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Copyright © 2006, American Society for Microbiology The UL69 Transactivator Protein of Human Cytomegalovirus Interacts with DEXD/H-Box RNA Helicase UAP56 To Promote Cytoplasmic Accumulation of Unspliced RNA Institut für Klinische und Molekulare Virologie der Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg, 91054 Erlangen, Germany *Corresponding author. Mailing address: Institut für Klinische und Molekulare Virologie, Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg, Schlossgarten 4, 91054 Erlangen, Germany. Phone: 49 9131 852 6783. Fax: 49 9131 852 2101. E-mail: thomas.stamminger/at/viro.med.uni-erlangen.de. Received November 16, 2005; Accepted December 13, 2005. This article has been cited by other articles in PMC.Abstract The UL69 gene product of human cytomegalovirus belongs to a family of regulatory proteins conserved among all herpesviruses that have in part been characterized as posttranscriptional transactivators participating in the nuclear export of RNA. Recent experiments suggested that pUL69 also acts as a posttranscriptional activator since it was demonstrated that nucleocytoplasmic shuttling via a CRM1-independent nuclear export signal is a prerequisite for its stimulatory effect on gene expression. Based on these findings we initiated studies to investigate the role of pUL69 in mRNA export and demonstrate that pUL69 efficiently promotes the cytoplasmic accumulation of unspliced RNA. Furthermore, we show that this pUL69 activity is linked to the cellular mRNA export machinery by direct protein interaction with the highly related DEXD/H-box RNA helicases UAP56 and URH49. Particularly, we identified a 12-amino-acid domain within the N terminus of pUL69 which is required for binding to UAP56 and URH49, and we could demonstrate that UAP56 interaction and nucleocytoplasmic shuttling are both prerequisites for pUL69-mediated mRNA export. Thus, we identified a novel cellular target which provides a herpesviral regulatory protein with access to a conserved cellular transport system in order to promote nuclear export of unspliced RNA. A defining feature of eukaryotic cells is their division into nucleoplasm and cytoplasm. This segregation requires specific mechanisms for the continuous transport of large numbers of macromolecules between the two compartments. One essential class of macromolecules that are produced in the nucleus, yet are used primarily in the cytoplasm, are mRNAs. Eukaryotic pre-mRNAs require extensive nuclear processing after synthesis in the nucleus, including addition of the 5′ cap, splicing, and polyadenylation. Following these processing events mRNAs are efficiently transported to the cytoplasm where they direct protein synthesis. This transport occurs through the nuclear pore complex and is mediated by shuttling RNA transport factors and the corresponding transport receptors (reviewed in reference 59). Viruses that replicate in the nucleus have to make extensive use of, or even modify, these transport mechanisms in order to optimize the cellular environment for efficient viral multiplication. In this regard the analysis of nuclear RNA export pathways accessed by different primate retroviruses led to the identification of CRM1 as an important member of the karyopherin/exportin family of nucleocytoplasmic transport receptors and of TAP as a key nuclear mRNA export factor in metazoan cells (reviewed in reference 9). Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1), which belongs to the complex retroviruses, encodes the sequence-specific mRNA export factor Rev, which acts as an adaptor between Rev-responsive element (RRE)-containing HIV-1 mRNAs and the cellular CRM1 nuclear export receptor (12, 14). However, it is now clear that CRM1 not only mediates the nuclear export of retroviral RNAs but is also responsible for the nuclear export of proteins containing a leucine-rich nuclear export signal (NES) and of some noncoding cellular RNAs like U snRNAs or rRNAs (9). TAP was first identified as the cellular factor that interacts with the constitutive transport element (CTE) present in RNAs from type D retroviruses, and TAP promotes the nuclear export of CTE-containing transcripts (25). Later on, it was demonstrated that TAP interacts with p15 and that