconnected by a convoluted membrane network. We used electron microscopy to identify murine coronaviruses with mutations in nsp3 and nsp14 that replicated normally while producing only half the normal amount of DMVs under low-temperature growth conditions. Viruses with mutations in nsp5 and nsp16 produced small DMVs but also replicated normally. Quantitative reverse transcriptase PCR (RT-PCR) confirmed that the most strongly affected of these, the nsp3 mutant, produced more viral RNA than wild-type virus. Competitive growth assays were carried out in both continuous and primary cells to better understand the contribution of DMVs to viral fitness. Surprisingly, several viruses that produced fewer or smaller DMVs showed a higher fitness than wild-type virus at the reduced temperature, suggesting that larger and more numerous DMVs do not necessarily confer a competitive advantage in primary or continuous cell culture. For the first time, this directly demonstrates that replication and organelle formation may be, at least in part, studied separately during infection with positive-stranded RNA virus. IMPORTANCE The viruses that cause severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS), poliomyelitis, and hepatitis C all replicate in double-membrane vesicles (DMVs). The big question about DMVs is why they exist in the first place. In this study, we looked at thousands of infected cells and identified two coronavirus mutants that made half as many organelles as normal and two others that made typical numbers but smaller organelles. Despite differences in DMV size and number, all four mutants replicated as efficiently as wild-type virus. To better understand the relative importance of replicative organelles, we carried out competitive fitness experiments. None of these viruses was found to be significantly less fit than wild-type, and two were actually fitter in tests in two kinds of cells. This suggests that viruses have evolved to have tremendous plasticity in the ability to form membrane-associated replication complexes and that large and numerous DMVs are not exclusively associated with efficient coronavirus replication.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24692638 PMCID: PMC3977362 DOI: 10.1128/mBio.01107-13
Source DB: PubMed Journal: mBio Impact factor: 7.867
FIG 1 Genetic characteristics of MHV mutants. The schematic shows amino acid changes responsible for temperature-sensitive phenotypes of viruses used in this study. Amino acid positions are numbered from the start of each nonstructural protein. Functions of potentially affected domains that are marked include papain-like proteinases (PL1pro and PL2pro), ADP-ribose 1ʺ phosphatase (ADRP), main proteinase (Mpro), RNA-dependent RNA polymerase (RdRp), and methyltransferases (N7-MT and 2O-MT).
FIG 2 Characterization of Brts105 growth. Viruses were inoculated at a multiplicity of 10 PFU/cell on primary MEFs (mouse embryo fibroblasts) at 33°C for 1 h and then incubated at either 33°C (A) or 40°C (B) for the duration of the experiment. Viral growth was measured by plaque assay at 33°C. The average of three replicates is shown. Dotted lines indicate the lower limit of detection for the plaque assay. (C) Northern blots show the effect of temperature on viral RNA production by the wild type and Brts105. Bands corresponding to viral subgenomic RNAs 4 to 7 are indicated. (D to F) The relative severity of ts phenotypes was characterized by a growth stop/resume assay. Growth was stopped 4.5 h after inoculation by incubating ts virus at 40°C or by treating wild-type virus with 10 µg/ml cycloheximide (CHX). After 3 h of arrested growth, the inhibition was either maintained to the end of the experiment (Stopped) or released (Resumed). Virus growth was measured by plaque assay, and the results for Brts105 are shown in panel E. The averages for 6 replicates are shown. The titer ratio (resumed to stopped) from panel E is shown in comparison to other mutants and CHX treatment in panel F. Statistically significant increases in titer after resumption are indicated (*, P ≤ 0.05; ns, not significant).
