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Rev. sci. tech. Off. int. Epiz., 1 9 9 8 , 1 7 (1), 269-277 Fv1, the mouse retrovirus resistance gene J.P. Stoye Division of Virology, National Institute for Medical Research, The Ridgeway, Mill Hill, London NW7 1 AA, United Kingdom Summary A n u m b e r of g e n e s w h i c h a f f e c t t h e susceptibility of m i c e t o i n f e c t i o n by r e t r o v i r u s e s h a v e b e e n d e s c r i b e d . One of t h e m o s t interesting of t h e s e g e n e s is Fvl (Friend virus susceptibility 1), w h i c h a c t s a t a s t a g e in t h e retroviral l i f e - c y c l e f o l l o w i n g virus entry into t h e cell but prior to i n t e g r a t i o n a n d f o r m a t i o n of proviral s t r u c t u r e s . A d e t a i l e d u n d e r s t a n d i n g of t h e m o d e of a c t i o n of Fv1 m i g h t b e e x p e c t e d to s h e d f r e s h light on e a r l y s t e p s of t h e retroviral r e p l i c a t i o n , a l t h o u g h p r o g r e s s h a s b e e n s l o w in this a r e a d u e to u n c e r t a i n t y a b o u t t h e n a t u r e of t h e Fv1 g e n e . T h e r e c e n t cloning of Fvl by a positional a p p r o a c h fills this g a p in c u r r e n t k n o w l e d g e . Fv1 a p p e a r s to be d e r i v e d f r o m a f r a g m e n t of a retroviral g e n o m e , a n o b s e r v a t i o n t h a t m a y s u g g e s t n o v e l a p p r o a c h e s t o t h e control of retroviral replication. Keywords D o m i n a n t negative m u t a t i o n - Endogenous retroviruses - Genetics susceptibility-1 - Integration - Positional cloning - Provirus - Retroviridae. Discovery of retroviral resistance genes in mice Retroviral infection can have a variety of severe consequences, which include oncogene activation leading to cancer, cell death leading to immunosuppression and germ-line integrations leading to inherited mutations. Since eukaryotic evolution has taken place against a background of retroviral infections, it would be surprising if genetic mechanisms for controlling retrovirus replication had not evolved. Studies of leukaemogenesis in mice performed in the 1960s and 1970s provided ample evidence to support this idea. Many of these studies utilised the Friend virus (Fv) complex, an immunosuppressive virus preparation which rapidly induces malignant erythroleukaemias ( 3 8 ) . A number of genes controlling responses to Friend virus infection were identified ( 3 6 ) , including at least five genes controlling immunological responses as well as six genes for Friend virus susceptibility, known as Fvl-Fv6, which act by non-immunological means (20). Friend virus Health (NIH)-Swiss strain (N) than on cells from BALB/c (B) mice, while B-tropic viruses grew better on B- than on N-type cells (19). A third category of virus, NB-tropic, grew equally well on N- and B-type cells. Both N- and B-tropic viruses grew poorly on cells from F l hybrids, which implies that resistance was dominant to susceptibility. Subsequent genetic studies showed that the in vitro restriction was controlled by a single genetic locus ( 3 2 ) , which proved to be identical to the Fvl locus identified in vivo (31) and mapped to the distal region of mouse chromosome 4 (35). Table I The effect ofFV1in vitro Virus Genotype of cells n/n n/b 100 1 1 1 B-MLV 1 NB-MLV 100 100 100 100 N-MLV b/b a) Relative titres in plaque assay (absolute titres are usually approximately 1 0 1 0 infectious units/ml in permissive and restrictive cells, respectively) N : National Institutes of Health-Swiss strain B : BALB/c strain M t V : murine leukaemia virus 5 and 3 Resistance genes were also identified by in vitro studies. For example, it was shown that murine leukaemia viruses (MLV) could be sub-divided into three categories based on their ability to grow on cells derived from the embryos of different strains of mice (Table 1). Some viruses, termed N-tropic, yielded higher titres on cells from the National Institutes of Although the block to infection mediated by Fvl is not absolute, in vitro titres are reduced by a factor of one hundred to one thousand ( 1 9 ) , and Fvl can confer resistance to 270 Rev. sci. tech. Off. int. Epiz., 17 (1) naturally-occurring MLV-induced disease (18). The majority of inbred strains of mice carry either the n or the b allele of Fvl (25), though two other