this heterodimer functions as the major mRNA transport receptor in metazoan cells that facilitates mRNA export to the cytoplasm via direct interaction with the nuclear pore (26, 53). Although TAP is able to interact directly with CTE-containing viral mRNAs, additional factors are needed to bridge the interaction between TAP-p15 and metazoan mRNAs (33). Among these are members of the evolutionarily conserved REF protein family (alternatively termed Aly and in Saccharomyces cerevisiae termed Yra1). REF proteins shuttle between the nucleus and the cytoplasm and bind directly to both mRNAs and TAP, thereby facilitating the association of the export receptor TAP with cellular mRNAs (47, 55). Nuclear export of mRNA is highly coupled to other processes in gene expression including transcription and splicing. A key factor that brings the transcription, splicing, and nuclear export machineries into close functional context is the RNA helicase UAP56 and its yeast homolog Sub2. These proteins belong to the DEXD/H-box family of RNA helicases (also referred to as DEAD-box proteins) (46). Although UAP56 has been implicated in splicing (13), this protein plays an essential role in mRNA export (37, 56). It has been reported that UAP56/Sub2 (i) interacts with the polymerase II-dependent transcription elongation machinery to form the TREX complex that links transcription to mRNA export (57) and (ii) interacts with the splicing machinery to form the exon junction complex that links splicing to mRNA export (45). Current models assume that UAP56 is recruited either cotranscriptionally or splicing-coupled to both intron-containing and intron-free pre-mRNAs and, then, UAP56 itself recruits REF and hence indirectly the TAP-p15 export receptor. After loading of REF onto the mRNA, UAP56 must be released from REF to allow binding of TAP, because binding of UAP56 and that of TAP to REF are mutually exclusive (9, 45, 59). Interestingly, a protein termed URH49 that is 90% identical to UAP56 has recently been identified in mammalian cells, and it is thought that the two proteins have similar or redundant functions in mammalian mRNA biogenesis (44). While most metazoan mRNAs are derived from spliced genes, Herpesviridae are dependent on the nuclear export of intronless mRNAs. Since these mRNAs are unable to recruit mRNA export factors via splicing, human herpesviruses have evolved regulatory proteins to promote the nuclear export of unspliced RNAs (reviewed in reference 51). The most intensively studied member of this group is the multifunctional regulatory protein ICP27 of herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) (52). ICP27 is a nucleocytoplasmic shuttling protein that functions mainly on the posttranscriptional level. With regard to RNA export it has been demonstrated that ICP27 recruits the cellular mRNA export factors REF and TAP to intronless viral mRNA, thus allowing these RNAs to access the cellular mRNA nuclear export pathway (6, 27, 50). Proteins with homology to ICP27 are present in all human herpesviruses, suggesting a conserved function of these polypeptides. Consistently, similar results have recently been reported for the homologous proteins EB2 of Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) (11, 19) or ORF57 of Kaposi's sarcoma-associated herpesvirus (39). The ICP27 homolog of human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) is the pleiotropic transactivator pUL69. The overall amino acid identity between the 744-amino-acid (aa) protein pUL69 and the 512-aa ICP27 is approximately 24%. However, the C-terminal 160 amino acids of ICP27, which are known to be of functional importance, show a higher conservation with several positionally conserved amino acids (52). This amino acid sequence with higher conservation corresponds to a central domain within pUL69. The betaherpesviral proteins differ from their homologous proteins by a unique C-terminal domain that is not contained within the alpha- or gammaherpesvirus members of this protein family (60). An initial functional characterization of pUL69 revealed several differences from ICP27. For instance, in contrast to ICP27, pUL69 is expressed as an early/late gene during viral replication and is incorporated into viral particles (61, 62). Recently, however, evidence has been