ABSTRACT
Mosquito-transmitted viruses are spread globally and present a great risk to human health. Among the many approaches investigated to limit the diseases caused by these viruses are attempts to make mosquitos resistant to virus infection. Coinfection of mosquitos with the bacterium Wolbachia pipientis from supergroup A is a recent strategy employed to reduce the capacity for major vectors in the Aedes mosquito genus to transmit viruses, including dengue virus (DENV), Chikungunya virus (CHIKV), and Zika virus (ZIKV). Recently, a supergroup B Wolbachia wStri, isolated from Laodelphax striatellus, was shown to inhibit multiple lineages of ZIKV in Aedes albopictus cells. Here, we show that wStri blocks the growth of positive-sense RNA viruses DENV, CHIKV, ZIKV, and yellow fever virus by greater than 99.9%. wStri presence did not affect the growth of the negative-sense RNA viruses LaCrosse virus or vesicular stomatitis virus. Investigation of the stages of the ZIKV life cycle inhibited by wStri identified two distinct blocks in viral replication. We found a reduction of ZIKV entry into wStri-infected cells. This was partially rescued by the addition of a cholesterol-lipid supplement. Independent of entry, transfected viral genome was unable to replicate in Wolbachia-infected cells. RNA transfection and metabolic labeling studies suggested that this replication defect is at the level of RNA translation, where we saw a 66% reduction in mosquito protein synthesis in wStri-infected cells. This study’s findings increase the potential for application of wStri to block additional arboviruses and also identify specific blocks in viral infection caused by Wolbachia coinfection.
KEYWORDS: Wolbachia, arbovirus, arthropod vectors, biocontrol, mechanisms of action
IMPORTANCE
Dengue, Zika, and yellow fever viruses are mosquito-transmitted diseases that have spread throughout the world, causing millions of infections and thousands of deaths each year. Existing programs that seek to contain these diseases through elimination of the mosquito population have so far failed, making it crucial to explore new ways of limiting the spread of these viruses. Here, we show that introduction of an insect symbiont Wolbachia wStri, into mosquito cells is highly effective at reducing yellow fever virus, dengue virus, Zika virus, and Chikungunya virus production. Reduction of virus replication was attributable to decreases in entry and a strong block of virus gene expression at the translational level. These findings expand the potential use of Wolbachia wStri to block viruses and identify two separate steps for limiting virus replication in mosquitos that could be targeted via microbes or other means as an antiviral strategy.
INTRODUCTION
Arbovirus transmission is sustained as new viruses emerge and expand into new territories annually. Dengue virus (DENV) has been transmitted annually in the Americas (1) and Asia (2) for more than 20 years. Although there has been an efficacious yellow fever virus (YFV) vaccine for over 75 years (3), YFV continues to spread in Brazil (4) and Africa (5), with a fatality rate up to 60%. Chikungunya virus (CHIKV) cases are annually detected throughout Asia and the Americas (6). In 2015, symptomatic Zika virus (ZIKV) cases were at an all-time high, with millions of people infected (7) after this virus was imported into Brazil from Asia in 2013-2014 (8). The relentless transmission of arboviruses demonstrates a need for novel control measures. While each of these viruses cause a different pathogenesis in humans, ZIKV (9), DENV (10), YFV (11), and CHIKV (12) are all transmitted by the same Aedes species of mosquito. Thus, targeting the ability of the mosquito vector to support virus replication offers a novel way to uniformly limit arbovirus disease.
Several strategies to either reduce mosquito populations or reduce the capacity of a mosquito to transmit viruses have been studied (13). Insecticides, which globally reduce mosquito populations, have been met with the challenge of broad insecticide resistance (14). Alternatively, the sterile insect technique has had some success. Sterile (15) or transgenic male mosquitos (with a lethal development gene) (16) are released to crash mosquito populations. These strategies require costly annual maintenance, prompting investigation of self-sustaining methods to target mosquito-borne virus transmission.
One self-sustaining way to limit the capacity of a mosquito to transmit viruses is through coinfection with Wolbachia pipientis, an intracellular bacterium which already infects up to 40% of all arthropods (17). Many divergent strains of Wolbachia have coevolved with their arthropod host (18, 19) and are classified into supergroups. Wolbachia wMel (supergroup A) was isolated from Drosophila melanogaster and has been transfected into Aedes aegypti mosquitos. A. aegypti mosquitos do not naturally have a Wolbachia infection (20). To establish Wolbachia infection in A. aegypti cultures, Wolbachia was first adapted to cell culture (21). This mosquito-adapted strain was used to stably infect A. aegypti mosquitos (22), and population introgression was demonstrated (20). This transinfection of wMel has been shown to block DENV (20), ZIKV (23, 24), and CHIKV (25). As a result, wMel field trials are now implementing Wolbachia-mediated biocontrol (26, 27).
Additional studies have demonstrated that other Wolbachia strains from the genetically distinct clade supergroup B may improve upon current wMel strategies and offer important tools for investigating the mechanism of Wolbachia-mediated virus suppression. A. aegypti mosquitos stably infected with wAlbB (28), a strain native to A. albopictus mosquitos, are reportedly less permissive to DENV growth (29). wAlbB has also been shown to repress DENV (30) and ZIKV (31) in A. albopictus cell lines. A more distant supergroup B strain from Laodelphax striatellus, wStri, has also been shown to repress ZIKV in A. albopictus cells. C/wStri cells are an A. albopictus (C710)-derived cell line that is stably infected with Wolbachia wStri. They are a powerful in vitro system for investigating the repression of viruses following Wolbachia colonization (31) because of their robust 4-log repression and because virus growth can be fully restored in these cells in the absence of Wolbachia replication. An additional advantage of these cells is that they lack a functional RNA interference pathway (32), allowing us to study mechanisms of virus suppression that are independent of this pathway.
