Entry by multiple picornaviruses is dependent on a pathway that includes TNK2, WASL, and NCK1
Abstract
Comprehensive knowledge of the host factors required for picornavirus infection would facilitate antiviral development. Here we demonstrate roles for three human genes, TNK2, WASL, and NCK1, in infection by multiple picornaviruses. CRISPR deletion of TNK2, WASL, or NCK1 reduced encephalomyocarditis virus (EMCV), coxsackievirus B3 (CVB3), poliovirus and enterovirus D68 infection, and chemical inhibitors of TNK2 and WASL decreased EMCV infection. Reduced EMCV lethality was observed in mice lacking TNK2. TNK2, WASL, and NCK1 were important in early stages of the viral lifecycle, and genetic epistasis analysis demonstrated that the three genes function in a common pathway. Mechanistically, reduced internalization of EMCV was observed in TNK2 deficient cells demonstrating that TNK2 functions in EMCV entry. Domain analysis of WASL demonstrated that its actin nucleation activity was necessary to facilitate viral infection. Together, these data support a model wherein TNK2, WASL, and NCK1 comprise a pathway important for multiple picornaviruses.
Introduction
Picornaviruses cause a wide range of diseases including the common cold, hepatitis, myocarditis, poliomyelitis, meningitis, and encephalitis (Melnick, 1983). Although vaccines exist for poliovirus and hepatitis A virus, there are currently no FDA approved antivirals against picornaviruses in the United States. As obligate intracellular pathogens, viruses are dependent on the host cellular machinery to complete their lifecycle. The early stages of the virus lifecycle, including receptor binding, entry, uncoating, and initiation of replication, are the ideal targets for preventing virus infection since the virus has not yet multiplied.
Despite extensive studies (Yamauchi and Helenius, 2013), there remain significant gaps in our understanding of virus entry. As the family Picornaviridae encompasses a wide range of viruses, it is not surprising that there is diversity in the known entry mechanisms of different species. Among the picornaviruses, poliovirus entry has been the most extensively studied. While some reports suggest that poliovirus enters the cell through clathrin-mediated endocytosis and that its genome release depends on endosome acidification (Madshus et al., 1984a), more recent studies report that poliovirus enters cells by a clathrin-, caveolin-, flotillin-, and microtubule-independent pathway (Brandenburg et al., 2007). Furthermore, poliovirus entry is sensitive to inhibitors of both tyrosine kinases and actin-polymerization, although it is not known which specific tyrosine kinase(s) is/are important for poliovirus infection (Brandenburg et al., 2007). Coxsackie virus B3 (CVB3) entry has also been extensively studied (Bergelson and Coyne, 2013). In polarized epithelial cells, CVB3 binding to the co-receptor decay-accelerating factor (DAF) and the coxsackievirus and adenovirus receptor (CAR) leads to entry by caveolin-dependent endocytosis and macropinocytosis (Coyne and Bergelson, 2006; Coyne et al., 2007). In contrast to CVB3 and poliovirus, there have been few studies of EMCV entry. Vascular cell adhesion molecule 1 (VCAM-1) and the disintegrin and metalloproteinase domain-containing protein 9 (ADAM9) are reported to be entry factors for EMCV (Huber, 1994; Bazzone et al., 2019; Baggen et al., 2019). Interaction of the EMCV virion with VCAM-1 is believed to induce a conformational change that then releases the viral RNA genome; entry into the cytosol is reported to be independent of acidification (Madshus et al., 1984b).
Using a novel virus infection system comprised of the model organism C. elegans and Orsay virus, the only known natural virus of C. elegans, we previously identified several genes that are essential for virus infection in C. elegans (Jiang et al., 2017). The genes sid-3, viro-2 and nck-1 were found to be essential for an early, pre-replication step of the Orsay virus lifecycle. sid-3 encodes a non-receptor tyrosine kinase orthologous to human Tyrosine Kinase Non-Receptor 2 (TNK2), viro-2 encodes an orthologue of human Wiskott-Aldrich Syndrome protein Like protein (WASL), and nck-1 encodes an orthologue of Non-Catalytic Region of Tyrosine Kinase (NCK1), an adaptor protein that binds to both TNK2 and WASL (Galisteo et al., 2006; Donnelly et al., 2013). Since Orsay virus is a non-enveloped, positive strand RNA virus that is evolutionarily related to the family Picornaviridae, we reasoned that the human orthologues of these genes may have a conserved role in infection by picornaviruses.
Human TNK2 is linked to cancers, has been reported to be activated by multiple extracellular stimuli, and is involved in many different pathways, such as clathrin/receptor mediated endocytosis, regulation of EGFR degradation, transduction of signals into the nucleus, and regulation of actin polymerization (Galisteo et al., 2006; Liu et al., 2010; Mahajan et al., 2005; Yokoyama et al., 2005). Furthermore, overexpression of TNK2 induces interferon and leads to reduced replication of a Hepatitis C virus replicon (Fujimoto et al., 2011). To date, there are no publications demonstrating a positive role for TNK2 in virus infection; several siRNA-based screens suggest that TNK2 is important for influenza A virus (IAV), vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV), and hepatitis C virus (HCV) infections (Fujimoto et al., 2011; König et al., 2010; Karlas et al., 2010; Lupberger et al., 2011), but no validation of these screening results have been reported. Humans encode two orthologues of viro-2, WASP and WASL (Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome protein /-like) (Massaad et al., 2013). Strikingly, biochemical assays have demonstrated that WASL is a substrate for the kinase activity of TNK2 (Yokoyama et al., 2005), suggesting that the two function in a pathway. NCK1 is an adaptor protein reported to co-localize with TNK2 (Galisteo et al., 2006; Teo et al., 2001) and interact with WASL. There are only limited studies linking WASL and NCK1 to virus infection. A clear role has been established for WASL in spread of vaccinia virus (Frischknecht et al., 1999) that involves NCK1 as well (Donnelly et al., 2013; Dodding and Way, 2009). Furthermore, sensitivity of Lassa virus infection to Wiskostatin, a small molecule inhibitor of WASL, suggests a role of WASL in virus entry (Oppliger et al., 2016). However, there are no studies implicating NCK1 in any aspect of picornavirus infection or in entry of any virus.
Here, we determined whether these three human orthologues of the genes found in a C. elegans forward genetic screen function in an evolutionarily conserved manner to facilitate virus infection in human cell culture. CRISPR-Cas9 genome editing was used to generate knockout cells for each gene, and their impact on infection by a panel of viruses from different families was then tested. Significant reductions in infection by multiple picornaviruses were observed in each of the cell lines. Consistent with these in vitro data, we observed increased survival of mice lacking murine TNK2 after EMCV challenge in vivo. We further demonstrated that TNK2, WASL, and NCK1 function in a pathway to support EMCV virus infection with WASL and NCK1 lying downstream of TNK2. Mechanistically, loss of TNK2 led to reduced EMCV virus internalization, while both TNK2 and WASL were required for proper endocytic trafficking of EMCV. These data support a model wherein TNK2, WASL, and NCK1 comprise a pathway that is important for entry by multiple picornaviruses.
Results
Non-receptor tyrosine kinase TNK2 is important for infection by multiple picornaviruses
To investigate the function of TNK2 in virus infection, human lung epithelial carcinoma A549 cells deficient in TNK2 were generated by CRISPR-Cas9 genome editing (Figure 1A). We tested a panel of viruses, including multiple viruses from the family Picornaviridae, which are evolutionarily related to Orsay virus (Wolf et al., 2018). In a single step growth analysis, deletion of TNK2 by two independent sgRNAs (TNK2 KO1 and TNK2 KO2 cells) reduced EMCV infection by 93% and 86%, respectively, compared to control cells (p<0.00001, Figure 1B and Figure 1—figure supplement 1A). When infected by CVB3, 56% and 48% fewer infected TNK2 KO1 and TNK2 KO2 cells were observed (p<0.0001, Figure 1D and Figure 1—figure supplement 1B). In a multi-step growth curve, EMCV titers in the supernatant from TNK2 KO1 were 1660-fold lower at 24 hr post infection (p<0.01, Figure 1C) and CVB3 titers in the supernatant from the TNK2 KO1 were 154-fold lower at 36 hr post infection (p<0.01, Figure 1E). In addition, reduced infectivity in TNK2 KO1 was also observed with both recombinant GFP-EMCV and GFP-CVB3, respectively (Figure 1—figure supplement 2A B). Furthermore, we examined virus replication complex formation by double stranded RNA immunostaining with the commercial J2 antibody and direct electron microscopy (EM) on EMCV-infected cells. We observed fewer cells positive for double-stranded RNA and smaller size of the virus replication complex (Figure 1—figure supplement 2C D). To corroborate these findings, we analyzed EMCV and CVB3 infection in commercial Hap1 cells (a haploid hematopoietic-derived lymphoma cell line) deficient in TNK2. Reductions in infected cells by 24% for EMCV and 30% for CVB3 were observed (p<0.001, Figure 1—figure supplement 3A B). Statistically significant reductions in poliovirus infection in both Hap1 and A549 TNK2 knockout cells and reduction in enterovirus D68 infection in A549 cells were also observed (Figure 1—figure supplement 3C, E F). In contrast, no effect of TNK2 deletion was seen for IAV, parainfluenza virus (PIV5) or adenovirus 5 (Figure 1—figure supplement 3D, G, H I), demonstrating the apparent specificity of TNK2 for picornavirus infection.