presented to suggest that pUL69 also acts at the posttranscriptional level and shares properties with mRNA export factors. In particular, it has been demonstrated that (i) pUL69 shuttles between the nucleus and the cytoplasm, (ii) pUL69 nuclear export is not dependent on CRM1 activity, and (iii) nucleocytoplasmic shuttling is crucial for pUL69-mediated activation of gene expression (34). Here, we extend these findings and report that pUL69 functions as a viral nuclear RNA export factor that promotes the nuclear export of unspliced reporter mRNAs. Most importantly, our results indicate that pUL69 gains access to the cellular mRNA export pathway via an interaction with the cellular DEXD/H-box RNA helicases UAP56 and URH49. This constitutes a novel mechanism for how viruses target the cellular machinery for mRNA export. MATERIALS AND METHODS Plasmids. The chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) reporter plasmids pDM128/CMV/RRE and pDM128/CMV/RxRE and the HIV-1 Rev (pcREV), the HTLV-1 Rex (pcREX), and the EBV EB2 (pSVSM) expression plasmids were described elsewhere and were obtained from J. Hauber (Hamburg, Germany) and M. Marschall (Erlangen, Germany) (7, 17). The eukaryotic expression plasmids coding for pUL69, pIE1, and the UL69 mutants aa92-744, aa1-521, PP598/99AA, PP602/03AA, QQ607/08AA, GE613/14AA, E617/18A, and ED619/20AA were described previously, as was the prokaryotic expression plasmid for glutathione S-transferase-IE1 (GST-IE1) (1, 34, 61). UL69 92-744 NLS was cloned by inserting the simian virus 40 (SV40) T antigen (TAg) nuclear localization signal (NLS) sequence in frame with the 5′ end of the UL69 aa92-744 cDNA. The FLAG-UL69-expressing vector F-UL69 was created by inserting a XhoI/BamHI PCR fragment of UL69 into plasmid FLAG-pcDNA3 (20). Site-directed mutagenesis within F-UL69 was performed using the QuickChange site-directed mutagenesis kit as instructed by the manufacturer (Stratagene). The resulting plasmid was termed UL69 mUAP. The bait plasmid pHM300 for the Saccharomyces cerevisiae two-hybrid screen and the yeast plasmids expressing UL69 deletion mutants aa315-744 and aa92-744 fused in frame to the GAL4-BD were described elsewhere (60). Additional UL69 N- or C-terminal deletion mutants fused to GAL4-BD (see Fig. Fig.3B)3B
Infection and transfection of cells and CAT RNA export assays. Primary human foreskin fibroblasts (HFFs) and HeLa and HEK 293T cells were cultured as described previously (20, 61). HFFs were infected with HCMV (strain AD169) at a multiplicity of infection of 1 to 2 PFU per cell. HeLa and 293T cells were transfected via the calcium phosphate coprecipitation procedure as described earlier (20, 61). CAT reporter assays were performed essentially as described in reference 11. To quantify CAT protein expression, a CAT enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay was used (Roche Molecular Biochemicals). After transfection, half of the cells were used for CAT assays according to the manufacturer's instructions, and the other half was used to monitor protein expression by Western blotting. Each transfection was performed in triplicate and was repeated at least three times. If inhibition of CRM1-dependent protein export was required, cells were treated with 2.5 ng/ml leptomycin B (LMB) (kindly provided by M. Yoshida, Tokyo, Japan) for 6 hours before cell extracts were prepared. RNA isolation and RNase protection assay. Total cellular RNA was harvested 48 h after transfection according to the method in reference 8. To isolate cytoplasmic RNA, cells were lysed in 50 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.0, 100 mM NaCl, 5 mM MgCl2, 0.5% Nonidet P-40, 40 units of RNasin (Roche), 1 mM dithiothreitol on ice for 30 seconds. After centrifugation, the supernatant was incubated with 20% sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) and 25 mg/ml proteinase K at 37°C for 15 min and then extracted twice with phenol-chloroform-isoamyl alcohol (25:24:1) and once with chloroform-isoamyl alcohol (24:1) followed by ethanol precipitation of the RNA. The pellet was resuspended in 100 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.5, 100 mM MgCl2 and treated with 10 U of RNase-free DNase (Roche) at 37°C for 15 min followed by an additional round of proteinase K