The mechanism by which Wolbachia blocks viral growth is hypothesized to be multifaceted. We and others have shown that Wolbachia blocks viral growth early in infection—at or preceding genome replication (31, 33, 34). Conflicting studies have suggested that priming of innate immunity by the Toll/IMD pathway (35, 36) or small interfering RNA pathway (34, 37, 38) may play a minor role. RNA degradation and RNA methylation have also been suggested to alter viral growth (33, 39, 40). Additional work has implicated lipid composition or cholesterol in DENV inhibition in Wolbachia-infected cells (41). We previously showed that cholesterol-lipid supplementation partially rescues ZIKV growth in mosquito cells (31). However, the exact block in viral infection and how cholesterol contributes to this restriction are unknown.
We hypothesized that Wolbachia blocks viral growth at multiple stages of viral infection, based on the broad range of positive-sense RNA virus families that Wolbachia is able to repress. We first show that Wolbachia wStri blocks positive-sense RNA viruses in both the Flaviviridae and Togaviridae families but not negative-sense RNA viruses in the Bunyaviridae and Rhabdoviridae families, demonstrating that Wolbachia blocks viral growth by a virus-specific mechanism. We further show that Wolbachia wStri blocks positive-sense RNA virus growth at two independent stages of viral growth, based on studies using viral labeling, imaging, and reporter constructs for ZIKV in C/wStri cells. Cholesterol-lipid supplementation partially rescued viral entry in Wolbachia-infected cells but did not rescue viral replication independent of entry. Delineating which viruses are repressed by Wolbachia and which stages of viral infection are blocked will focus future efforts to understand the mechanism by which Wolbachia limits viral growth.
RESULTS
Wolbachia wStri inhibits positive-sense but not negative-sense RNA viruses.
Following experiments that showed that A. albopictus cells colonized with wStri significantly reduced ZIKV replication compared with cells that were wStri-free, we investigated the breadth of virus repression in wStri-colonized cells. We chose a broad repertoire of viruses, including the positive-sense RNA viruses YFV, ZIKV, and DENV-2 (Flaviviridae), CHIKV (Togaviridae), and the negative-sense RNA arboviruses vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) (Rhabdoviridae) and LaCrosse virus (LACV) (Bunyaviridae) for this investigation. Wolbachia-free cells (W−) and Wolbachia-containing cells (W+) were infected with each of these arboviruses at a multiplicity of infection (MOI) of 10, and virus accumulation in the medium was assessed at 3 days postinfection by plaque assay. Growth of YFV, DENV, and ZIKV (family Flaviviridae) was significantly reduced for all three viruses by Wolbachia wStri (Fig. 1A) (P < 0.05, t test). YFV growth was repressed by approximately 4 logs, from a titer of 5.44 × 106 focus-forming units (FFU)/ml in W− to only 1.67 × 102 FFU/ml in W+ cells (99.99% reduction) (Fig. 1A). DENV-2 growth was similarly repressed in the presence of wStri, showing growth of 1.99 × 105 FFU/ml in W− cells but just 6.1 × 102 FFU/ml in W+ cells (99.9% reduction) (Fig. 1A). Consistent with previous work (31), ZIKV growth was repressed approximately 4 logs in W+ cells (1.43 × 103 PFU/ml) compared to W− cells (1.5 × 107 PFU/ml) (Fig. 1A). Growth of CHIKV was significantly reduced (99.99%; P < 0.05, t test) in W+ cells (1.56 × 102 PFU/ml) relative to that in W− cells (3.67 × 106 PFU/ml) (Fig. 1A). These data are consistent with previous reports of supergroup A Wolbachia repression of positive-sense RNA viruses and demonstrate the broad-range antiviral phenotype for supergroup B Wolbachia wStri.
In contrast to the repression of positive-sense RNA virus replication in wStri-containing W− cells, negative-sense RNA virus growth was not inhibited in cells that contained Wolbachia (Fig. 1B). LACV growth in W+ cells (3.64 × 107 PFU/ml) was slightly higher (not significantly) than in W− cells (1.18 × 107 PFU/ml) (Fig. 1B). VSV growth was also unaffected (5.58 × 107 PFU/ml in W+ compared to 1.69 ×107 PFU/ml in W−) (Fig. 1B). These data showed that the restriction of positive-sense viruses was due to specific actions on positive-sense RNA virus replication and was not a general restriction of all virus replication.
Wolbachia-conditioned medium does not repress ZIKV growth.