We next attempted to rescue the EMCV infection defect in TNK2 knockout cells by ectopic overexpression of TNK2. However, the complexity of the TNK2 locus (three major isoforms and 22 putative transcript variants; Zerbino et al., 2018) presented challenges, and the reported induction of interferon by TNK2 overexpression (Fujimoto et al., 2011) may have further complicated interpretation of these experiments. Lentivirus expression of each of the three major TNK2 isoforms (which yielded expression levels of TNK2 much higher than the endogenous levels (Figure 1—figure supplement 4D)) in control A549 cells led to statistically significant reductions in EMCV infection (Figure 1—figure supplement 4A, B C). In addition, fluorescently tagged TNK2 expression through either direct transfection in 293 T cells or lentivirus transduction in A549 cells led to aggregates inside the cytosol (Figure 3—figure supplement 1 and Figure 5—figure supplement 1A). Nevertheless, we consistently observed a small, but statistically significant increase in EMCV virus infection in TNK2 KO1 cells transduced with the canonical isoform one as compared to the control cells (Figure 1—figure supplement 4A). We also used an alternative approach to rescue virus infection in TNK2 KO1 cells by reverting the 28 bp deletion in clone TNK2 KO1 using CRISPR-Cas9 with oligonucleotide-mediated homologous template-directed recombination (HDR); three synonymous mutations were included in the template to unambiguously identify a successful repair event (Figure 1—figure supplement 4H). Screening of 500 single-cell clones yielded one clone that had repaired the TNK2 28 bp deletion allele. However, this process also introduced an insertion of 11 nucleotides in the adjacent intron sequence 9 bp from the nearby splice acceptor (Figure 1—figure supplement 4H). We were able to restore low levels of TNK2 expression in the HDR repaired clone (Figure 1—figure supplement 4G). In this clone, EMCV infected cell percentage and virus titer increased, by 8-fold (p<0.0001, Figure 1—figure supplement 4E) and 9-fold (p<0.01, Figure 1—figure supplement 4F), respectively as compared to TNK2 KO1 cells.
As a completely independent means of assessing the role of TNK2, we treated A549 cells with Aim-100, a small molecule kinase inhibitor with specificity for TNK2 (Mahajan et al., 2010). Aim-100 pre-treatment reduced EMCV infection in a dose dependent manner without affecting cell viability (Figure 1F, Figure 1—figure supplement 1C and data not shown).
WASL, a known substrate of TNK2, is important for picornavirus infection
The human genome encodes two WASP paralogues, WASP and WASL (also known as N-WASP). In this study, we focused on WASL because WASP is not expressed in epithelial cells such as A549. Clonal WASL knockout A549 cells were generated by CRISPR-Cas9 genome editing (Figure 2A). In a single step growth analysis, WASL KO cells showed 62% reduction in EMCV-infected cells as compared to control cells (p<0.0001, Figure 2B and Figure 2—figure supplement 1A), while in a multi-step growth curve, WASL KO cells yielded 248-fold reduced virus titers at 24 hr post infection (p<0.01, Figure 2C). Ectopic expression of WASL in the WASL KO cells rescued EMCV infection to wild type levels (Figure 2—figure supplement 2A B). As with TNK2, we observed fewer cells positive for double stranded RNA by immunostaining and smaller size of the virus replication complex by EM (Figure 1—figure supplement 2C D). Reduced levels of CVB3, poliovirus, and enterovirus D68 infection were observed in these cells (Figure 2D and E, Figure 1—figure supplement 3E, F). In addition, independent Hap1 cells deficient in WASL had reduced EMCV, CVB3 and poliovirus infection (Figure 1—figure supplement 3A, B C). To independently assess the role of WASL during virus infection, we used a small molecule inhibitor of WASL, Wiskostatin (Peterson et al., 2004). Wiskostatin reduced EMCV infection in A549 cells in a dose-dependent manner with no apparent decrease of cell viability (Figure 2F, Figure 2—figure supplement 1C and data not shown). These data demonstrate that WASL is important for multiple picornavirus infection in human cell culture.
The signaling adaptor protein NCK1 is also important for picornavirus infection
Deletion of NCK1 in A549 cells (Figure 2G) reduced the number of EMCV and CVB3 infected cells by 55% and 49%, respectively (p<0.0001, Figure 2H and J, Figure 2—figure supplement 1D E) comparable to the reductions observed in WASL KO cells. By a multi-step growth analysis, NCK1 KO showed 10-fold reduction of EMCV virus titer at 24 hr post infection (P<0.01 Figure 2I) and 14-fold reduction of CVB3 titer at 36 hr post infection (p<0.05, Figure 2K). Ectopic expression of NCK1 in the NCK1 KO cells rescued EMCV infection to wild type levels (Figure 2—figure supplement 2C D). As with TNK2 and WASL, these data demonstrate that NCK1 is important for multiple picornavirus infection in human cell culture.
TNK2, WASL, and NCK1 are components of a common pathway
To determine whether TNK2, WASL, and NCK1 act in a common or distinct pathway for virus infection, we performed genetic epistasis analysis by generating double and triple mutant cell lines (Figure 3—figure supplement 2A). EMCV infection levels and viral titer production in the double and triple knockout lines were the same as observed in the TNK2 KO1 lines (Figure 3A and B and Figure 3—figure supplement 3A). The lack of an additive effect suggests that WASL and NCK1 are both in the same genetic pathway as TNK2. Combined with the known ability of TNK2 to phosphorylate WASL (Yokoyama et al., 2005), these data support a model where TNK2 acts upstream of WASL and NCK1. The magnitude of the impact of TNK2 KO1 was greater than that of WASL KO or NCK1 KO, suggesting that TNK2 might work through additional pathways in mediating virus infection besides acting through WASL and NCK1.
Because TNK2 phosphorylation of WASL increases its actin nucleation activity (Yokoyama and Miller, 2003), we reasoned that it might be possible to complement the TNK2 deficiency by overexpression of WASL. Overexpression of wild type WASL in the TNK2 KO1 A549 cells led to increased EMCV virus infection (Figure 3C). Since constitutively active point mutants of WASL have been described (Adamovich et al., 2009; Keszei et al., 2018) (Figure 3—figure supplement 2B C), we next tested whether overexpression of three such constructs in the TNK2 KO1 cells could further increase virus infection. A higher level of complementation for all three mutants was observed compared to wild type WASL (Figure 3C, Figure 3—figure supplement 3B). For NCK1, based on its reported binding to WASL and TNK2, we hypothesized that its function is to recruit WASL to TNK2, which could then activate WASL via phosphorylation (Yokoyama et al., 2005; Rohatgi et al., 2001). Thus, we also tested whether constitutively active WASL could complement NCK1 KO. Constitutively active WASL fully rescued the NCK1 KO virus infection phenotype (Figure 3D and Figure 3—figure supplements 2D, 3C). Together, these data demonstrated that TNK2, WASL, and NCK1 are in a pathway to support picornavirus infection with WASL and NCK1 downstream of TNK2.