treatment, phenol extraction, and ethanol precipitation. The antisense riboprobe was prepared using plasmid pHM2119 containing a 655-bp SalI-EcoRI fragment of pDM128/CMV/RRE downstream of the T7 promoter of the pBluescript vector (Stratagene). Preparation of the riboprobe and RNase protection analysis were performed as described previously (54). Yeast two-hybrid screen and mapping. The GAL4-based yeast two-hybrid screening procedure to identify pUL69-interacting proteins has been described previously (60). For mapping of the pUL69 interaction domain using the yeast two-hybrid system, the respective UL69 deletion mutants were transformed together with the interactor plasmids into yeast strain Y153 and tested as described in reference 35. Purification of GST fusion proteins and pull-down assays. The purification of GST fusion proteins was described in detail elsewhere (30). For pull-down assays, 5 to 30 μl of glutathione-Sepharose-bound proteins were preincubated for 10 min in 200 μl of ELB+ buffer (250 mM NaCl, 50 mM HEPES, pH 7.0, 0.1% NP-40, 0.5 mM EDTA, 1 mM phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride, 0.5 mM dithiothreitol, 10 μg/ml RNase A) containing bovine serum albumin to a final concentration of 1 mg/ml. After addition of 1 to 5 μl of the indicated in vitro-translated, radiolabeled protein which had been generated by using the TNT system (Promega), the beads loaded with GST fusion proteins were gently mixed for 2 h at 4°C. The beads were then washed five times in 1 ml ELB+ buffer, pelleted, and boiled in SDS sample buffer. Finally, the bound proteins were resolved using SDS-polyacrylamide gels. The gels were fixed, incubated in Amplify (Amersham Life Science) for 30 min, dried, and subjected to autoradiography. Western blotting and immunoprecipitation analysis. For Western blot analysis, transfected cells were lysed, diluted in SDS-Laemmli buffer, and boiled at 94°C for 5 min (20). Samples were electrophoresed by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE) on 8 to 12.5% polyacrylamide gels, and the proteins were transferred onto nitrocellulose membranes. Western blotting and chemiluminescence detection were performed according to the manufacturer's protocol (ECL Western detection kit; Amersham Pharmacia Biotech). Coimmunoprecipitation analysis was performed as described previously (35). Briefly, transfected 293T cells or HCMV-infected (72 h postinfection) and mock-infected HFFs were lysed in 800 μl of NP-40 lysis buffer (50 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.0; 150 mM NaCl; 5 mM EDTA; 0.5% NP-40; 1 mM phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride; 1 mg each of aprotinin, leupeptin, and pepstatin per ml) and incubated for 20 min at 4°C. After centrifugation, the supernatant was incubated with the appropriate antibody coupled to protein A-Sepharose beads for 1 h at 4°C. The Sepharose beads were collected and washed five times in NP-40 lysis buffer. Antigen-antibody complexes were recovered by boiling the mixture in SDS sample buffer and analyzed by Western blotting. For RNase A treatment, 100 μg RNase A was added to the cell extracts and preincubated at room temperature 15 min before immunoprecipitation. Antibodies, indirect immunofluorescence analysis, and heterokaryon assays. The polyclonal antiserum used to detect pUL69 was described previously (61), the polyclonal antisera against REF (KJ58) and TAP (αTAP) were obtained from E. Izaurralde (Heidelberg, Germany), and the polyclonal anti-UAP56 antibody (αUAP56) was provided by Michael Green (HHMI, Worcester, MA) (13). The anti-FLAG monoclonal antibody M2 was purchased from INTEGRA Bioscience (Fernwald, Germany), and the anti-β-galactosidase (β-Gal) antibody was obtained from Roche (Mannheim, Germany). Anti-mouse and anti-rabbit horseradish peroxidase- or fluorescein isothiocyanate- and tetramethyl rhodamine isothiocyanate-conjugated secondary antibodies were obtained from Dianova (Hamburg, Germany). Indirect immunofluorescence analysis and interspecies heterokaryon analyses were carried out exactly as described previously (34). Images were analyzed using a Zeiss Axioplan-2 microscope and recorded with a cooled Spot color digital camera (Diagnostic Instruments, Sterling Heights, MI). The Meta-Imaging series and Adobe Photoshop