To better understand mechanisms of Wolbachia-mediated mosquito protection from positive-sense arboviruses, we sought to determine how and where virus replication is blocked in Wolbachia-infected cells. We focused on ZIKV PRVABC59 because of the significant interest in using Wolbachia-infected mosquitos as a ZIKV control strategy and the robust repression (>4 log) by wStri. Wolbachia-mediated virus suppression has been suggested to be systemic throughout whole mosquitos (42). Thus, we first examined the hypothesis that an extracellular effector molecule secreted by Wolbachia-infected cells (43–45) was acting to repress viral growth. To test this hypothesis, we collected conditioned medium from W+ cells and conditioned medium from W− cells and assessed virus growth in W− cells in the presence and absence of medium from W+ cells. Virus growth in W− cells in the presence of W−-conditioned media was used as a control. W− cells treated with W+-conditioned medium grew to 2.80 × 107 PFU/ml, which was comparable to the control W− cells treated with medium conditioned with W− cells (1.04 × 107 PFU/ml) (Fig. 1C), suggesting that Wolbachia does not secrete an inhibitory factor outside the host cell to broadly repress viral growth. These data do not address if Wolbachia secretes an effector molecule into the host that alters the intracellular environment.
wStri inhibition of ZIKV is overcome at low Wolbachia infection frequencies.
We then investigated the possibility that cell-cell communication between W+ and W− cells might influence ZIKV growth. We cocultured W+ and W− cells at varying W+:W− cell ratios for 24 h. After cells adhered to the plate, they were infected with ZIKV at an MOI of 10. One hour post-viral absorption, the virus inoculum was removed and fresh medium was added to the cells. ZIKV growth was determined by plaque assay at 72 h postinfection. Results showed that there was a bimodal repression of ZIKV. When 10% or fewer W+ cells were plated with W− cells, ZIKV replicated to a titer of 4.47 × 107 PFU/ml or higher, similar to growth in the control with W− only. When 50% or more of the plated cells were W+, ZIKV growth was strongly repressed (Fig. 2A) (one-way analysis of variance [ANOVA] and Tukey test, P < 0.05). These data suggest that infected cells do not produce an extracellular factor to systematically repress ZIKV replication and that Wolbachia infection frequency across a cell population is a determinant of antiviral phenotype.
From these data, it was unclear if Wolbachia-infected cells within a mixed Wolbachia-infected and Wolbachia-free cell population were replication sites for ZIKV or if they remained uninfected while W− cells produced virus. To understand if ZIKV was growing in Wolbachia-infected cells, we fixed cells from the described treatment, immunolabeled them for ZIKV, and probed them for Wolbachia by fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH). Mean fluorescence of Wolbachia and ZIKV was determined in individual cells under each growth condition. ZIKV and Wolbachia concentration by mean fluorescence per cell were graphed against one another to determine if high ZIKV density occurs in the presence of Wolbachia (Fig. 2B). When 0% or 1% W+ cells were plated with W− cells, minimal Wolbachia infection and robust ZIKV growth were observed. In contrast, when 50% or 100% W+ cells were plated with W− cells, minimal ZIKV growth and high Wolbachia density were observed. Interestingly, when 10% W+ cells were plated with W− cells, both ZIKV and Wolbachia were observed in the same cells, perhaps due to the high titer of virus (Fig. 2B, black circle). These data suggest that Wolbachia infection frequency determines ZIKV growth in vitro but that, in cases of incomplete penetrance of Wolbachia infection in a cell population, repression is less effective and ZIKV can enter and/or replicate in cells.
Wolbachia wStri blocks ZIKV entry.
Since a secreted effector molecule was not identified, we next investigated intracellular mechanisms of Wolbachia’s antiviral phenotype. Several reports have suggested that Wolbachia blocks virus replication at an early stage (31, 33, 34). We first tested whether Wolbachia blocked entry of virus. We labeled VSV and ZIKV with BODIPY 650/665 to create a fluorescently labeled virus particle that could be tracked in microscopy-based assays. When purified virus was analyzed by SDS-PAGE, no fluorescently labeled proteins were evident in the absence of BODIPY labeling (Fig. 3A and B, lane 1). Following BODIPY labeling (Fig. 3A and B, lane 2), fluorescent bands corresponding to VSV glycoprotein and ZIKV envelope were observed.
To test our hypothesis that Wolbachia blocks ZIKV entry, we incubated cells with ZIKV-BODIPY-labeled virus or VSV-BODIPY-labeled virus for 1 h at 28°C. Unattached virus was then removed and virus attachment and entry were determined by immunofluorescence. Resulting images showed that VSV entered both W− and W+ cells (Fig. 3C), yet ZIKV entry into W+ cells was severely impaired relative to entry into W− cells (Fig. 3D). Mean fluorescence intensity per cell was calculated to quantify viral entry for VSV (Fig. 3E) and ZIKV (Fig. 3F). The median of VSV-BODIPY mean fluorescent intensity in W− cells (26.5 arbitrary units [AU]) was decreased 22.2% compared to W+ cells (20.6 AU) (Table 1). Although this change was statistically significant, it was insufficient to alter VSV growth in W+ cells (Fig. 1A). ZIKV entry into W+ cells (4.7 AU) was reduced by 67.7% relative to that into W− cells (14.63 AU) (Fig. 3F; Table 2). These data show that ZIKV entry into Wolbachia-infected cells is reduced.
TABLE 1 .
Cell type | Supplement | Fluorescence intensity (AU) |
|
---|---|---|---|
Median | % change from W− | ||
W− | 26.5 | 0.0 | |
W− | Cholesterol | 28.8 | 8.6 |
W+ | 20.6 | −22.2 | |
W+ | Cholesterol | 21.3 | −19.7 |
TABLE 2 .