We further evaluated the interactions between TNK2, WASL and NCK1 using biochemical and biophysical assays. Previous studies had reported interaction between NCK1 and WASL through far Western and pull-down assay (Donnelly et al., 2013) and co-localization of TNK2 and NCK1 through protein overexpression (Galisteo et al., 2006). Fluorescent protein tagged forms of TNK2, WASL, and NCK1 were individually expressed in 293 T cells. WASL and NCK1 both distributed homogenously throughout the cytoplasm, while TNK2 formed puncta in the cytoplasm (Figure 3—figure supplement 1), which agreed with previous observations (Teo et al., 2001; Shen et al., 2011). To examine potential co-localization, we co-expressed either mCerulean tagged TNK2 or mCerulean tagged WASL with mVenus tagged NCK1 in 293 T cells, respectively. Since NCK1 is an adaptor protein, we reasoned that its interactions with binding partners would likely be relatively stable and therefore more readily detectable. Co-expression of mCerulean tagged TNK2 with mVenus tagged NCK1 re-localized NCK1 into the puncta observed by TNK2 expression alone (Figure 3—figure supplements 1, 4A). Co-expression of mCerulean tagged WASL with mVenus tagged NCK1 showed homogenous distribution in the cytoplasm and co-localization of these two proteins (Figure 3—figure supplements 1, 4A). Further analysis by quantitative FRET demonstrated that WASL and NCK1 had higher FRET efficiency in cells, while TNK2 and NCK1 also had significant, but lower, FRET efficiency (Figure 3—figure supplement 4A B). Consistent with the FRET data, in co-transfected 293 T cells, immunoprecipitation of FLAG tagged NCK1 pulled down HA tagged WASL more efficiently than it did Myc tagged TNK2 (Figure 3—figure supplement 4C). Altogether, these data demonstrate that TNK2 and WASL bind directly to NCK1.
TNK2, WASL, and NCK1 affect a pre-replication step of the EMCV lifecycle
To begin dissecting the stage of the EMCV virus lifecycle impacted by TNK2, WASL, and NCK1, we transfected EMCV genomic RNA into the cells to bypass the early stages of the viral lifecycle. The TNK2 KO1, WASL KO, and NCK1 KO cells produced the same titers of EMCV virus as the control cells at 10 hr post transfection (Figure 4A) demonstrating that TNK2, WASL, and NCK1 are dispensable for EMCV replication and post-replication stages of the EMCV lifecycle. Thus, we concluded that all three genes act on an early stage of the viral lifecycle. As a second line of evidence, we determined the impact of adding the TNK2 kinase-specific inhibitor Aim-100 before or at varying times after EMCV infection. While Aim-100 pre-treatment reduced EMCV infection, administration after virus inoculation had no effect (Figure 4B and Figure 4—figure supplement 1), consistent with a role for TNK2 at an early stage of virus infection.
TNK2, but not WASL functions in virus internalization
We examined the impact of TNK2 and WASL deletion on virus binding, virus internalization, pore formation, and viral RNA genome translocation. Following incubation at 4°C for one hour, no difference in virus binding was observed among control, TNK2 KO1, and WASL KO cells (Figure 4C), as assessed by qRT-PCR for EMCV genomic RNA. In contrast, after raising the temperature to 37° C for 30 min to allow for internalization of the bound virus particles and then trypsinization to remove uninternalized surface virus particles as described before (Berry and Tse, 2017; Hackett et al., 2015), there was a 46% reduction (p<0.001) of intracellular EMCV viral RNA in the TNK2 KO1 cells (Figure 4D and Figure 4—figure supplement 2C–E). However, no difference in RNA levels was observed in WASL KO cells (Figure 4D). As a complementary approach, we evaluated internalization using fluorescently labeled EMCV virions (Figure 4—figure supplement 2A B). 25% fewer EMCV positive TNK2 KO1 cells were observed compared to control cells (Figure 4E and Figure 4—figure supplement 2B), while no statistical difference was observed in the WASL KO cells (Figure 4E and Figure 4—figure supplement 2B).
We examined the ability of fluorescently labeled transferrin, a known cargo for clathrin-mediated endocytosis, to be endocytosed in both TNK2 KO1 and WASL KO cells. Transferrin was internalized in TNK2 KO1 and WASL KO cells to the same level as in the control cells (Figure 4—figure supplement 3A B), consistent with a previous report that knock down of TNK2 has no effect on transferrin endocytosis (Grøvdal et al., 2008). To further check other general virus entry pathways, we also examined whether macropinocytosis was affected in these cells. FITC conjugated Dextran (7 KDa) is reported to be uptaken by macropinocytosis (Oppliger et al., 2016). No defect in uptake of Dextran was observed in TNK2 KO1 cells (Figure 4—figure supplement 3C D). In contrast, the WASL KO cells had a 75% reduction in Dextran uptake (Figure 4—figure supplement 3C D), which is consistent with the known dependency of macropinocytosis on actin polymerization (Innocenti et al., 2005). The Dextran macropinocytosis defect in the WASL KO appears to be unrelated to EMCV infection though since no reduction in either binding or internalization of EMCV was observed.
A step that is closely linked to internalization for picornaviruses is virus-induced pore formation, which is required for genome release into the cytoplasm. To assess pore formation, cells were treated with the membrane impermeable translation inhibitor, α-sarcin. Virus-induced pore formation will lead to translation inhibition and reduction of 35S methionine and 35S cysteine incorporation whereas in the absence of pore formation, translation will proceed at wild type levels (Fernández-Puentes and Carrasco, 1980). TNK2 KO1 and WASL KO cells showed no defect in virus pore formation during EMCV infection (Figure 4F). Although a clear defect in EMCV internalization exists in the TNK2 KO1 cells (Figure 4D and E), no defect in pore formation was observed. Since the internalization defect in TNK2 KO1 cells is not absolute, pore formation may still occur with sufficient frequency to inhibit translation. Alternatively, pore formation may not necessarily require prior internalization; for example binding of parainfluenza virus alone is sufficient to initiate pore formation at the cell membrane (Porotto et al., 2012). For WASL, no defect in binding, internalization or pore formation was observed in the knockout cells, suggesting that the defect is downstream of these steps. Similarly, a recent report suggests that the human gene PLA2G16 acts at a step of the picornavirus lifecycle that is subsequent to pore formation (Staring et al., 2017).
To determine whether TNK2 or WASL plays any role in downstream viral RNA genome translocation after pore formation, we examined virus-induced host protein cleavage after its entry. For some picornaviruses, immediately after translocation of its genome, translation of the incoming positive strand RNA leads to proteolytic cleavage of the host protein eIF4G to shut down host translation (Glaser and Skern, 2000). Since this activity has not been described for EMCV, we used CVB3 which is known to have this activity (Carthy et al., 1998). eIF4G cleavage in presence or absence of a virus genome replication inhibitor guanidine hydrochloride showed no difference in the WASL KO cells as compared to the control cells, demonstrating that WASL does not impact this step of the viral lifecycle. In contrast, we observed a decrease of eIF4G cleavage in TNK2 KO1 cells, suggesting that TNK2 might play a role in this process. Alternatively, the reduced eIF4G cleavage level might simply reflect the reduced level of virus internalization in TNK2 KO1 cells (Figure 4G).
TNK2 was found in proximity to labeled EMCV particles during infection
TNK2 is present in endocytic vesicles and colocalizes with the early endosome marker EEA1 (Teo et al., 2001; Shen et al., 2011; Grøvdal et al., 2008; Jones et al., 2014). To visualize TNK2 subcellular localization, we expressed N-terminally GFP tagged TNK2 in the TNK2 KO1 cells. Two different patterns were observed in GFP positive cells: high TNK2 expression formed GFP aggregates inside the cytosol of cells in about 80% of the cell population, which has been described previously (Teo et al., 2001; Prieto-Echagüe et al., 2010), and low TNK2 expression inside the cytosol of cells in about 20% of the cell population (Figure 5—figure supplement 1A, B and C). Consistent with the native TNK2 rescue, N-terminally GFP tagged TNK2 expression in the TNK2 KO1 cells statistically increased virus infection from 17.2% to 22.0% of GFP-transduced control cell infection (p<0.01, Figure 5—figure supplement 1E). The modest increase was comparable to that observed with ectopic expression of wild type TNK2. Next, we checked TNK2 localization in cells infected with fluorescently labeled EMCV. In TNK2 KO1 cells with high TNK2 expression that formed aggregates, no GFP-TNK2 in proximity to EMCV was observed (Figure 5—figure supplement 1A). However, in cells with low TNK2 expression, labeled EMCV particles were observed in proximity to GFP-TNK2 (Figure 5A and Figure 5—figure supplement 1B), presumably in early endosomes. Further quantification demonstrated that about 40% of the EMCV particles were in proximity to GFP-TNK2 in those cells (Figure 5—figure supplement 1D).
WASL is recruited to vaccinia virus vesicles to promote its intracellular trafficking (Dodding and Way, 2009). To examine whether EMCV infection recruits WASL as observed for poxvirus, we expressed N-terminal GFP tagged WASL in WASL KO cells. The GFP tagged WASL was functional as it rescued EMCV infection (Figure 5—figure supplement 1F). Following infection with fluorescently labeled EMCV, no clear recruitment of GFP-WASL to fluorescently labeled EMCV was observed (Figure 5A).