package (Universal Imaging Corp., Brandywine, PA; Adobe Systems Incorporated) were used for processing. RESULTS The UL69 protein promotes the nuclear export of inefficiently spliced mRNA. Human herpesviruses encode posttranscriptional activators that are believed to up-regulate viral replication by facilitating viral mRNA export. We have reported previously that the HCMV transactivator pUL69 is a nucleocytoplasmic shuttling protein that contains a novel type of CRM1-independent nuclear export signal. Initial functional experiments revealed a correlation between nucleocytoplasmic shuttling and pUL69-mediated transactivation, indicating that pUL69 might function as an mRNA export factor (34). Consequently, we initiated studies to investigate the role of pUL69 in mRNA export. For this, we took advantage of a functional reporter assay which has been developed by Hope and colleagues to monitor RNA export in vivo (22). This assay is based on the pDM128/CMV reporter plasmid (Fig. (Fig.1A)1A
In order to test whether the HCMV UL69 protein is active in this reporter assay, plasmids expressing HIV-1 Rev, HTLV-1 Rex, EBV EB2, HCMV pUL69, and HCMV IE1-p72 (IE1) were transfected into HeLa cells together with the pDM128/CMV/RRE reporter construct, followed by quantification of CAT protein expression (Fig. (Fig.1B,1B To confirm that the stimulation of CAT protein expression observed in the reporter assay reflects an increased export of unspliced CAT RNA, we performed an RNase protection assay with either total (Fig. (Fig.1C,1C pUL69-mediated nuclear export of unspliced RNA requires nucleocytoplasmic shuttling but is independent of the CRM1 export receptor. Since we could demonstrate that pUL69 promotes the nuclear export of unspliced mRNA, we next queried the role of nucleocytoplasmic shuttling for pUL69-mediated RNA export. For this, a pUL69 deletion mutant lacking the C-terminally located NES (UL69 1-521) and a series of pUL69 alanine replacement mutants carrying point mutations within the NES were tested for their capacity to export RNA, using the pDM128/CMV/RRE reporter system (Fig. (Fig.2).2
Next, we were interested in the nuclear export pathway which is targeted by pUL69 in order to facilitate nuclear RNA export. Previous studies had demonstrated that sequence-specific RNA binding proteins encoded by complex retroviruses (e.g., HIV-1 Rev) recruit the cellular nuclear export receptor CRM1 to incompletely spliced viral mRNAs (3, 14). In contrast, posttranscriptional transactivators encoded by specific herpesviruses have been described to facilitate RNA export independently of CRM1 by accessing the cellular mRNA export factor REF (18, 27, 39). To address the question whether the HCMV UL69 protein promotes cytoplasmic accumulation of unspliced RNA via a CRM1-dependent or -independent pathway we tested whether pUL69-associated nuclear export of RNA is resistant to LMB, a specific inhibitor of the CRM1 transport receptor (63). For this, HeLa cells were cotransfected with the pDM128/CMV/RRE reporter and HIV-1 Rev or HCMV pUL69 expression vectors followed by incubation in the presence or absence of LMB. The presence of LMB effectively inhibited Rev-dependent RNA export, confirming that LMB treatment of cells was able to block the CRM1-dependent export pathway (Fig. (Fig.2D,2D pUL69 interacts with the cellular mRNA export factors URH49 and UAP56 in vitro and in vivo. To identify potential interacting partners of pUL69, we screened a human cDNA library derived from B lymphocytes by yeast two-hybrid analysis and selected the putative DEXD/H-box RNA helicase URH49 (also termed DDX39) as a potential pUL69 binding partner (31, 44, 60). Since URH49 shares more than 90% amino acid identity with the multifunctional intranuclear RNA helicase UAP56, we further analyzed both URH49 and UAP56 for their ability to bind pUL69 in a yeast two-hybrid assay. As shown in Fig. Fig.3A,3A The identification of protein-protein interactions between pUL69 and UAP56 or URH49 raised the question of the responsible interaction motif within pUL69. To uncover the region of pUL69 required for binding to UAP56, we constructed a series of N- or C-terminal pUL69 deletion mutants fused to the GAL4 DNA binding domain (Fig. (Fig.3B).3B To confirm that the observed interaction of pUL69 with UAP56 