Cell type | Supplement | Fluorescence intensity (AU) |
|
---|---|---|---|
Median | % change from W− | ||
W− | 14.63 | 0.0 | |
W− | Cholesterol | 17.7 | 21.0 |
W+ | 4.728 | −67.7 | |
W+ | Cholesterol | 9.944 | −32.0 |
Cholesterol has previously been implicated in flavivirus entry (46) and has been suggested to mediate Wolbachia repression of DENV (41). We previously showed that cholesterol-lipid supplementation partially rescues ZIKV growth in W+ cells (31). To assess if cholesterol-lipid addition altered ZIKV entry into W+ cells, we supplemented cells with an in vitro cholesterol-lipid reagent during viral absorption. Cholesterol-lipid supplementation had no significant effect on VSV entry (20.6 AU to 21.3 AU) (Fig. 3E; Table 2) but doubled ZIKV entry in W+ cells (4.7 AU to 9.9 AU) (Fig. 3F; Table 2). These results showed that cholesterol and lipids can increase ZIKV entry but that supplementation does not recover the entire replication block, suggesting that there are additional mechanisms.
Wolbachia blocks viral replication downstream of ZIKV entry.
To investigate Wolbachia blockade of viral replication downstream of viral entry, we tested whether transfected viral genomes were capable of producing infectious virus in W+ and W− cells. We initially assessed transfection efficiency in W+ and W− cells by using a fluorescently conjugated oligonucleotide. Transfection rates, determined by use of confocal imaging (Fig. 4A) and a plate reader (Fig. 4B), showed similar transfection efficiencies in W+ and W− cells. We then transfected 0.5 µg or 1 µg of purified viral RNA into cells and assessed the production of infectious virus 4 days posttransfection. W− cells produced greater than 1 × 105 PFU/ml when either 0.5 or 1 µg of RNA was transfected (Fig. 4C). W+ cells failed to produce any detectable infectious virus when transfected with 0.5 or 1 µg of viral RNA. These data showed that a robust block in ZIKV growth occurs post-viral entry in Wolbachia wStri-infected cells.
Wolbachia blocks initiation of viral translation.
To determine whether a deficiency in viral protein production in W+ cells contributes to the blockade of ZIKV replication, we generated a reporter construct containing the 5′-untranslated region (UTR) and 3′-UTR of ZIKV flanking a luciferase reporter. One microgram of reporter was transfected into W− and W+ cells. W+ cells produced 68% less luminescence than W− cells, suggesting that ZIKV translation is significantly reduced in W+ cells (Fig. 5A) (t test, P < 0.05).
These results led us to examine whether this repression was due to a specific effect on ZIKV translation or whether Wolbachia infection resulted in a decrease in overall translation. We assessed the rates of translation in W+ and W− cells by pulse-labeling with [35S]methionine. Figure 5B shows the pattern of protein synthesis in W+ cells labeled with [35S]methionine for 30 min. Total protein measured by Coomassie staining (Fig. 5B, right) is shown to confirm equal loading. Under normal labeling conditions, a gray background punctuated with several prominently labeled bands was observed. Cycloheximide (CHX) treatment (lane 2) blocked most insect protein synthesis. Notable in CHX-treated cells was one prominent band that was translated at the same rate in the presence and absence of the eukaryotic protein synthesis inhibitor. This band disappeared when cells were treated with tetracycline, revealing that it is likely a Wolbachia protein (Wolb*) (Fig. 5B, left) that is produced through bacterial protein synthesis. Quantitation of these results indicated that Wolbachia protein translation represents approximately 1/3 of total protein translation (CHX), while 2/3 of total translation is mosquito derived (TET) in W+ cells (Fig. 5C).
There was a remarkable difference in the rate of protein synthesis observed when W− and W+ cells were labeled under similar conditions. As shown in Fig. 5D, there was significantly more total protein synthesis in W− cells than in W+ cells for a given amount of total protein present (Fig. 5E). As expected, CHX ablated all translation in W− cells (Fig. 5D, lane 1 compared to lane 2 or 4), and TET did not impair mosquito translation (Fig. 5D, lane 1 compared to lane 3). Quantification of the difference in protein synthesis (Fig. 5F) showed that when TET-treated W− cells were compared to TET-treated W+ cells, host translation was reduced approximately 66% in W+ cells. These data suggest that Wolbachia wStri blocks viral translation by globally reducing host translation.
DISCUSSION
The data presented here show that the Wolbachia-mediated inhibition of ZIKV replication in mosquito cells occurs by at least two independent mechanisms. We observed a significant reduction of ZIKV entry in cells infected with wStri, which is likely to be an important cause of decreased ZIKV replication. Importantly, complementary experiments showed that if virion-mediated entry of ZIKV was bypassed, ZIKV replication was still blocked. This blockade is correlated with a reduction in the translation of a ZIKV minigenome reporter construct, indicating that replication is additionally blocked at the stage of protein synthesis. The finding that there are multiple mechanisms by which Wolbachia mediates viral repression is encouraging. If these multiple mechanisms of virus repression seen in cell culture are also active in an intact mosquito infected with Wolbachia, it is less likely that viruses will evolve resistance to this strategy of arbovirus control.