restrictive alleles, with subtly different phenotypes, have also been described (4, 28). Most wild mice do not appear to exhibit F v l restriction (28). To date, there is no convincing evidence for the presence of F v l restriction in other species of animal. containing single-stranded RNA as their genetic material. Extracellular virus binds to a specific receptor on the target cell by means of the envelope protein. Following membrane fusion, the viral capsid enters the cell. Reverse transcription of the viral RNA takes place to form linear double-stranded DNA. This DNA, still associated with remnants of the capsid, moves to the nucleus where integration of viral DNA into the host cell DNA occurs, which results in the formation of a Phenotypic characterisation of Fv1 restriction provirus. This DNA is transcribed and the resulting RNA is translated by the synthetic machinery of the cell. Viral RNA and protein assemble and bud through the cell membrane, thereby acquiring an envelope. Proteolytic cleavage then results in virion maturation. The observation that F v l restriction is manifested in vitro, in a dominant fashion, implies that this restriction has a direct effect on retroviral replication, most likely mediated by an interaction between the F v l gene product and some component of the virus. Initial mechanistic studies were therefore focused on discovering the stage in the retroviral life-cycle at which it might be acting and in determining the viral target for restriction. between rhabdoviruses, such as vesicular stomatitis virus, and The stomatitis virus was dependent on the activity of the MLV Initial studies showed clearly that Fvl did not affect the entry of virions into cells. Mixed viral pseudotypes can be formed retroviruses (both of which are enveloped RNA viruses). Preparations of vesicular stomatitis virus genomes coated with the envelope protein from an N-tropic MLV grew equally well on N- or B-type cells ( 2 2 , 3 0 ) . Since replication of vesicular retroviral life-cycle is shown in schematic form in Figure 1. Readers are referred to Coffin ( 1 0 ) for a review of envelope, this experiment shows that Fvl must act at a stage retroviral replication. Retroviruses are enveloped viruses in the retroviral life-cycle subsequent to the stages mediated Fig. 1 Possible sites of action for the Fv1 gene product The retroviral life-cycle is shown in schematic form illustrating the points at which the Fv1 gene product might act 271 Rev. sci. tech. Off. int. Epiz., 17 (1) by the envelope protein, in other words at either attachment to the cellular receptor or uptake into the cell. A variety of experimental approaches have ruled out the possibility of Fvl action late in the viral replication cycle. Immunofluorescence studies showed greatly reduced levels of viral protein in infected cells, implying that restriction must act at, or before, translation of novel viral products ( 1 9 ) . Nucleic hybridisation experiments showed reduced levels of new viral transcript in restricted cells, which points to a preintegration or transcriptional block ( 2 7 ) . Finally, direct measurements of the amount of integrated viral DNA also showed reduced levels, thereby indicating that Fvl must act prior to integration and formation of proviruses (26). Attempts to define more precisely which of the preintegration steps (reverse transcription, nuclear import and integration) is affected by Fvl action have yielded conflicting results. Early experiments showed no reduction in the amounts of freshly synthesised viral DNA in the cytoplasm of infected cells (26), but this appears to depend on both the time at which measurements are made and the cell type examined ( 3 3 ) . Nuclear association of only slightly reduced levels of viral DNA has been reported, but it is not clear whether that DNA was truly within the nucleus (33). Preintegration complexes isolated from restricted cells appear to have normal integration activity in vitro, which suggests that no overt damage to the complex results from the interaction with F v l gene product ( 3 3 ) . Thus, only careful measurements of the amounts and precise localisation of the preintegration complex in restricted cells seem likely to resolve these issues. Attempts to answer the question regarding the target for F v l restriction have been more successful. Initial