can also be detected in an independent experimental approach, GST pull-down analyses were performed using a GST-UAP56 fusion protein purified from Escherichia coli (Fig. (Fig.3E).3E pUL69 is associated with UAP56- and URH49-containing protein complexes in mammalian cells. Although the yeast two-hybrid screen and the in vitro interaction experiments suggested that pUL69 associates with UAP56- or URH49-containing protein complexes, we sought to confirm this within the context of a mammalian cell. In order to be able to immunoprecipitate the two highly related DEXD/H-box RNA helicases from mammalian cell extracts, we constructed eucaryotic vectors, expressing the indicated proteins in fusion with the FLAG epitope. Since very little is known about the URH49 protein expression pattern, we first examined the intracellular localization of F-URH49 in HeLa cells. As shown in Fig. Fig.4A,4A
In light of these results we next asked whether pUL69 can also interact with UAP56 in HCMV-infected cells. To do so, we performed anti-UAP56 immunoprecipitations using extracts of HCMV-infected or mock-infected primary HFF cells followed by Western blotting analysis. As shown in Fig. Fig.4C,4C pUL69 does not rescue REF recruitment to a REF-binding-deficient UAP56 or URH49 mutant. After having shown that pUL69 forms a complex with both UAP56 or URH49 and REF in eukaryotic cells, we went on and asked whether the presence of pUL69 in mRNP complexes leads to an enhanced recruitment of REF, as shown for ICP27 of HSV-1 (6, 27). To address this question, we took advantage of the observation that different domains within UAP56 and URH49 are required for binding to pUL69 or REF. In detail, N-terminal UAP56 or URH49 deletion mutants lacking ~150 amino acids failed to interact with REF in the yeast two-hybrid assay; however, binding to pUL69 was unimpaired (Fig. (Fig.5A).5A
UAP56 binding is crucial for pUL69-mediated nuclear RNA export. The DEXD/H-box RNA helicase UAP56 has been implicated in nuclear mRNA export as well as in RNA splicing (10). To determine whether the interaction with UAP56 is necessary for pUL69-mediated stimulation of nuclear RNA export, we investigated the RNA export activity of pUL69 mutants incapable of binding to UAP56 (Fig. (Fig.6).6
Since the RNA export function of the UL69 protein correlated with its ability to shuttle between the nucleus and the cytoplasm (Fig. (Fig.2B),2B DISCUSSION Recently, it has become apparent that some homologous proteins of the transactivator pUL69 within the subfamilies of human alpha- and gammaherpesviruses, including HSV-1 ICP27, EBV EB2, and Kaposi's sarcoma-associated herpesvirus ORF57, are implicated in RNA processing and transport (27, 39). The experiments described here provide distinct lines of evidence supporting the identification of pUL69 of the betaherpesvirus HCMV as an additional important herpesviral regulatory protein that promotes the cytoplasmic accumulation of unspliced RNA. Importantly, although it appears that all pUL69 counterparts in herpesviruses share this conserved function, we identified significant differences in how pUL69 mediates RNA export. Utilizing a reporter system widely used and designed to identify factors with mRNA export potential, we demonstrate that expression of pUL69 in human cells bypasses nuclear retention and promotes the nuclear export of unspliced reporter RNAs that are otherwise exported inefficiently. Interestingly, our characterization of this RNA export revealed that shuttling of pUL69 is linked to the export of unspliced RNAs, suggesting coexport of pUL69 with RNAs to the cytoplasm. We have previously reported that pUL69 shuttles between the nucleus and the cytoplasm in a CRM1-independent manner (34). Thus, it was tempting to speculate that, unlike with HIV-1 Rev, pUL69 nuclear export of RNA was also not dependent on the CRM1 pathway. Consistent with this idea, our results showed that pUL69-mediated nuclear RNA export is not sensitive to LMB, a drug that specifically binds to and inactivates CRM1 (29). If not targeting the CRM1 pathway, how does pUL69 promote the nuclear export of unspliced RNA? Recently, it turned out that some members of the ICP27 family of herpesviral proteins directly bind to specific intronless mRNAs and direct these RNAs to the TAP-dependent cellular