Comparative growth characteristics of MHV mutants[]
| Cell line | Conditions | Titer (log) of | Titer difference relative to wild type (log) | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Time (h) | Temp (°C) | Br | Alb | Br | Wü | Alb | ||
| 17Cl-1 | 14 | 33 | 6.9 ± 0.3 | 0 | −0.6 | −0.2 | 0.4 | −0.8 |
| MEF | 24 | 33 | 5.3 ± 0.4 | 0.1 | −0.4 | −0.3 | 0.1 | −1 |
| MEF | 48 | 33 | 7.1 ± 0.2 | −0.2 | ND[ | 0 | ND | ND |
| MEF | 72 | 33 | 4.6 ± 0.4 | ND | 0 | ND | ND | ND |
| ADMSC | 48 | 33 | 6.2 ± 0.1 | 0.1 | ND | ND | ND | ND |
| BMSC | 18 | 33 | 3.8 ± 0.2 | 0 | ND | ND | ND | ND |
| 17Cl-1 | 14 | 40 | 5.1 ± 0.2 | ≤−3.8 | −3.4 | ≤−3.8 | −2.7 | ≤−3.8 |
| MEF | 24 | 40 | 5.6 ± 0.2 | ≤−4.3 | ≤−4.3 | ≤−4.3 | ≤−4.3 | −3.5 |
Effects of mutations on viral growth were assessed at permissive (33°C) and nonpermissive (40°C) temperatures in continuous (17Cl-1) and primary (MEF, ADMSC, and BMSC) cell cultures. Titer differences were calculated from a minimum of three replicates.
The wild-type titer is shown as the mean ± standard deviation.
ND, not determined.
FIG 3 Replicative organelles formed at 33°C by MHV mutants in 17Cl-1 cells. (A) Positions of double-membrane vesicles (stars), intracellular virus (arrowhead), and convoluted membrane (c) in infected cells are marked. (B) Magnified images of intracellular virus particles from each virus.
DMV and virion size in infected cells
| Conditions | Virus | Double-membrane vesicles | Intracellular virions | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Size[ | Size[ | |||||||
| L929, 37°C, 5 hpi[ | Wild-type | 302 | 179 ± 36 | 63 | 75 ± 9 | |||
| Wü | nsp16 | 196 | 157 ± 61 | 2 × 10−6 | 77 | 75 ± 8 | NS[ | |
| Revertant | nsp16[ | 165 | 178 ± 31 | NS | 42 | 77 ± 13 | NS | |
| DBT, 33°C, 5.5 hpi | Wild type | 468 | 228 ± 45 | 74 | 69 ± 8 | |||
| Br | nsp3 | 58 | 195 ± 38 | 2 × 10−6 | 70 | 69 ± 9 | NS | |
| DBT, 40°C, 5.5 hpi[ | Wild type | 841 | 218 ± 50 | 9 × 10−5 | 141 | 71 ± 10 | NS | |
| 17cl1, 33°C,10 hpi | Wild type | 604 | 228 ± 36 | 169 | 68 ± 10 | |||
| Br | nsp3 | 403 | 208 ± 34 | 5 × 10−19 | 263 | 68 ± 10 | NS | |
| Alb | nsp5 | 459 | 189 ± 33 | 8 × 10−66 | 102 | 70 ± 8 | NS | |
| Br | nsp14 | 463 | 220 ± 36 | 2 × 10−4 | 278 | 69 ± 10 | NS | |
| Wü | nsp16 | 456 | 211 ± 35 | 2 × 10−15 | 39 | 67 ± 12 | NS | |
| Alb | nsp12 | 231 | 204 ± 43 | 2 × 10−13 | 34 | 68 ± 11 | NS | |
Size was calculated as perimeter length divided by π; data are means ± standard deviations.
Compared to the wild-type (Wüts18) or revertant (Brts31) control by Mann-Whitney test.
Wüts18 and the revertant grow to wild-type levels at 37°C (41).
NS, not significantly different from the corresponding wild-type control.
Containing the original ts mutation in nsp16 plus a compensating mutation in nsp16 N43S.
Incubated at 33°C for 3.5 h and then shifted to 40°C.
