Abstract

Vaccinia virus (VACV) strain Western Reserve protein C4 has been characterized and its function and contribution to virus virulence assessed. Bioinformatic analysis showed that C4 is conserved in six orthopoxvirus species and shares 43 % amino acid identity with VACV protein C16, a known virulence factor. A recombinant VACV expressing a C-terminally tagged version of C4 showed that, like C16, this 37 kDa protein is expressed early during infection and localizes to both the cytoplasm and the nucleus. Functional assays using a firefly luciferase reporter plasmid under the control of a nuclear factor kappa B (NF-κB)-dependent promoter demonstrated that C4 inhibits NF-κB activation at, or downstream of, the inhibitor of kappa kinase (IKK) complex. Consistent with this, C4 inhibited interleukin-1β-induced translocation of p65 into the nucleus. A VACV lacking the C4L gene (vΔC4) showed no significant differences from wild-type virus in growth kinetics or spread in cell culture, but had reduced virulence in a murine intranasal model of infection. vΔC4-infected mice exhibited fewer symptoms, lost less weight and recovered 7 days earlier than animals infected with control viruses expressing C4. Furthermore, bronchoalveolar lavage fluid from vΔC4-infected mice had increased cell numbers at day 5 post-infection, which correlated with reduced lung virus titres from this time onward. C4 represents the ninth VACV protein to inhibit NF-κB activation and remarkably, in every case examined, loss of each protein individually caused an alteration in virus virulence, despite the presence of other NF-κB inhibitors.

Highlights

  • Vaccinia virus (VACV) is the prototypical member of the genus Orthopoxvirus (OPV) of the Poxviridae, a family of large, complex viruses with dsDNA genomes of 135 kb or more (Moss, 2007)

  • This study reports a characterization of VACV strain Western Reserve (WR) protein C4, encoded by gene C4L

  • The C-terminal sequence VTKYYI is very similar to VTKFYF present in the same position of the IL-1 receptor antagonist (IL1-ra) protein

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Summary

Introduction

Vaccinia virus (VACV) is the prototypical member of the genus Orthopoxvirus (OPV) of the Poxviridae, a family of large, complex viruses with dsDNA genomes of 135 kb or more (Moss, 2007). The more variable terminal regions encode proteins that are non-essential for virus replication in cell culture, but which affect virus host range, virulence and immunomodulation in vivo. The latter group includes proteins that are secreted from infected cells to bind cytokines, chemokines, interferons (IFNs) or complement factors, and intracellular proteins that inhibit apoptosis, synthesize steroid hormones or block signalling cascades leading to activation of transcription factors that promote expression of IFNs and pro-inflammatory molecules (Smith, 1994; Alcami, 2003; Seet et al, 2003)

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