studies showed that changes in the capsid protein (also known as p 3 0 or CA), the major protein component of the viral capsid, were associated with changes in viral tropism ( 2 1 , 3 4 ) . Studies with 'mix and match' recombinants made using cloned viral DNAs confirmed these observations and showed that the viral determinants of F v l could be mapped to a pair of amino acids in CA (Fig. 2) ( 8 , 13). Very recent studies performed using site-directed mutagenesis reveal that the second of the two amino acids (arginine/glutamate) is the more important in determining tropism (29). The fact that CA is the target for the F v l gene product is fully consistent with current understanding of the site of action of Fvl, since CA is known to be present on the subviral complex in which reverse transcription occurs and which mediates nuclear import and integration (9). However, further progress in understanding how Fvl might act was inhibited by a complete absence of information about the F v l gene product and for this reason, the keen interest that was shown in-Fvl in the late 1970s and early 1980s has waned in recent years. Cloning of Fvl How might the cloning of Fvl be approached? One method would be to try to take advantage of what little is known of Fvl functional properties and to isolate a cellular protein which binds to MLV-CA, or to clone a gene encoding such a protein. Several laboratories have attempted to clone Fvl using the so-called yeast two-hybrid system ( 1 4 ) , which N : National Institutes of Health-Swiss strain B : BALB/c strain Fig. 2 Viral determinants of Fv1 tropism Simple retroviruses such as murine leukaemia virus (MLV) possess three genes. These are called gag, which encodes the components of the viral capsid MA (matrix), p12, CA (capsid), NC (nucleocapsid); pol, which provides PR (protease), RT (reverse transcriptase) and IN (integrase); and env, which encodes the envelope proteins SU (surface) and TM (transmembrane). The primary target for the Fv1 gene product is amino acid 110 of CA-arginine in N-MLV and glutamate In B-MLV 272 allows the detection of interacting proteins expressed from complementary DNAs (cDNAs) in yeast. These attempts have not met with success, perhaps because the CA 'bait' used in these experiments did not assume the correct conformation for interaction with the F v l gene product. An alternative approach, which ultimately proved successful, was to adopt a genetic approach known as positional cloning. In essence, positional cloning comprises three steps. Firstly, the gene in question is mapped as accurately as possible to a small, defined genetic interval. Then, the DNA from this interval is cloned. Finally, the genes encoded within these clones are identified and differences between different alleles are sought. Though labour-intensive, this approach has met with considerable success in cloning genes associated with inherited diseases in man and in a variety of mouse mutations, in which little was known about the function of the mutated gene (11). The possibility of cloning Fvl in this way arose as a result of observations made in the course of genetic studies with the endogenous MLVs of mice. If a retrovirus infects a germ cell, the resulting provirus can Become part of the germ line, provided that undue harm to the host is not caused by virtue of expression or by the position of the provirus in the genome. These inherited elements, which are known as endogenous retroviruses, are associated with a plethora of biological phenomena (7). The endogenous retroviruses of a given species can be classified into a few groups, each containing up to ten thousand individual members which show a high degree of nucleotide sequence similarity but differ in their specific integration sites within the genome. A lower degree of sequence similarity is seen between different groups. There are between fifty and one hundred endogenous MLVs in mice (7). In the course of mapping one MLV sub-family, four proviruses, called Xmv8, Xmv9, X m v l 4 and Xmv44, were shown to be tightly linked to Fvl ( 1 5 ) . Since the Fv4 restriction gene was known to correspond to a fragment of a retrovirus, which prevented infection by competing for the receptor for virus binding (24), it was suggested that one or more of these endogenous proviruses might correspond to Fvl ( 1 5 ) . As