EMCV infection is CDC42 dependent but clathrin independent
Both TNK2 and WASL are activated by the upstream CDC42 small GTPase (Galisteo et al., 2006; Grøvdal et al., 2008; Howlin et al., 2008; Mahajan et al., 2007; Rohatgi et al., 2000), which can be inhibited by pirl1 (Oppliger et al., 2016). Pirl1 treatment inhibited EMCV replication at a 10 μM concentration without cell toxicity (Figure 5B, Figure 5—figure supplement 2 and data not shown), suggesting that CDC42 mediates EMCV infection.
Since a role for TNK2 in clathrin-mediated endocytosis (CME) has been reported (Teo et al., 2001), we next examined whether the classic CME inhibitors such as dynasore (a canonical inhibitor of dynamin) or pitstop-2 (an inhibitor of clathrin) affect EMCV virus infection. Dynasore and pitstop-2 had no effect on EMCV infection while they inhibited VSV, a virus known to rely predominantly on CME for its entry, in a dose dependent fashion (Figure 5—figure supplement 3A B). Together, these data indicate that EMCV infection in A549 cells is dependent on CDC42, which activates TNK2 and WASL, but does not require CME for its entry.
EMCV virions accumulate in early endosomes in the absence of TNK2 or WASP
We next examined colocalization of EMCV with the early endosome marker EEA1. A time course analysis demonstrated that in control cells, the peak colocalization of EMCV with EEA1 occurred at 20 min post internalization (Figure 5—figure supplement 3C D), which was followed by a decrease at 30 min post internalization. This result is consistent with a previous report that poliovirus entry peaks at 20 min post infection (Brandenburg et al., 2007). In contrast, in both the TNK2 KO1 and WASL KO cells, higher levels of EMCV particles were retained in EEA1 containing vesicles at 30 min post internalization (Figure 5C, D, and Figure 5—figure supplement 3D). Thus, both TNK2 KO1 and WASL KO cells are characterized by increased accumulation of EMCV particles in early endosomes.
EMCV infection is dependent on the activation of WASL and its actin modulating function
The primary known effector function of WASL is nucleation of actin polymerization, which is mediated by binding of its C-terminal domain to the Arp2/3 complex and actin monomers (Galletta et al., 2008). Different domains of WASL are critical for interaction with other proteins that can modulate WASL stability, activation, or function. Because ectopic expression of wild type WASL fully rescued EMCV infection in WASL KO cells, we tested the ability of a series of WASL domain deletion mutant constructs to rescue infection in WASL KO cells (Figure 6A). The basic region that binds with PIP2, the proline rich region that binds with SH3 domain containing proteins, the GTPase binding domain that interacts with CDC-42 kinase, and the acidic domain that is involved in actin binding and polymerization were all required for EMCV infection (Figure 6B and C and Figure 6—figure supplement 1A). Interestingly, transduction of the N-terminal WH1 domain truncated mutant increased EMCV infection by 3-fold compared to wild type WASL transduction (Figure 6B and Figure 6—figure supplement 1A). The WH1 domain is reported to bind with WASP interacting proteins (WIPs) to maintain WASL in an inactivated state (Stradal et al., 2004); therefore, the WH1 domain truncation mutant should have increased actin polymerization activity. To further assess the WASL pathway’s role in EMCV infection, we treated cells with the Arp2/3 complex inhibitor CK-869. CK-869 treatment inhibited EMCV infection in a dose-dependent manner without cell toxicity (Figure 6D, Figure 6—figure supplement 1B and data not shown). Altogether, these data demonstrated that WASL and its downstream actin pathway play important roles in EMCV infection.
TNK2 is required for EMCV infection in an in vivo mouse model
To investigate TNK2’s role in EMCV infection in vivo, we generated a Tnk2 knockout mouse that carried a 13 Kb deletion of the murine Tnk2 genomic locus, which eliminated all annotated TNK2 isoforms and splice variants (Figure 7A). In primary mouse lung fibroblast cells, complete ablation of TNK2 protein expression was observed by Western blot (Figure 7B). The number of cells infected by EMCV was reduced by 40% in the knockout cells (p<0.001, Figure 7C and Figure 7—figure supplement 1). A multi-step growth analysis showed that wild type primary lung fibroblast had more than 10-fold higher virus production than Tnk2 knock out cells at 6 hr post infection (p<0.01, Figure 7D). In vivo, EMCV challenge with 107 PFU by oral gavage resulted in greater survival of Tnk2 knockout animals compared to wild type animals (p=0.0051, Figure 7E). Virus titration in infected mouse tissues showed that Tnk2 knock out mice had four logs lower virus titer in average in brain and two logs lower virus titer in average in heart (p<0.05, Figure 7F and G). Together, these data demonstrated an important role for TNK2 in EMCV infection in an in vivo mouse infection model.
Discussion
We previously determined that the C. elegans genes sid-3, viro-2, and nck-1 are essential for Orsay virus infection in C. elegans (Jiang et al., 2017). In this study, we further asked whether their respective human orthologues TNK2, WASL, and NCK1 play any roles in mammalian virus infection. After screening a panel of mammalian viruses, we found that multiple picornaviruses, including EMCV, CVB3, enterovirus D68, and poliovirus, rely on TNK2, WASL, and NCK1 for infection in different cell lines. For TNK2, this represents the first evidence that it has any pro-viral function. Interestingly, poliovirus entry was previously shown to be dependent on an unknown kinase based on the use of a broad-spectrum tyrosine kinase inhibitor (Brandenburg et al., 2007). One possibility is that TNK2 might be the kinase targeted in that study.
Our data represent the first demonstration that WASL and NCK1 are important for infection by picornaviruses such as EMCV, CVB3, enterovirus D68, and poliovirus. RNA transfection of EMCV into TNK2, WASL, and NCK1 knockouts each yielded the same level of virus as the control demonstrating their role in an early stage of the EMCV lifecycle. For WASL, this is in contrast to its well-defined role in facilitating spread and transmission of vaccinia virus (Frischknecht et al., 1999) suggesting that WASL is important for different lifecycle stages for different viruses. In addition to the known interactions between NCK1 and WASL, TNK2 has been reported to phosphorylate WASL (Yokoyama et al., 2005). Consistent with these data, our genetic epistasis analysis and ectopic trans-complementation data (Figure 3A–D) demonstrated that these three genes function in a pathway in the context of picornavirus infection. Furthermore, biochemical and biophysical data demonstrated direct interaction of NCK1 with both TNK2 and WASL. Previous studies have established a clear role for CDC42 in regulation of TNK2 and WASL (Rohatgi et al., 2000; Prieto-Echagüe and Miller, 2011), and inhibition of CDC42 resulted in reduced EMCV infection.
We explored the mechanism by which TNK2 and WASL act regarding picornavirus infection. TNK2 KO1 cells were partially defective in EMCV internalization. In contrast, internalization was not affected in WASL KO cells, suggesting WASL functions in one or more steps downstream of virus internalization. In the absence of either TNK2 or WASL, EMCV particles continued to accumulate in early endosomes at 30 min post infection in contrast to control cells, demonstrating a role for both genes in endosomal trafficking. Notably, sid-3, the C. elegans orthologue of TNK2, is important for endosomal trafficking of RNA molecules (Jose et al., 2012). Thus, one possibility is that the delay in release from the early endosomes contributes to the reduction in EMCV infection in both TNK2 and WASL KO cells. However, it is uncertain whether this observed accumulation in early endosomes is directly related to the reduced levels of infection in these cells. In detailed studies of poliovirus, most of the RNA genome is released from the virus particles by 20 min post internalization (Brandenburg et al., 2007). Thus, additional studies are necessary to determine whether the accumulated particles in the early endosomes still contain genomic RNA.
These data led us to the following model (Figure 8). TNK2 is in a pathway upstream of WASL and NCK1. Because TNK2 deletion has a greater magnitude of impact than WASL or NCK1 deletion, TNK2 must act on one or more additional step of the viral lifecycle than WASL and NCK1. Consistent with this model, we demonstrated that TNK2 (but not WASL) is needed for virus internalization. In addition, we propose that TNK2 activates WASL (presumably, but not necessarily, by phosphorylation and in a fashion mediated by NCK1 binding), which then affects a subsequent early step of the EMCV lifecycle. Our data suggest that this step is linked to proper endocytic trafficking of the incoming viral particles, which accumulated in early endosomes in both TNK2 and WASL deficient cells to a greater extent than in control cells. The requirement for the WASL acidic domain, which is responsible for actin binding and nucleation, along with the sensitivity to the Arp2/3 inhibitor CK-869, demonstrates that this process is actin dependent. One possibility is that regulated actin polymerization may be necessary to deliver endocytic vesicles to specific subcellular locations necessary for productive infection.