Our work also provides some insights into potential mechanisms for the different steps of virus restriction. We showed that cholesterol supplementation partially rescues the viral entry defect that we observed in W+ cells, which indicated that lower levels of cholesterol (known to occur in Wolbachia-infected cells [41]) limit ZIKV entry. While cholesterol-lipid supplementation was successful, it is important to note that we and others have been unable to rescue entry through the more common method of cholesterol-saturated methyl beta-cyclodextrin-mediated cholesterol supplementation (41). These results are consistent with our earlier findings (31) that showed cholesterol supplementation improved ZIKV replication.
Our data showing that ZIKV entry is affected in wStri-containing cells in a cholesterol-dependent manner differ from those of a report that did not find a change in DENV entry into Aag2 cells infected with wMel. Reasons for this discrepancy could stem from the differences in the virus used or Wolbachia strain used, but different assay approaches may play a role as well. Our results are based on direct imaging of labeled virus entry and include controls to affirm that known blockers of entry lead to decreases in signal in our assays. Thomas et al. used quantitative reverse transcription-PCR (40) without controls to define how known blockers of entry impact the results. It will be important to further assess these questions using similar assays in future experiments to improve our understanding of biological (mosquito/microbe) specificity versus technical limitations.
Our studies also demonstrated that there is a global decrease in protein synthesis activity in Wolbachia-infected cells. This global repression alone is a likely candidate for the lack of ZIKV protein production observed (31) and is consistent with other examinations of the effect of Wolbachia on insect cell homeostasis that have shown decreases in protein synthesis machinery (47). Wolbachia sequesters host amino acids, which may contribute somewhat to this decrease in mosquito translation (48). Proteomic interrogation of Wolbachia-infected cells has also indicated decreases in amino acid metabolism (47) and translation factors (49) following Wolbachia infection. The observed change in protein synthesis as a means of altering ZIKV replication is consistent with findings from other studies suggesting a block of virus replication early in viral replication (31, 34).
Global dysregulation of methylation patterns in Wolbachia-infected cells has previously been suggested to interfere with RNA virus replication. RNA methylation has been implicated in the translational control of host (50) and viral (51) protein production. Wolbachia disrupts global methylation patterns within a cell (52). Cytosine methyltransferases such as Dnmt2 have been shown to alter translation (53–55). Dnmt2 was downregulated in Wolbachia-infected mosquitos, limiting DENV replication (39), yet upregulated, limiting Sindbis virus, in Drosophila (33). Dnmt2 has also been shown to directly bind to Drosophila C virus RNA, a positive-sense RNA virus in Drosophila (56). These studies suggest dynamic control of host translation mediated by methylation of tRNAs. Additional studies are needed to delineate how global translation is downregulated in Wolbachia-infected cells and the specific effects on viral translation.
Our results are consistent with Wolbachia exerting part of its virus-repressive effect at the level of translation. This hypothesis is consistent with results from a study with a Drosophila cell line infected with Wolbachia wMel; that study suggested that Semliki Forest virus replicons are inhibited early postentry at the stage of viral translation and/or replication, but it could not delineate between a block at one or both stages (34). Our results differ from those of another investigation of Wolbachia-virus interactions in Drosophila that suggested that Wolbachia repression of virus replication at RNA replication is caused by Dnmt2 (33). That study used a cyclic reporter to measure nonstructural versus structural open reading frame expression levels and suggested that translation was not hindered. In contrast to our study, this method is indirect and did not directly measure translation rates.
An additional factor that may contribute to Wolbachia restriction of flavivirus replication is the mosquito mRNA degradation system. A recent report showed that knockdown of XRN1 in wMel-infected mosquito cells leads to a decrease in viral RNA elimination in these cells (40). This suggests that the degradation of viral RNA can contribute to the restriction of flavivirus replication and is consistent with our data showing changes at the level of protein synthesis. XRN1 is not functional on its own to degrade RNA that is capped. It requires the activity of the capping complex DCP2/DCP1, which recognizes and removes the 5′ cap (57). A reduction in recruitment of flavivirus RNA into the translation apparatus would leave the 5′ cap more vulnerable to decapping and increase its susceptibility to the XRN1 pathway.
While the global inhibition of translation may strongly affect ZIKV replication, it does not act as a universal block to viral growth. Our experiments demonstrate a different impact of Wolbachia infection on positive- and negative-strand RNA virus replication. In our experiments, Wolbachia wStri infection only limited the replication of positive-sense RNA viruses. Our data are consistent with previous studies showing that Wolbachia-infected Aedes cells restrict the replication of ZIKV (23, 24, 31), DENV (26, 30, 37, 58, 59), and CHIKV (25, 60, 61). LACV and VSV have not been studied in Aedes mosquito cells in the presence and absence of Wolbachia, but the replication of the negative-sense RNA viruses is not impeded in Wolbachia-infected mosquitos. In Culex quinquefasciatus mosquitos (a nonnative vector of LACV), LACV was not restricted by Wolbachia wPip (62). In Culex tarsalis mosquitos, a vector of the negative-sense Rift Valley fever virus, viral growth was also unaffected by Wolbachia (63). Thus, our data and recent literature expand a broad trend for Wolbachia-mediated viral repression of positive-sense but not negative-sense RNA viruses.