described below, this suggestion, though not correct in detail, contained an element of truth. To test the possibilities that one of these proviruses might be Fvl (or if not Fvl itself, might lie close enough to Fvl to allow positional cloning of the gene), a detailed genetic analysis of the region of distal chromosome 4 known to contain Fvl was performed (37). This study ruled outXmv8, Xmv9 and Xmv44 as candidates for F v l . However, Xmv9 and two other markers (Nppa and lap3rcl 1) showed no recombination with F v l , and the researchers argued that these markers must lie within 1.2 megabase (Mb) of one another and Fvl, confirming the feasibility of a positional approach. The research team set out to clone the chromosomal interval spanning these markers. Genomic libraries containing large Rev. sci. tech. Off. int. Epiz., 17 (1) fragments of DNA derived from C57BL mice (Fvl b/b) cloned as yeast artificial chromosomes (YACs) were screened for Nppa and Xmv9. A variety of different YACs were isolated. Unfortunately, attempts to generate an ordered array of overlapping YACs failed because many of the YACs were unstable, probably as a result of multiple copies of a repeated zinc finger gene. At this point, the research team decided to abandon a systematic gene-finding approach and. concentrate on testing the cloned YACs for Fvl activity in a functional test (Fig. 3), based on the argument that since Fvl was a dominant gene, introduction of a YAC containing Fvl into cells should result in an alteration of their susceptibility to MLV infection. Mouse cells were fused with yeast carrying Xmv9 or Nppa YACs and stable clones were isolated. These cell clones were expanded and infected with N- and B-tropic viral vectors carrying a gene for resistance to the antibiotic puromycin. By enumerating puromycin-resistant colonies, the cells could be typed for Fvl phenotype. Using this approach, a YAC carrying the Nppa gene was shown also to contain Fvl activity (5). As expected, given the Fvl origin of the YAC, the introduced resistance gene affected N-tropic virus replication but did not inhibit an NB-tropic virus. b/b To isolate the Fvl gene, a cosmid library was prepared from the YAC and individual cosmids carrying Fvl were identified in the functional assay. Fragments of a positive cosmid were retested and a 6.5 kilobase (kb) Fvl-positive clone was isolated. The DNA sequence of this clone was determined and a 1.4 kb open reading frame with a predicted protein product of 4 5 9 amino acids, subsequently shown to possess Fvl activity restricting the replication of B-tropic virus, was identified. The corresponding fragment was cloned from a library prepared from an Fvln/n mouse restricted B-tropic MLV, thus confirming that the research team had succeeded in cloning Fvl. The predicted product of the n allele is nineteen amino acids shorter than that of the b allele; the alleles also differ at two other amino acid positions (5). Origin of Fv1 Analysis of the structure and distribution of Fvl revealed a number of unusual features (Fig. 4 ) ( 5 , Le Tissier et al, in preparation). Firstly, most genes have multiple exons, whereas Fvl comprises a single long exon. Secondly, the presumptive polyadenylation signal is provided by the second of a pair of short, interspersed nuclear repeats (B2 elements) located downstream of the open reading frame, rather than by a 'natural' gene-specific signal. Thirdly, the Fvl gene is present only in mice and not in rats or humans, which implies a relatively recent evolutionary origin. Sequence data bank comparisons provide an explanation for these findings. The Fvl coding sequence is related to the gag gene of the endogenous retrovirus family, called HERV-Ls or 273 Rev. sci. tech. Off. int. Epiz., 17 (1) Normal cells (Fv1n) Fvl MLV N B YAC Puro : : : : : : Mouse cells fused w i t h YAC carrying Fvf Friend virus susceptibility 1 murine leukaemia virus National Institutes of Health-Swiss strain BALB/c strain yeast artificial chromosome puromycin Fig. 3 Functional cloning of Fvl The assay used for detecting the Fvl gene in cloned DNA is illustrated in schematic form. YACs carrying the NeoR gene were introduced into mouse cells by spheroplast fusion (23), and G418 resistant cell clones were isolated. These cells were then infected with equal titres of N-tropic or B-tropic