Actin is critical for many cellular processes and due to its essentiality, is not a druggable target. In this study, we identified a TNK2 and actin-dependent pathway necessary to promote virus infection but does not appear to alter normal endocytosis. As cells lacking TNK2 and NCK1 are clearly viable, as are mice lacking TNK2 and NCK1 (Bladt et al., 2003). These genes are potential antiviral targets that could be disrupted by small molecules without compromising overall actin biology and survival of the host.
It is becoming increasingly clear that there are additional, poorly defined stages of the picornavirus lifecycle. A recent genetic screen identified PLA2G16 as an essential gene required for an early stage of multiple picornaviruses at a step post binding, internalization, and pore formation (Staring et al., 2017). Our study similarly suggests that WASL also acts after these stages. Further study is needed to determine whether WASL acts at the same stage as PLA2G16 or at a distinct step.
All four picornaviruses we tested were dependent on TNK2 and WASL. In contrast, viruses in other families such as influenza A virus, parainfluenza 5 and adenovirus A5 were not affected by absence of these genes, suggesting that picornaviruses may specifically depend on these host factors. PIV5 is known to enter cells by direct fusion at the cellular membrane and is not believed to utilize endocytic vesicles (Porotto et al., 2012). The observed lack of dependence of PIV5 on TNK2 or WASL is consistent with a potential role of TNK2 and WASL in modulating endocytic vesicle trafficking. In contrast, picornaviruses such as poliovirus, CVB3, and EMCV are generally thought to utilize clathrin independent endocytic vesicles for entry (Bergelson and Coyne, 2013), while influenza A virus and adenovirus mostly rely on clathrin-mediated endocytosis for their entry (Yamauchi and Helenius, 2013). The magnitude of the phenotypes did vary significantly among the tested picornaviruses, which is not surprising given the significant degree of divergence between these virus genomes and differences in their entry requirements. Nonetheless, all four tested picornaviruses displayed different degree of dependence on this pathway. It will be important to test a wider range of picornaviruses to determine exactly which taxa within the Picornaviridae are most reliant on these genes. It will also be of great interest to test additional viruses from other families. The data suggesting a role of WASL in Lassa virus infection (Oppliger et al., 2016) supports the notion that at least some viruses in other virus families may also depend on one or more of these genes for infection.
In recent years, multiple studies of host factors critical for picornavirus infection have utilized haploid gene-trap screening or CRISPR screening in mammalian cell lines (Bazzone et al., 2019; Staring et al., 2017; Kim et al., 2017). These studies have identified multiple host genes required broadly for picornaviruses (Staring et al., 2017), as well as examples of genes required for specific picornaviruses. For instance, ADAM9 was discovered as a potential receptor for EMCV by CRISPR and gene trap screening (Bazzone et al., 2019; Baggen et al., 2019). Notably, the genes that we identified by starting with the C. elegans Orsay virus genetic screen, TNK2, WASL, and NCK1, were not identified as hits in any of the direct mammalian screens undertaken by others (Bazzone et al., 2019; Staring et al., 2017; Kim et al., 2017). Thus, these approaches provide complementary experimental strategies that, ideally in the long run, will lead to comprehensive understanding of host factors necessary for virus infection.
Our study of TNK2 was driven by our identification in C. elegans of sid-3 as a host factor required for Orsay virus infection (Jiang et al., 2017). sid-3 was originally identified in a genetic screen for mutants defective in systemic spread of RNAi (Jose et al., 2012). That screening strategy also identified another C. elegans gene, sid-1, that is reported to transport dsRNA (Winston, 2002). A recent study demonstrated that the mammalian orthologue of sid-1, SIDT2, has an evolutionarily conserved function in transporting dsRNA that serves as a means of activating innate antiviral immunity in mice (Nguyen et al., 2017). Those studies provide an example of the value of using the C. elegans model system to guide insights into conserved functions with mammals. Here we demonstrated that TNK2, the human orthologue of sid-3, has an evolutionarily conserved function to facilitate virus infection in mammals. In C. elegans, Orsay virus infection is presumed to occur by fecal-oral transmission, as evidenced by its exclusive intestinal cell tropism (Franz et al., 2014). Deletion of sid-3 reduces Orsay virus infection by >5 logs in vivo in the C. elegans host (Jiang et al., 2017). In the current study, infection of mice lacking TNK2 by oral gavage, the analogous route of infection as for Orsay virus infection of C elegans, led to increased survival of animals deficient in TNK2. These results clearly demonstrate the functional parallels between sid-3 and TNK2 in their respective hosts in vivo. Thus, our study has identified another example wherein novel insight in mammalian biology emerge from initial discoveries in model organism studies.
Materials and methods
Cell culture and viruses
Request a detailed protocolA549 cells were cultured and maintained in DMEM supplemented with 25 mM HEPES, 2 mM L-glutamine, 1X non-essential amino acids, 10% Fetal bovine serum (FBS) and 100 u/ml antibiotics (penicillin and streptomycin). 293T (human embryonic kidney), BHK-21 (Baby hamster kidney), RD (rhabdomyosarcoma) and Hela cells were cultured and maintained in DMEM with 10% FBS. Haploid cells (HAP1) were cultured and maintained in IMDM with 10% FBS. Mouse primary lung fibroblasts were isolated by lung digestion as described (Edelman and Redente, 2018). Primary lung fibroblasts were derived from a Tnk2 homozygous knockout mouse (generated at the Genome Engineering and iPSC Center (GEiC) at Washington University as described below) and a homozygous wild type littermate and were cultured in DMEM with 20% FBS. All cell lines used in this study were tested negative for mycoplasma and their identity was indicated in the key resource table. Viruses were obtained from the following: EMCV VR-129 strain (Michael Diamond), coxsackie virus B3 Nancy strain (Julie Pfeiffer), poliovirus Mahoney strain (Nihal Altan-Bonnet), influenza A virus WSN strain (H1N1) (Adrianus Boon), adenovirus A5 (David Curiel), enterovirus D68 (ATCC), parainfluenza virus (Robert A. Lamb), GFP-EMCV and GFP-CVB3 (Frank J. M. van Kuppeveld). EMCV was amplified on BHK-21 cells; CVB3 and polio viruses were amplified on HeLa cells; and enterovirus D68 was amplified on RD cells.
Reagents and antibodies
Request a detailed protocolα-sarcin was purchased from Santa Cruz. 35S methionine and 35S cysteine were purchased from Perkin Elmer. Alexa FluorA647 succinimidyl ester was purchased from ThermoFisher Scientific. Inhibitors were purchased from commercial vendors as follows: Aim-100 (Apexbio), Wiskostatin (Sigma), Dynasore (Sigma), Pitstop-2 (Sigma), CK-869 (Sigma), Pirl1 (Hit2leads). Anti-EMCV mouse polyclonal antibodies were provided by Michael Diamond. Anti-poliovirus antibodies were provided by Nihal Altan-Bonnet. Other antibodies were obtained from commercial vendors as follows: Anti-coxsackie virus B3 antibodies (ThermoFisher), Anti-adenovirus A5 antibodies (ThermoFisher), Anti-influenza A virus NP antibodies (Millipore), Anti-TNK2 (A11) (Santa Cruz), Anti-WASL (Abcam and Sigma), Anti-actin, clone C4 (Sigma), Anti-NCK1 (Millipore), enterovirus D68 Ab (GeneTex), Anti-HA (ThermoFisher), Anti-Flag (GenScript), Anti-c-Myc (Invitrogen), Anti-double stranded J2 antibodies (Scicons).