Attenuated growth at 33°C compared to the wild type.
DMV and intracellular virion (IV) prevalence in infected cells
| Conditions | Virus | No. of | Prevalence of intracellular signs | No. per cell section when present | Rel. DMV | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| DMV (%) | IV (%) | DMV | IV | |||||||||
| DBT, 33°C, 5.5 hpi | Wild type | 323 | 6 | 7 | − | 18 ± 20 | 3 ± 4 | − | 100 ± 60 | |||
| Br | nsp3 | 753 | 2 | 8 × 10−4 | 7 | NS[ | 6 ± 6 | 1 × 10−2 | 3 ± 4 | NS | 20 ± 12 | |
| 17Cl-1, 33°C, 10 hpi | Wild type | 161 | 40 | 29 | 9 ± 9 | 4 ± 3 | 100 ± 48 | |||||
| Br | nsp3 | 238 | 24 | 4 × 10−4 | 25 | NS | 7 ± 8 | 4 × 10−4 | 4 ± 6 | NS | 35 ± 18 | |
| Alb | nsp5 | 120 | 37 | NS | 19 | NS | 9 ± 8 | NS | 4 ± 4 | NS | 53 ± 28 | |
| Br | nsp14 | 230 | 22 | 1 × 10−4 | 32 | NS | 9 ± 13 | NS | 4 ± 4 | NS | 49 ± 25 | |
| Wü | nsp16 | 140 | 36 | NS | 20 | NS | 9 ± 10 | NS | 2 ± 1 | 7 × 10−3 | 71 ± 36 | |
| Alb | nsp12 | 13 | 1 × 10−5 | 9 | 1 × 10−5 | 6 ± 5 | NS | 1 ± 0.4 | 1 × 10−5 | 16 ± 10 | ||
Calculated by Fisher’s exact test.
Relative DMV capacity was calculated as follows: average DMV size (± standard deviation) × percentage of cell sections with DMVs × DMVs per section, relative to wild-type.
Not significantly different from the corresponding wild-type control.
Attenuated growth at 33°C compared to the wild type.
FIG 4 RNA synthesis and relative DMV capacity. (A) Relative DMV capacity was estimated as DMV size (± standard deviation) × percentage of cell sections with visible DMVs × average number of DMVs per cell and expressed as a percentage of wild-type DMV capacity (indicated by the dotted line). (B) Viral genomic and subgenomic RNA synthesis at 10 h postinoculation in 17Cl-1 cells was measured by quantitative RT-PCR and is expressed as an amount relative to wild-type RNA synthesis. Statistically significant differences in RNA load are indicated (***, P ≤ 0.001; ns, not significant).
FIG 5 Viral fitness assay validation and results. (A) Numbers of plaques generated by samples of the wild type and Brts105. Plaque assays were inoculated at 33°C for 1 h and then incubated at 33°C and 40°C. Results were normalized to the average titer obtained from the 33°C plaque assays and are averages for 14 replicates for the wild type or 8 replicates for Brts105. A titer below the 25-PFU/ml lower limit of detection is indicated (<). (B) Relative fitness of MHV mutants in continuous 17Cl-1 and primary MEFs, as determined by plaque assays at both 33°C and 40°C for each sample. Fitness is expressed as (33°C titer − 40°C titer)/40°C titer. Error bars show standard deviation. Statistically significant differences between the titer of ts virus (33°C titer − 40°C titer) and wild-type virus (40°C titer) are indicated (*, P ≤ 0.05; ns, not significant; nt, conditions not tested). (C) DNA sequencing results for the wild type, Brts105, and a 1:1 mixture of wild-type and Brts105 viruses. (D) Results of competitive fitness assays performed in triplicate with 1:1, 3:1, and 5:1 ratios of Brts105 to wild-type virus as determined by RT-PCR and DNA sequencing. Results are ratios of the two viruses based on peak height from direct cDNA sequencing and are from three replicate sequences.