One way in which the protein synthesis block may have an effect on positive-sense RNA viruses but not negative-sense RNA viruses is the difference in replication strategies employed by the different viruses. Positive-sense RNA virus genomes are a singular infectious mRNA and must be translated by the host to generate a viral polymerase that will make additional mRNAs (64). Negative-sense RNA viruses bring with them a viral polymerase that generates mRNAs from the genome (64). The level of mRNA transcribed by this polymerase is regulated by the amount of viral protein produced. Under conditions where there is a general inhibition of protein synthesis, negative-sense RNA viruses would be predicted to overproduce mRNAs. This is done by extending the production of mRNA prior to translation (65), which raises the level of viral mRNA concentration until a sufficient amount of protein accumulates. Because positive-sense RNA viruses lack this mRNA production/compensation mechanism, a reduction in translation could lead to a much more severe decrease in protein synthesis.
Our studies also expand the understanding of the performance of the wStri Wolbachia strain as a viral antagonist. Cells containing wStri reduced the growth of all flaviviruses and alphaviruses (CHIKV) tested. Importantly, wStri blocked YFV, which is not repressed by the supergroup A Wolbachia strain wMel (66). These results suggest that Wolbachia wStri has an ability to repress a wider variety of positive-sense RNA arboviruses and should be investigated in vivo for further applications. While wMel is the strain currently employed in field trials (67), an understanding of wStri alone or as a superinfection with wMel in vivo may strengthen the approach of Wolbachia-mediated virus control.
Our study provides bases for multiple mechanisms of Wolbachia-mediated virus control and focuses future efforts to delineate molecular interactions which facilitate Wolbachia-induced viral repression. Additional studies investigating other flaviviruses as well as alphaviruses are needed to better understand the uniformity and divergence of how Wolbachia blocks specific viruses. Investigations of wStri repression of viruses in A. aegypti cells and whole mosquitos are needed to advance the application of these studies. These data provide significant advancements in the understanding of how Wolbachia represses virus growth and offer new insights to the control of additional flaviviruses, such as YFV.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Cell culture.
W+ cells (C/wStri) were derived from W− cells infected with Wolbachia pipientis wStri from Laodelphax striatellus (68), which was provided by Ann Fallon. W− and W+ cells were grown at 28°C with 5% CO2 and subcultured weekly at a 1:5 dilution in E-5 medium as previously described (31), with a modified increase of fetal bovine serum (FBS) concentration to 10%, termed E-10 medium. A. albopictus C6/36 cells were cultured in minimal essential medium (MEM) with 10% fetal bovine serum, 1× nonessential amino acids, and 2 mM glutamine and subcultured weekly at a 1:10 dilution. Macaca mulatta kidney LLC-MK2 (ATCC CCL-7) cells were cultured in Dulbecco’s modified Eagle medium (DMEM) with 10% fetal bovine serum and 2 mM glutamine at 37°C with 5% CO2. African green monkey (Cercopithecus aethiops) Vero E6 (ATCC CRL-158) cells were grown in MEM with 10% fetal bovine serum. African green monkey (Cercopithecus aethiops) kidney epithelial Vero cells (CCL-81; ATCC, Manassas, VA) were cultured in DMEM supplemented with 10% (vol/vol) fetal bovine serum, 2 mM Glutamax, 100 U ml−1 penicillin G, 100 µg ml−1 streptomycin, and 0.25 µg ml−1 amphotericin B at 37°C with 5% (vol/vol) CO2. LLC-MK2, Vero, and Vero E6 cells were subcultured biweekly at a 1:10 dilution.
Viruses.
The following virus strains were used in this study: DENV-2 NGC, ZIKV PRVABC59, YFV 17 D, CHIKV 131/25, LACV H78, and VSV Indiana. DENV and ZIKV were propagated in C6/36 cells at an MOI of 0.01 for 6 days. YFV 17 D was recovered from a molecular clone obtained from Charles Rice at Rockefeller Institute. YFV 17 D was propagated in Vero cells at an MOI of 0.001 for 3 days. CHIKV was provided by Robert Tesh at the University of Texas at Galveston. Lyophilized CHIKV was reconstituted in serum-free DMEM and propagated in Vero cells for 2 days. LACV and VSV were grown in Vero E6 cells at a starting MOI of 0.01 and harvested when cytopathic effect showed greater than 50% lethality (approximately 24 to 36 h). Harvested supernatants were pelleted at 4,000 relative centrifugal force (RCF), filtered through a 0.2-µm polyethersulfone (PES) membrane, aliquoted, and stored at −80°C.
Assessment of infectious virus.
Infectious units of ZIKV, CHIKV, LACV, and VSV were quantified by plaque assay. Briefly, Vero cells, or Vero E6 cells, were plated at ~90% confluence. Serial dilutions of virus were incubated with cells for 1 h followed by removal of the viral inoculum, and 1.4% Avicel in MEM with 10% FBS was added. Cells were incubated at 37°C with 5% CO2 for the following durations: ZIKV, 5 days; CHIKV, 2 days; LACV, 3 days; VSV, 1 day. After incubation, the overlay was removed by aspiration and cells were fixed with 4% formaldehyde for 1 h at room temperature. Crystal violet was incubated with cells for 10 min and cells were rinsed in water and counted.