Plasmid constructions
Request a detailed protocolAll primers and oligonucleotides used in this study are listed in the supplementary table. Single guide RNA (sgRNA) oligonucleotides were synthesized by Integrated DNA Technologies (IDT). sgRNA oligoes were annealed and cloned into Lenti-CRISPR V2 plasmid digested by BsmBI. TNK2 (pReceiver-TNK2) and WASL (pReceiver-WASL) ORF clones were obtained from GeneCopoeia. NCK1 (pcDNA-NCK1) ORF clone was obtained from GenScript. Mutations in the sgRNA binding sites were introduced by site-directed mutagenesis (Stratagene) according to the manufacturer’s protocol. TNK2, WASL and NCK1 were subcloned into a Lentivirus expression vector pFCIV digested with Asc1 and Age1. The FRET control plasmid C5V was obtained from Addgene. mVenus cassette was subcloned into pcDNA-NCK1 and pReceiver-WASL. mCerulean cassette was subcloned into pReceiver-TNK2. Myc tagged TNK2 and HA tagged WASL was generated by annealing of oligonucleotides and then subcloned into the expression vector. GFP tagged TNK2 and WASL were subcloned into a tetracycline promoter driven Lentivirus vector pCW57. Constitutive active WASL constructs were generated by site-directed mutagenesis. Domain truncation was generated by overlapping PCR. In brief, to generate pFCIV-WASL ΔWH1, pFCIV-WASL ΔB, pFCIV-WASL ΔPRD, pFCIV-WASL ΔGBD, and pFCIV-WASL ΔA, WASL fragments were amplified from the start of the gene to the start of the truncation and from the end of the truncation to the end of the gene, and the fragments were then joined by overlapping PCR. The resulting product was digested by AgeI and AscI and ligated into Lentivirus expression vector pFCIV that were cut by the same restriction enzymes.
Lentivirus production and cell transduction
Request a detailed protocol800 ng of Lenti CRISPR V2 plasmids or pFCIV plasmids or pCW57 plasmids were transfected with 800 ng pSPAX2 and 400 ng pMD2.G into 293 T cells using Lipofectamine 2000 according to the manufacturer’s protocol. Cell culture supernatant was harvested two days post transfection and stored at −80°C. For transduction, A549 cells were seeded one day before transduction. Cells were spin transfected with lentivirus and 8 μg/ml of polybrene at MOI 5. Two days after transduction, cells were passaged and either selected under corresponding antibiotics or fluorescently sorted through flow cytometry.
CRISPR genome editing
Request a detailed protocolA549 naïve cells were transduced by lentiviruses that express the corresponding sgRNA and Cas9 protein. Transduced cells were passaged two days later and then selected with 2 μg/ml puromycin for 7 days. Cells were passaged once during this selection. Clonal selection was performed through limiting dilution in 96-well plates. After two weeks, single cell clones were picked and expanded in 24-well plates. The desired genome editing was identified by a restriction enzyme digestion-based genome typing assay. Genome edited clonal cells were further sequenced by Sanger sequencing to define the precise genome editing event. Detection of a homozygous 28 bp (base pair) deletion allele of TNK2 defined TNK2 KO1 and detection of a 25 bp deletion allele and 137 bp deletion allele of TNK2 defined TNK2 KO2. Identification of a 1 bp insertion allele and a 2 bp deletion allele of WASL defined WASL KO. An insertion allele of 94 bp in NCK1 was observed and this defined NCK1 KO. TNK2 KO1, WASL KO and NCK1 KO were used in all experiments except places specified using other cells.
For homologous template-directed DNA repair through CRISPR genome editing, assembled CRISPR RNP were transfected into A549 cells with single stranded oligodeoxynucleotide (ssODN) as described (Jacobi et al., 2017). In brief, Alt-R S.p. Cas9 nuclease 3NLS protein, Alt-R CRISPR-Cas9 crRNA designed to target the deleted TNK2 KO1 genomic region, Alt-R CRISPR-Cas9 ATTO 550 tagged tracrRNA and ssODN were purchased from IDT. A549 cells were seeded into 12-well plates one day before transfection. Equal molar crRNA and tracrRNA were annealed by heating to 95°C for 5 min and then cooled to room temperature. RNP was assembled by combing equal molar ratio of annealed cr-tracrRNA with Cas9 nuclease protein in opti-MEM. RNP was then transfected with ssODN into A549 cells by lipofectamine CRISPR-MAX according to the manufacturer’s protocol. 24 hr after transfection, ATTO 550 positive cells were FACS sorted individually into 96-well plates. Single cell colonies were expanded one week after sorting and genotyped with a restriction enzyme-based genotyping assay. Template-directed DNA repair was finally confirmed by both Sanger and PCR product deep sequencing.
For generation of gene double or triple knockout cells, the same CRISPR RNP transfection method was used as homologous template-directed DNA repair using corresponding crRNA designed to target genes with ssODN omitted. A double knockout of NCK1 and WASL was generated by CRISPR-Cas9 genome editing of the NCK1 locus in the WASL KO cells. A double knockout of WASL and TNK2, a double knockout of NCK1 and TNK2, and a triple knockout of WASL, NCK1 and TNK2 were generated by CRISPR-Cas9 genome editing of the WASL locus and NCK1 locus in the TNK2 KO1 cells. Genome editing events were screened by a restriction enzyme digestion-based genotyping assay.
EMCV virus labeling and infection for imaging
Request a detailed protocolEMCV was amplified in BHK-21 cells and purified according to previous publications (Brandenburg et al., 2007; Staring et al., 2017). Virus labeling was performed with Alexa FluorA647 succinimidyl ester in a 1:10 molar ratio and was then purified through Nap-5 desalting column (GE Healthcare). Labeled viruses were aliquoted and stored at −80°C. For EMCV entry imaging analysis, A549 cells were seeded at 3000 cells per well in an 18-well IBD imaging slide chamber one day before infection. The next day, cells were washed once with serum free DMEM and then inoculated with labeled EMCV virus at an MOI of 20 on ice for one hour. Cells were washed three times with ice-cold PBS after on ice binding. Cells were then fixed with 4% paraformaldehyde for 15 min at room temperature or cells were switched to 37°C incubation with complete medium for internalization. After incubation with complete medium for 30 min, cells were then washed once with PBS and fixed with 4% paraformaldehyde. Fixed cells were mounted in IBD mounting medium for image analysis. For GFP-TNK2 and GFP-WASL localization with labeled EMCV virus imaging, live cell experiment was performed in an 18-well IBD imaging slide in a temperature-controlled imaging chamber.
EMCV virus binding and internalization assay
Request a detailed protocolA549 cells were seeded at 1 × 105 cell per well in a 24-well plate one day before the assay. Cells were chilled on ice for 30 min and then washed with ice-cold DMEM before inoculation. EMCV was diluted in ice-cold DMEM with 0.1% BSA and then inoculated at an MOI of 20 in 250 μl of DMEM per well of 24-well plate. Viruses were allowed to bind on ice for one hour. For virus binding experiments, cells were washed three times with ice-cold PBS and then lysed in 350 μl Trizol reagent. For virus internalization assay using trypsinization, experiments were performed as described previously for WNV and AAV (Berry and Tse, 2017; Hackett et al., 2015). In brief, after one hour of binding, the virus inoculum was removed and pre-warmed complete medium was added onto cells. Cells were incubated in a 37°C water bath for 30 min to allow for virus internalization. After incubation, cells were washed three times with ice-cold PBS and then trypsinized for 6 min to remove surface bound virus. Trypsinized cells were then washed again three times and then spin at 300 g for 5 min. Cell pellets were lysed in 350 μl Trizol reagents. RNA was extracted using the 96-well Zymo RNA easy column extraction according to the manufacturer’s protocol. Viral RNA was quantified by one step reverse transcription quantitative real-time PCR with an EMCV assay probe (Primers: forward 5’-CGATCACTATGCTTGCCGTT-3’; reverse 5’-CCCTACCTCACGGAATGGG-3’; Taqman probe 5’ FAM-AGAGCCGATCATATTCCTGCTTGCCA-3’). Fold change was converted from delta delta Ct of an internal control assay by RPLP0 (Ribosomal protein lateral stalk subunit P0). For labeled EMCV, internalization was performed the same way, after trypsinization and washing, cells were fixed in 4% paraformaldehyde for 15 min at room temperature and then washed twice with P2F (PBS with 2% Fetal bovine serum). Cells were finally resuspended in P2F and analyzed by MACS flow cytometry.
FACS assay
Request a detailed protocolA549 cells were seeded one day before infection into 96-well plates. Approximately, 16 hr after seeding, cells were infected by EMCV at an MOI of 1. One hour after infection, the inoculum was removed and cells were cultured in DMEM with 2% FBS. 10 hr post infection, cells were trypsinized and fixed with 4% paraformaldehyde. Fixed cells were then permeabilized with perm buffer (1 g Saponin, 10 ml HEPES, 0.025% Sodium Azide in 1L HBSS) for 15 min. After permeabilization, cells were incubated with primary antibodies for one hour and then washed twice before incubation with fluorescently conjugated secondary antibodies. After one hour of secondary antibody incubation, cells were washed three times with perm buffer and then resuspended with 70 μl of FACS buffer P2F (PBS with 2% fetal bovine serum). Infected cells were then analyzed and quantified through MACS flow cytometry (Miltenyi Biotec). FACS analysis of infection by CVB3, polio, enterovirus D68, adenovirus and influenza virus on either A549 or Hap1 cells were performed the same as EMCV infection, except that cells were harvested 8 hr post infection for CVB3, adenovirus, enterovirus D68 and influenza virus, and 6 hr post infection for poliovirus.