retroviral vectors carrying the PuroR gene. Reduction in the number of puromycin-resistant colonies as a result of fusion with a specific YAC was indicative of the presence of Fvl on that YAC MuERV-Ls, which are themselves highly divergent from MLV (3, 12). The F v l gene seems to have resulted from the insertion of all or part of such an element into a M u s progenitor. Expression is dependent on the chance presence on either side of the insertion point of cryptic signals. Transcription utilises a cellular promoter found upstream of the open reading frame and transcripts are polyadenylated at an insertion element. interact during virus assembly, and these proteins have been Significance and future prospects previously been implicated in superinfection What are the implications of the observation that F v l is derived from the g a g gene of an inserted retrovirus? Perhaps the most interesting feature of this result is that it suggests a possible model of action for the gene. Gag proteins must the F v l gene product which interact with MLV in order to shown to bind tightly to one another through complex interaction domains (1). This suggests that might considered as a dominant negative mutation be in which restriction involves an interaction between the F v l gene product and the CA protein present on incoming virions: an interaction which would result in inhibition of capsid function (17). However, the fact that Gag proteins have not resistance should be noted, which thus implies unusual properties for the MuERV-L Gag protein that corresponds to F v l . Stoye and colleagues are currently attempting to identify the domains of determine whether CA binding can be dissociated from inhibition of virus replication. If binding alone results in restriction, the team will attempt to prepare a peptide, or peptide mimetic, capable of inhibiting virus replication. 274 MuERV-L LTR Fv1 ORF Rev. sci. tech. Off. int. Epiz., 17 (1) : : : : murine endogenous retrovirus with leucine transfer ribonuceic acid (tRNA) primer long terminal repeat Friend virus susceptibility 1 open reading frame Fig. 4 Structure and origin of the Fvl gene The relative positions of the Fvl promoter and open reading frame are indicated, as well as the B2 repeats, the second of which provides the major polyadenylation site for the Fvl message. The region of similarity (about 65% identity) to the gag gene of a MuERV-L element is shown Though expressed at very low levels in cells, Fv1 can still inhibit viral replication. This suggests that Fvl acts very efficiently and that the binding of only a few molecules of F v l is sufficient to inhibit virus replication. This observation is potentially of considerable significance to the development and use of dominant negative versions of viral genes to combat human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1), for example, since it suggests that very low amounts of active protein might have significant restrictive effects. Fvl joins a list of at least three other mouse genes (mls, Fv4 and R m c f ) which are derived from retroviruses and can influence susceptibility to retroviral infection ( 6 , 16). The demonstration of such activities in mice raises the question of whether analogous retrovirus restriction systems have evolved elsewhere, for instance in humans, where the absence of inbred strains would have obscured their presence. Tantalising clues for the existence of similar restriction systems have been reported; these include intracellular restriction of asymptomatic isolates of HIV-1 (2) and Fvl appears to be derived from a retrovirus unrelated to MLV. Was the anti-MLV activity an inherent property of the MuERV-L gag, or did the antiviral activity evolve in response to selective pressures? In other words, was MuERV-L an anti-virus virus? A tentative answer to this question is provided by the observation that the Fvl open reading strain appears to be present in all subspecies of Mus, whereas only a limited subset of Mus appears to have Fvl activity (28). Stoye and colleagues speculate that the germ-line infection of mice by the progenitors of MLVs provided a selective advantage for mice with mutations leading to antiviral activity in a gene which did not initially have antiviral activity (S. Ellis e£ al., in preparation). Endogenous retroviruses are usually considered