mRNA export pathway (reviewed in reference 51). Consistently, we could demonstrate that pUL69 is also able to interact directly with RNA, although, similar to its homologs, no apparent specificity for defined RNA sequences could be detected up to now (Z. Toth et al., unpublished data). However, whereas for ICP27, EB2, and ORF57 a direct protein interaction with the adaptor protein REF has been described elsewhere (19, 27, 39), our findings suggest that pUL69 gains access to the mRNA export pathway via its physical interaction with the highly related DEXD/H-box RNA helicases UAP56 and/or URH49 initially described by Fleckner et al. (13) and Pryor et al. (44). In this context it is of note that, although initial data suggest that the highly related proteins URH49 and UAP56 are likely to carry out similar functions in mammalian mRNA biogenesis, details of the biological function of URH49 are unknown so far (44). Interestingly, recent publications reported a differential up-regulation of URH49 expression during HIV-1 infection and a requirement of DEAD box RNA helicase DDX3 for HIV-1 Rev-RRE export function (28, 64). This suggests that RNA helicases of the DEAD box family may be of general importance for viral infections. The conclusion that UAP56 is involved in pUL69-mediated nuclear RNA export is based on several results. First, we have demonstrated that both UAP56 and URH49 associate with pUL69 in yeast two-hybrid assays, as well as in in vitro binding and in coimmunoprecipitation experiments. These interactions were not bridged by RNA since we could observe coimmunoprecipitation of the respective proteins after RNase treatment of cell extracts. Second, the domain required for UAP56 or URH49 binding has been narrowed down to pUL69 amino acids 18 to 30 and we verified that pUL69 mutants, lacking this domain or carrying amino acid exchanges within this domain, failed to bind the DEXD/H-box proteins in vitro and in vivo. It should be noted that the UAP56 binding sequence of pUL69 is not conserved within other members of the ICP27 family. Third, functional characterization of these protein-protein interactions demonstrated that pUL69 mutants incapable of binding to UAP56/URH49 lost their stimulatory effect on nuclear RNA export. Interestingly, nucleocytoplasmic shuttling of UAP56-binding-deficient mutants was not impaired, which is consistent with the fact that the previously defined CRM1-independent nuclear export signal of pUL69 is clearly distinct from the 12-amino-acid domain required for UAP56 binding. Thus, nucleocytoplasmic shuttling per se appears to be insufficient for pUL69 to export unspliced RNA; however, an interaction with UAP56 or URH49 is additionally required. This scenario is not without precedent since the REF binding site within ICP27 also differs from sequences required for nuclear export (5). Thus, the nuclear export pathway accessed by the pUL69 NES still remains to be defined, but our experiments unambiguously demonstrate a requirement of UAP56 binding for pUL69 RNA export activity. In coimmunoprecipitation experiments we detected the adaptor protein REF in RNase-insensitive protein complexes that contained UAP56 or URH49 together with pUL69. This observation is consistent with the assumption that pUL69 acts to stimulate nuclear export of intronless viral RNAs by accessing the same pathway proposed for nuclear export of spliced cellular mRNAs via its association with UAP56 and/or REF. Interestingly, however, a closer look at the composition of pUL69-containing protein complexes using REF-binding-deficient mutants of UAP56 or URH49 did not reveal that the interaction of pUL69 with UAP56 or URH49 leads to an increased recruitment of REF to UAP56/URH49-containing complexes; furthermore, the result of this experiment argues against a direct protein-protein interaction between REF and pUL69 (Fig. (Fig.5).5 UAP56 was defined as a factor which couples transcription and splicing to cellular mRNA export, thus acting at multiple steps during mRNA biogenesis (10). The importance of this protein is also emphasized by the recent demonstration that UAP56 homologs in yeast, Drosophila melanogaster, and Caenorhabditis elegans are essential for mRNA export and viability (15, 38, 56). It has been shown that UAP56 associates with the