Multistep growth analysis for EMCV and Polio virus
Request a detailed protocolFor multistep growth analysis, A549 or Hap1 cells were infected by EMCV at an MOI of 0.01. One hour after inoculation, cells were washed five times with serum free DMEM and were then cultured in DMEM or IMDM with 2% FBS. Culture supernatant was collected at time 0, 6, 12, 24, 36, and 48 hr post infection. Viruses released in the culture supernatant were titrated on BHK-21 cells by plaque assay. For polio virus multi-step growth titration, A549 or Hap1 cells were infected by virus at MOI 0.01 and culture supernatant were collected. Released viruses were titrated on HeLa cells by plaque assay. For Coxsackie B3 virus multi-step growth titration, A549 cells were infected by virus at MOI 0.01 and culture supernatant were collected at time 0, 6, 12, 24, 36, and 48 hr post infection. Released viruses were titrated on HeLa cells by plaque assay.
EMCV genomic RNA transfection
Request a detailed protocolEMCV genomic RNA was extracted from pelleted virions by phenol chloroform extraction. For RNA transfection, A549 cells (gene knockouts and control) were seeded into 24-well plate at 1 × 105 cells per well. 16 hr after seeding, cells were transfected with 1.6 μg EMCV RNA by Lipofectamine 3000 according to the manufacturer’s protocol. Cell culture supernatant was collected at 10 hr post transfection and was then titrated on BHK-21 cells by plaque assay.
Co-immunoprecipitation and western blot
Request a detailed protocolFlag C-terminal tagged NCK1 was transfected with HA N-terminal tagged WASL or with Myc N-terminal tagged TNK2 into 293 T cells. 48 hr after transfection, cells were lysed in IpLysis buffer (Invitrogen). Protein concentrations were quantified by BCA assay. 500 μg protein lysates were incubated with 2 μg of anti-flag antibodies at 4°C for overnight for immunoprecipitation. After antibody binding, the immuno-complex was incubated with protein A/G magnetic beads for one hour at room temperature. The beads were washed and proteins bound to antibodies were eluted according to the manufacture’s protocol (Invitrogen). Protein samples were prepared with 4X NuPAGE sample buffer (Invitrogen) and then resolved on 4–12% NuPAGE gel. Proteins were transferred to a PVDF membrane and then blocked with 5% skim milk. Primary antibodies were incubated in 5% milk for overnight at 4°C. After three washes with PBST (PBS with 0.3% of tween-20), corresponding HRP conjugated secondary antibodies were incubated in 5% milk at room temperature for 1 hr. The membrane was washed five times with PBST and was then developed with chemiluminescent substrate for 5 min and then imaged using a Bio-Rad chemiluminescence imager.
α-Sarcin pore forming assay
Request a detailed protocolA549 cells were seeded at 3.6 × 104 per well of a 48-well plate. The next day, cells were washed once with PBS and then incubated with methionine and cysteine free DMEM for one hour. Subsequently, cells were inoculated with EMCV virus at an MOI of 50 on ice for one hour. Inoculum were then removed and cells were washed three times with ice cold PBS. Cells were then incubated with 100 μg/ml α-sarcin diluted in methionine and cysteine free DMEM for 90 min at 37°C. After α-sarcin treatment, cells were pulsed with 7.4 MBq 35S methionine and 35S cysteine in DMEM for 20 min. Next, cells were washed four times with ice cold PBS and then lysed with SDS sample buffer. Proteins were resolved on 7.5% SDS-PAGE gel and then dried on a Bio-Rad gel dryer. Dried gels were exposed to a phosphorimager overnight and then scanned by Fuji IFA imaging system. As an internal loading control, a parallel SDS-PAGE gel was run and then proteins were transferred to PVDF membrane and blotted with anti-actin antibodies.
Immunofluorescence assay
Request a detailed protocolFor EMCV co-localization with EEA1 marker, A549 cells were seeded at 3000 cells per well in an 18-well IBD imaging slide chamber one day before infection. The next day, cells were washed once with serum free DMEM and then inoculated with labeled EMCV virus at an MOI of 20 on ice for one hour. Cells were washed three times with PBS after on ice binding. Cells were then switched to 37°C incubation with complete medium for internalization at indicated time. After incubation with complete medium for different time, cells were then washed once with PBS and fixed with 4% paraformaldehyde for 10 min. Fixed cells were then permeabilized with 0.2% saponin for 10 min at room temperature and subsequently blocked with IFA blocking buffer (10% goat serum, 0.05% saponin in PBS) at room temperature for 30 min. Cells were then incubated with EEA1 antibodies at 1:100 dilution in blocking buffer overnight with shaking. Cells were washed three times with PBS and then incubated with secondary antibodies at room temperature for 1 hr. After incubation, cells were washed once with PBS and then incubated with Hoechst at 1:1000 dilution for 10 min at room temperature. Cells were washed three time with PBS and mounted in IBD mounting medium for image analysis. For dsRNA immunostaining in EMCV infected cells, the same procedure was performed as EEA1 immunostaining except that 0.1% Triton was used instead of Saponin.
Confocal imaging and FRET analysis
Request a detailed protocolCells on slides or in an IBD imaging slide chamber were examined on a Zeiss airy scan confocal microscope (LSM 880 II). A Plan Apochromat 63X, 1.4-numerical-aperture oil objective lens (Carl Zeiss, Germany) was used to image labeled virus infection. For FRET analysis, 293 T cells were seeded on coverslips and transfected with FRET pairs, mCerluean tagged TNK2 with mVenus tagged NCK1 and mCerulean tagged WASL with mVenus tagged NCK1 respectively. 24 hr post transfection, cells were fixed in 4% paraformaldehyde and mounted on slides. Cells were imaged on a Zeiss airy scan confocal with a Plan Apochromat 100X, 1.4-numerical-aperture oil objective lens. Acceptor photo bleach was performed with 80% laser intensity of the imaging channel. Images were taken before and after photo bleach and FRET efficiency were calculated after image acquisition on Zen pro software (Carl Zeiss, Germany). For quantification of colocalization, image analysis was performed using Volocity software V6.3 (PerkinElmer). In brief, virus pixels were automatically detected in the red channel by Volocity with a particle size filter of no less than 25 pixels, colocalization were detected by intersection pixels of the red channel and green channel. Percent of colocalization was determined by dividing the colocalized intersection pixels by the total virus pixels. Pearson correlation coefficient of EMCV and EEA1 was determined for each image using Volocity by setting a threshold of each channel above background.
Transmission electron microscopy
Request a detailed protocolEMCV was incubated with A549 cells (wild type, TNK2 KO and WASL KO) at an MOI of 20 for 1 hr on ice. Cells were then washed with serum free DMEM and incubated with A549 culture media (2% FBS) for 6 hr. Infected cells were washed with PBS and fixed with 2% paraformaldehyde, 2.5% glutaraldehyde (Polysciences Inc, Warrington, PA) in 100 mM cacodylate buffer for 1 hr at room temperature. Next, cells were scraped from plates using a rubber cell scraper and cell pellets were embedded in agarose. Agarose embedded cell pellets were post-fixed in 1% osmium tetroxide (Polysciences Inc) for 1 hr, then rinsed extensively in dH20 prior to en bloc staining with 1% aqueous uranyl acetate (Ted Pella Inc, Redding, CA) for 1 hr. Following several rinses in dH20, samples were dehydrated in a graded series of ethanol and embedded in Eponate 12 resin (Ted Pella Inc). Sections of 95 nm were cut with a Leica Ultracut UCT ultramicrotome (Leica Microsystems Inc, Bannockburn, IL), stained with uranyl acetate and lead citrate, and viewed on a JEOL 1200EX transmission electron microscope (JEOL USA, Peabody, MA) equipped with an AMT eight mega-pixel digital camera (Advanced Microscopy Techniques, Woburn, MA).