as selfish DNA which provide no benefit to their hosts. However, there is a possibility that these retroviruses can sometimes afford selective advantages by providing protection against exogenous retroviral infection, and that these advantages might favour the retention of endogenous retroviruses (6). polymorphic human gene(s) determining differential susceptibility to infection by HIV-1 ( 4 0 ) . Although these reports remain somewhat controversial, it is tempting to speculate that they represent Fvl -like activities. Unfortunately, the observation that Fvl is a 'neogene' rules out simple genetic tests for linkage to the human chromosomal region homologous to the Fvl -containing region. Nevertheless, the possibility that one or more of the thousands of endogenous viruses ( 3 9 ) present in the human germ line can affect retroviral replication remains. Addressing this issue appears to be a formidable, but potentially hugely rewarding, undertaking. Rev. sci. tech. Off. int. Epiz., 17 (1) 275 Fvl : le gène de la résistance aux rétrovirus chez les souris J.P. Stoye Résumé Plusieurs g è n e s liés à la sensibilité d e s souris à l'infection par d e s rétrovirus ont d é j à é t é d é c r i t s . P a r m i c e s g è n e s , l'un d e s plus i n t é r e s s a n t s e s t le Fvl (sensibilité-1 a u virus de Friend), qui intervient à un c e r t a i n s t a d e du c y c l e biologique d e s rétrovirus a p r è s l'entrée du virus d a n s la c e l l u l e m a i s a v a n t l'intégration e t la f o r m a t i o n d e s t r u c t u r e s p r o v i r a l e s . U n e c o n n a i s s a n c e plus p r é c i s e du m o d e d'action de Fvl p o u r r a i t a p p o r t e r un é c l a i r a g e n o u v e a u p e r m e t t a n t de m i e u x c o m p r e n d r e les p r e m i è r e s é t a p e s de la r é p l i c a t i o n d e s rétrovirus ; les p r o g r è s o n t é t é lents d a n s c e d o m a i n e , e n r a i s o n d e s i n c e r t i t u d e s sur la n a t u r e du g è n e Fvl. Le c l o n a g e de Fvl, e f f e c t u é r é c e m m e n t s e l o n u n e m é t h o d e de p o s i t i o n n e m e n t , a p e r m i s de f a i r e p r o g r e s s e r la c o n n a i s s a n c e sur ce point. Fvl s e m b l e ê t r e d é r i v é d ' u n f r a g m e n t d e g é n o m e r é t r o v i r a l , c e qui p o u r r a i t ouvrir d e n o u v e l l e s v o i e s pour le c o n t r ô l e de la r é p l i c a t i o n d e s rétrovirus. Mots-clés Clonage positionnel - Génétique - Intégration - M u t a t i o n négative d o m i n a n t e - Provirus - Rétroviridés - Rétrovirus endogène - Sensibilité-1 au virus de Friend. • Fv1, el gen del ratón que confiere resistencia a los retrovirus J.P. Stoye Resumen S e h a n d e s c r i t o diversos g e n e s q u e influyen s o b r e la s u s c e p t i b i l i d a d de los r a t o n e s a la i n f e c c i ó n por retrovirus. Uno de los m á s i n t e r e s a n t e s es Fvl virus susceptibility-1, (Friend o g e n de tipo 1 q u e c o n t r o l a la s u s c e p t i b i l i d a d a l e u c e m i a s i n d u c i d a s por el virus Friend), c u y a a c c i ó n a f e c t a a una f a s e del ciclo vital retrovírico ulterior a la p e n e t r a c i ó n del virus e n la c é l u l a p e r o previa al e n s a m b l a j e y la f o r m a c i ó n d e e s t r u c t u r a s p r o v í r i c a s . C a b e e s p e r a r q u e la c o m p r e n s i ó n d e t a l l a d a del m o d o de a c c i ó n de e s e g e n a r r o j e luz s o b r e las p r i m e r a s e t a p a s de la r e p l i c a c i ó n r e t r o v í r i c a , y a u n q u e los p r o g r e s o s e n este c a m p o h a n sido lentos d e b i d o a la i n c e r t i d u m b r e e x i s t e n t e s o b r e la n a t u r a l e z a del g e n Fvl, la r e c i e n t e c l o n a c i ó n posicional de Fvl ha v e n i d o a llenar esta l a g u n a . Fvl p a r e c e d e r i v a r de un f r a g m e n t o de g e n o m a r e t r o v í r i c o , una o b s e r v a c i ó n q u e podría dar pie a n u e v a s f ó r m u l a s p a r a el control de la r e p l i c a c i ó n r e t r o v í r i c a . Palabras clave Clonación posicional - Ensamblaje - Gen de t i p o 1 de la susceptibilidad al virus Friend Genética endógenos. M u t a c i ó n negativa d o m i n a n t e - Provirus - Retroviridae - Retrovirus 276 Rev. sci. tech. Off. int. 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