DENV titers were determined in a focus-forming assay. Briefly, LLC-MK2 cells were incubated with serially diluted virus for 1 h. Virus was removed and cells were rinsed one time before adding 1.4% Avicel in MEM with 10% FBS. Plates were incubated for 72 h, followed by fixation in 10% formalin for 1 h at room temperature and then permeabilization with 70% ethanol for 30 min. Cells were stained with flavivirus anti-envelope protein antibody (D11C) (69) in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) with 0.01% Tween 20 and 5% nonfat dry milk (NFDM), followed by goat anti-human antibody–horseradish peroxidase (HRP) conjugate. Foci were developed with 0.5 mg/ml diaminobenzidine in 25 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.2). Foci were counted and results were graphed in GraphPad Prism.
The YFV 17D titer was determined in a focus-forming assay. Vero cells were seeded at a density of 5 × 105 cells per well of a 12-well plate 24 h prior to infection. Serial dilutions of virus were incubated with cells for 1 h, followed by removal of the viral inoculum and addition of 1.4% Avicel in MEM with 10% FBS. Cells were incubated at 37°C with 5% CO2 for 48 h followed by fixation in Formalde-Fresh solution for 1 h at room temperature, and then they were permeabilized with 70% ethanol for 30 min. Cells were stained with flavivirus anti-envelope protein antibody (1.6D) (69) in PBS with 0.01% Tween 20 and 5% NFDM, followed by goat anti-human antibody–HRP conjugate. Foci were visualized by the addition of 3,3-diaminobenzidine tetrahydrochloride. Foci were counted and results were graphed in GraphPad Prism.
High-MOI infections with positive- and negative-sense RNA viruses.
W+ and W− cells were seeded at 2 × 105 cells per well in a 12-well plate and incubated at 28°C with 5% CO2 for 24 h. Cells were infected with one of the six viruses described above at an MOI of 10 in serum-free medium at 28°C with 5% CO2. After 1 h, virus inoculum was carefully removed and 1 ml of E-10 medium was added per well. Infections were incubated at 28°C with 5% CO2 for 72 h. Cell supernatant was collected and infectious virus was quantified as described above.
Repressive capacity of Wolbachia-conditioned medium.
W+ and W− cells were seeded at 1 × 105 cells in a total volume of 5 ml per T-25 flask and incubated at 28°C with 5% CO2 for 5 days. Conditioned medium was collected and pelleted at 4,000 RCF to remove any cells and cell debris. W+ and W− cells were seeded at 2 × 105 cells per well in 12-well dishes. Cells were infected at an MOI of 10 with ZIKV PRVABC59 in serum-free medium for 1 h at 28°C with 5% CO2. Post-virus absorption, 1 ml of conditioned medium was added to cells. Infected cells were incubated at 28°C with 5% CO2 for 3 days. Supernatant was harvested, and infectious virus production was assayed as described above.
Determining the effect of Wolbachia infection frequency on ZIKV growth.
W+ and W− cells were seeded in varying ratios of W+:W− cells with a total of 3.5 × 105 cells per well in a 24-well plate and incubated at 28°C with 5% CO2 for 24 h. Cells were infected with ZIKV PRVABC59 for 1 h at 28°C with 5% CO2 in serum-free medium. Virus inoculum was removed and 0.5 ml of E-10 medium was added per well. Cells were incubated for 72 h at 28°C with 5% CO2. Postincubation, cell supernatant was collected to determine the production of infectious virus, as described above, and cells were processed for immunofluorescence as described below.
Cells were fixed with 4% paraformaldehyde with 0.1% Triton and 0.1% Tween 20 for 1 h at room temperature. Cells were then incubated in 70% ethanol for 30 min to further permeabilize the cells. Primary antibody to detect ZIKV envelope protein (D11C) was added at 1 µg/ml in PBS with 0.1% Tween 20. Cells were incubated overnight at 4°C. After removing and rinsing primary antibody, cells were incubated for 30 min with 1:500 goat anti-human antibody–Alexa Fluor 568 conjugate (secondary antibody). Secondary antibody was removed, and cells were rinsed three times with PBS and fixed with 4% paraformaldehyde a second time to stabilize the antibody complex during fluorescent in situ hybridization.
Fluorescent in situ hybridization was performed as previously described (70) with minor modification. Cells were then incubated in hybridization buffer (50% formamide, 5× SSC [1× SSC is 0.15 M NaCl plus 0.015 M sodium citrate], 250 mg/liter salmon sperm DNA, 0.5× Denhardt’s solution, 20 mM Tris-HCl, 0.1% SDS) at 37°C for 1 h. Next, 7.5 pg/µl 16S rDNA probe (AlexaFluor 488–5′-ACATGCTCCACCGCTTGTGCGGGTCCCCGTCAATT-3′) was added in hybridization buffer for a minimum of 3 h at 37°C, and then the mixture was washed in buffer 1 (1× SSC, 20 mM Tris-HCl, and 0.1% SDS) followed by wash buffer 2 (0.5× SSC, 20 mM Tris-HCl, and 0.1% SDS) at 37°C for 15 min each. Cells were stained with Hoechst at 0.5 µg/ml in wash buffer 2 for 30 min at room temperature. Finally, cells were rinsed with wash buffer 2 twice and mounted in Prolong Gold for imaging on an Olympus FV100 fluoview confocal microscope.
BODIPY labeling and entry assay.