In vivo infection experiments
Request a detailed protocolAnimal experiments were conducted under the supervision of Department of Comparative Medicine at Washington University in St. Louis. All animal protocols were approved by the Washington University Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee (Protocol #20170194 and #20180289). Tnk2 knockout mice were generated in the C57BL/6 background by CRISPR-Cas9 genome editing at the Genome Engineering and iPSC Center (GEiC) at Washington University. All animals were housed in the pathogen-free barrier. Age-matched animals with mixed gender (6–8 weeks old, 5 females and six males for Tnk2 knockout, 2 females and five males for wild type littermates) were infected with 1 × 107 PFU of EMCV (two doses at day 0 and day 1) via oral gavage according to previous publication (Wang et al., 2015). Infected mice were monitored for 3 weeks for all experiments. For virus titration in infected mouse tissues, whole brain and heart were harvested at day four post virus gavage (16 Tnk2 knock out and 14 wild type male mice). Tissues were weighed and a 1:5 wt to volume ratio of PBS was added to tissue sample. Tissues were homogenized by bead beating for 1 min on a MagNALyzer bead beater, cool down for 2 min on ice and then another minute for bead beating. Tissue homogenates were centrifuged at 13,000 g for 5 min and supernatant were collected for plaque assay on BHK-21 cells.
Statistical analysis
Request a detailed protocolFor statistical analysis, Student T-test was performed on the average values from three replicates. All data shown with statistics are representative of at least two independent experiments. Log-rank test and Mann Whitney test were done in Graphpad Prism V7. Statistical significance is indicated as below: NS: no statistical significance, *: p<0.05, **: p<0.01, ***: p<0.001, ****: p<0.0001, *****: p<0.00001.
Data availability
All data generated or analysed during this study are included in the manuscript and supporting files. Source data files were provided.
References
-
Activating mutations of N-WASP alter Shigella pathogenesisBiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications 384:284–289.https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bbrc.2009.04.050
-
Picornavirus entryAdvances in Experimental Medicine and Biology 790:24–41.https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4614-7651-1_2
-
Caspase activation and specific cleavage of substrates after coxsackievirus B3-induced cytopathic effect in HeLa cellsJournal of Virology 72:7669–7675.
-
Isolation and characterization of mouse fibroblastsMethods in Molecular Biology 1809:59–67.https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4939-8570-8_5
-
Dysregulation of Ack1 inhibits down-regulation of the EGF receptorExperimental Cell Research 314:1292–1300.https://doi.org/10.1016/j.yexcr.2007.12.017
-
VCAM-1 is a receptor for encephalomyocarditis virus on murine vascular endothelial cellsJournal of Virology 68:3453–3458.
-
Abi1 regulates the activity of N-WASP and WAVE in distinct actin-based processesNature Cell Biology 7:969–976.https://doi.org/10.1038/ncb1304
-
Constitutive activation of WASp in X-linked neutropenia renders neutrophils hyperactiveJournal of Clinical Investigation 128:4115–4131.https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI64772
-
Requirements for entry of poliovirus RNA into cells at low pHThe EMBO Journal 3:1945–1950.https://doi.org/10.1002/j.1460-2075.1984.tb02074.x
-
Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome: a comprehensive reviewAnnals of the New York Academy of Sciences 1285:26–43.https://doi.org/10.1111/nyas.12049
-
Lassa virus cell entry via dystroglycan involves an unusual pathway of macropinocytosisJournal of Virology 90:6412–6429.https://doi.org/10.1128/JVI.00257-16
-
Chemical inhibition of N-WASP by stabilization of a native autoinhibited conformationNature Structural & Molecular Biology 11:747–755.https://doi.org/10.1038/nsmb796
-
Mechanism of fusion triggering by human parainfluenza virus type III: communication between viral glycoproteins during entryThe Journal of Biological Chemistry 287:778–793.https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M111.298059
-
Regulation of ack-family nonreceptor tyrosine kinasesJournal of Signal Transduction 2011:1–9.https://doi.org/10.1155/2011/742372
-
Mechanism of N-WASP activation by CDC42 and phosphatidylinositol 4, 5-bisphosphateThe Journal of Cell Biology 150:1299–1310.https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.150.6.1299
-
Nck and phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate synergistically activate actin polymerization through the N-WASP-Arp2/3 pathwayJournal of Biological Chemistry 276:26448–26452.https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M103856200
-
Regulation of actin dynamics by WASP and WAVE family proteinsTrends in Cell Biology 14:303–311.https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tcb.2004.04.007
-
The tyrosine kinase ACK1 associates with clathrin-coated vesicles through a binding motif shared by arrestin and other adaptorsJournal of Biological Chemistry 276:18392–18398.https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M008795200
-
Phosphorylation of WASP by the Cdc42-associated kinase ACK1: dual hydroxyamino acid specificity in a tyrosine kinaseThe Journal of Biological Chemistry 280:42219–42226.https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M506996200
-
Biochemical properties of the Cdc42-associated tyrosine kinase ACK1. substrate specificity, Authphosphorylation, and interaction with hckThe Journal of Biological Chemistry 278:47713–47723.https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M306716200
Article and author information
Author details
Funding
National Institutes of Health (R01 AI134967)
- David Wang
The funders had no role in study design, data collection and interpretation, or the decision to submit the work for publication.
Acknowledgements
This work was supported in part by National Institutes of Health R01 AI134967.
We thank Adrianus Boon, Skip Virgin, Celeste Morley and John Cooper for helpful discussions. We thank Rong Zhang and Michael S Diamond for access to FACS instrumentation. FRET experiments were performed at the Washington University Center for Cellular Imaging (WUCCI) supported by Washington University School of Medicine, The Children’s Discovery Institute of Washington University and St. Louis Children’s Hospital (CDI-CORE-2015–505) and the Foundation for Barnes-Jewish Hospital (3770). We thank Wandy Beatty for assistance with electron microscopy and laser scanning confocal. We thank the Genome Engineering and iPSC Center (GEiC) at the Washington University in St. Louis for their sgRNA validation and genotyping services for generating the Tnk2 knockout mouse. We thank the flow cytometry core at Department of Pathology and Immunology, Washington University School of Medicine for assisting cell sorting. We thank Tim Schaff and Darren Kreamalmeyer for assistance with mouse breeding.
Ethics
Animal experimentation: Animal experiments were conducted under the supervision of Department of Comparative Medicine at Washington University in St. Louis. All animal protocols were approved by the Washington University Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee (Protocol #20170194 and #20180289).
Copyright
© 2019, Jiang et al.
This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use and redistribution provided that the original author and source are credited.
Metrics
-
- 1,867
- views
-
- 309
- downloads
-
- 17
- citations
Views, downloads and citations are aggregated across all versions of this paper published by eLife.
Download links
Downloads (link to download the article as PDF)
Open citations (links to open the citations from this article in various online reference manager services)
Cite this article (links to download the citations from this article in formats compatible with various reference manager tools)
Further reading
-
- Immunology and Inflammation
- Microbiology and Infectious Disease
Granulomas are defined by the presence of organized layers of immune cells that include macrophages. Granulomas are often characterized as a way for the immune system to contain an infection and prevent its dissemination. We recently established a mouse infection model where Chromobacterium violaceum induces the innate immune system to form granulomas in the liver. This response successfully eradicates the bacteria and returns the liver to homeostasis. Here, we sought to characterize the chemokines involved in directing immune cells to form the distinct layers of a granuloma. We use spatial transcriptomics to investigate the spatial and temporal expression of all CC and CXC chemokines and their receptors within this granuloma response. The expression profiles change dynamically over space and time as the granuloma matures and then resolves. To investigate the importance of monocyte-derived macrophages in this immune response, we studied the role of CCR2 during C. violaceum infection. Ccr2–/– mice had negligible numbers of macrophages, but large numbers of neutrophils, in the C. violaceum-infected lesions. In addition, lesions had abnormal architecture resulting in loss of bacterial containment. Without CCR2, bacteria disseminated and the mice succumbed to the infection. This indicates that macrophages are critical to form a successful innate granuloma in response to C. violaceum.
-
- Computational and Systems Biology
- Microbiology and Infectious Disease
Timely and effective use of antimicrobial drugs can improve patient outcomes, as well as help safeguard against resistance development. Matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF MS) is currently routinely used in clinical diagnostics for rapid species identification. Mining additional data from said spectra in the form of antimicrobial resistance (AMR) profiles is, therefore, highly promising. Such AMR profiles could serve as a drop-in solution for drastically improving treatment efficiency, effectiveness, and costs. This study endeavors to develop the first machine learning models capable of predicting AMR profiles for the whole repertoire of species and drugs encountered in clinical microbiology. The resulting models can be interpreted as drug recommender systems for infectious diseases. We find that our dual-branch method delivers considerably higher performance compared to previous approaches. In addition, experiments show that the models can be efficiently fine-tuned to data from other clinical laboratories. MALDI-TOF-based AMR recommender systems can, hence, greatly extend the value of MALDI-TOF MS for clinical diagnostics. All code supporting this study is distributed on PyPI and is packaged at https://github.com/gdewael/maldi-nn.