THO proteins of transcription elongation factors, thus forming the TREX (transcription/export) complex. TREX is thought to have a dual role both in the control of transcription elongation and in coupling transcription elongation with mRNA export (48, 57). Interestingly, we have reported previously an interaction between pUL69 and a transcription elongation factor termed hSPT6 (60). One might speculate that pUL69, via its interaction with hSPT6, is recruited to elongating RNA polymerase II. This could then result in an enhanced cotranscriptional loading of UAP56 onto nascent mRNPs, thus ultimately stimulating the nuclear export of intronless RNAs. This scenario would be consistent with the finding that different domains of pUL69 are required for an interaction with either hSPT6 or UAP56 (60). Such a mechanism of enhanced cotranscriptional loading of an essential mRNA export factor could account for an involvement of pUL69 in pleiotropic up-regulation of cellular and viral gene expression as observed for HCMV-infected cells at late stages of the replication cycle. Studies using an HCMV mutant virus with a deletion of the UL69 coding region showed that the lack of pUL69 led to a substantially diminished level of several viral late transcripts (16). At present, it cannot be distinguished whether this is a direct or an indirect consequence of the lack of pUL69. As an indirect effect, viral transcripts that are dependent on pUL69 for efficient nuclear export might be misleadingly retained in the nucleus with the consequence that these unexported mRNAs are rapidly degraded by the nuclear exosome complex (24). This idea fits with observations that have recently been published for an HSV mutant lacking ICP27 or an EB2-deleted EBV (2, 43). Alternatively, the nuclear export of specific viral early RNAs might also be affected, thus leading to a general delay of the replication cycle which would then in turn result in reduced transcription of viral late genes. However, we cannot exclude that pUL69 may also exert a direct effect on transcription elongation of specific viral late RNAs which could be mediated via its interaction with hSPT6. A detailed comparison of nuclear and cytoplasmic transcript levels as well as a quantification of the transcriptional elongation rate of viral late genes in the absence or presence of pUL69 will be required in order to differentiate between these possibilities. In addition to its modulatory influence on gene expression, it was reported that pUL69 is also able to induce a G1 cell cycle arrest in both transfected and infected cells (16, 36). Although several publications report that either depletion or overexpression of UAP56 leads to a deregulation of mRNA export, subsequently eliciting a growth arrest, our data do not allow us to conclude that the UAP56-UL69 interaction contributes to the cell cycle arrest induced by pUL69 (15, 37, 38, 56). Further experiments will be required to clarify this. In summary, our current work identifies a novel cellular target which provides a herpesvirally encoded regulatory protein with access to a conserved cellular transport system in order to promote export of unspliced RNA. In this regard, future studies on the activities of pUL69 may help to provide further insights into the mechanisms by which viruses are able to optimize the coupling of transcription with nuclear RNA export in order to enhance their gene expression. Acknowledgments We thank Minoru Yoshida for his generous gift of LMB and Joachim Hauber, Michael Dobbelstein, Michael Green, Kyosuke Nagata, and Elisa Izaurralde for providing plasmids or antibodies. This work was supported by the DFG (SFB473), the IZKF Erlangen, and the Wilhelm Sander Stiftung. REFERENCES 1. Arlt, H., D. Lang, S. Gebert, and T. Stamminger. 1994. Identification of binding sites for the 86-kilodalton IE2 protein of human cytomegalovirus within an IE2-responsive viral early promoter. J. Virol. 68:4117-4125. [PubMed] 2. Batisse, J., E. Manet, J. Middeldorp, A. Sergeant, and H. Gruffat. 2005. Epstein-Barr virus mRNA export factor EB2 is essential for intranuclear capsid assembly and production of gp350. J. Virol. 79:14102-14111. [PubMed] 3. Bogerd, H. P., A. Echarri, T. M. Ross, and B. R. Cullen. 1998. 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