VSV and ZIKV were grown in 5 T-150 flasks as described above. Supernatant was pelleted at 4,000 RCF to remove cell debris and filtered through a 0.2-µm PES filter. Virus was pelleted at 32,000 rpm in an SW32Ti rotor in a Beckman Coulter, Inc. Optima L-90K ultracentrifuge. Virus pellets were resuspended in 1 ml of 1× PBS with 10 µg/ml BODIPY 650/665.Virus-BODIPY was incubated with rocking overnight at 4°C. Virus was collected and dialyzed in an 8,000-Da molecular weight cutoff membrane to remove unbound probe for 3 days in 3 liters of PBS at 4°C. PBS was exchanged for fresh solution each day. After dialysis, virus was collected and aliquoted. Virus titer was determined through a plaque assay as described above. Virus labeling was confirmed on a 10% SDS-PAGE gel. BODIPY 650/665 incorporation was determined through imaging on a Licor Odyssey in the 700-nm channel.
W− and W+ cells were plated at 3 × 105 cells per chamber on a ChamberSlide (catalog number 154526; LabTekII) and incubated at 28°C with 5% CO2 for 24 h. Cells were infected with VSV-BODIPY or ZIKV-BODIPY for 1 h at 28°C with 5% CO2 in either serum-free medium or serum-free medium with cholesterol-lipid supplement at a 2× concentration (31). Virus inoculum was removed and cells were rinsed 3 times with PBS. Cells were fixed in 4% paraformaldehyde for 1 h at room temperature, mounted in Prolong Gold, and stained with 4′,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI). Virus absorption was measured based on the mean BODIPY fluorescence per cell and using ImageJ.
Transfection efficiency.
An AlexaFluor 568-conjugated probe was adhered to the 5′ end of the partial ZIKV 5′-UTR sequence: 5′-CTACTCCGCGTTTTAGCATATTGACAATCCGGAATCCTCCGG-3′. W+ and W− cells were plated at 3.5 × 105 cells per well in 0.5 ml volumes in a 24-well plate and incubated for 24 h at 28°C with 5% CO2. Per well, 1 µg of probe was diluted in 100 µl of Optimem with 1 µl of Mirus Bio mRNA boost and 1 µl of Mirus Bio mRNA TransIT reagent; we allowed 3 min for lipid complexes to assemble and added them to cells. Control transfection experiments without the DNA probe or transfection boost and reagent were conducted simultaneously. Cells were incubated at 28°C with 5% CO2 for 24 h. Supernatant was removed, and cells were either fixed for imaging analysis or rinsed three times with PBS for plate reader analysis. For imaging, cells were fixed in 4% paraformaldehyde for 1 h at room temperature. Cells were rinsed 1 time with PBS and mounted in Prolong Gold and stained with DAPI. For plate reader analysis, cells were lysed in NP-40 lysis buffer and 100 µl of cell lysate was transferred to a clear-bottom plate. A Tecan Spark plate reader was used to determine fluorescence in the 568-nm channel.
Infectious RNA isolation and virus genome transfection.
To isolate infectious viral RNA, five 150-cm2 flasks of C6/36 cells were infected with ZIKV at an MOI of 0.01. Six days postinfection, supernatant was pelleted at 4,000 RCF to remove cell debris and filtered through a 0.2-µm PES filter. Virus was pelleted at 32,000 rpm in an SW32Ti rotor in a Beckman Coulter, Inc. Optima L-90K ultracentrifuge. Virus pellets were resuspended in 500 µl of TRIzol reagent (Thermo Fisher Scientific). TRIzol RNA extraction was carried out per the manufacturer’s protocol. Viral RNA was resuspended in 100 µl of RNase-free water and quantified via a Thermoscientific Nano Drop 2000 system. W+ and W− cells were plated at 3.5 × 105 cells per well in 0.5 ml volumes in a 24-well plate and incubated for 24 h at 28°C with 5% CO2. Each well was transfected with 0.5 µg or 1 µg of infectious RNA diluted in 100 µl of Optimem with 1 µl of Mirus Bio mRNA boost and 1 µl of Mirus Bio mRNA TransIT reagent. Three minutes was allowed for lipid complexes to assemble before being added to cells. Cells were incubated for 4 days at 28°C with 5% CO2. Twenty-four hours posttransfection cell supernatant was replaced with fresh media. At the end of the 4 day incubation, supernatant was collected and infectious virus was assessed by plaque assay as described above. RNA isolation by a Qiagen RNeasy extraction did not yield infectious RNA when transfected.
Translation reporter construction.
A gene block with the 5′- and 3′-UTRs of ZIKV flanking the region encoding firefly luciferase was purchased from Integrated DNA Technologies, Inc. The 5′-UTR and 3′-UTR of ZIKV was derived from ZIKV strain FSS13025 (GenBank accession number KU955593.1). The gene block was cloned into a TOPO cloning vector and amplified with the following primers: ZIKV 5′-UTR with T7, 5′-GGCTTAATACGACTCACTATTAGAGTTGTTGATCTGTGTGAATC-3′; ZIKV 3′-UTR reverse primer, 5′-TGGGAATTCGGAAACCATGGATTTC-3′. For the amplification step, the PCR mixture was subjected to 40 cycles of 95°C for 30 s, 60°C for 1 min, and 72°C for 3 min. DNA was quantified by using a ThermoFisher Scientific Nano Drop 2000 system. One microgram of DNA was in vitro transcribed and capped by using an mMessenger mMachine T7 kit (catalog number AM1344; ThermoFisher Scientific). Capped RNA was isolated by using a Qiagen RNeasy kit per the manufacturer’s recommendations. W+ and W− cells were plated at 3.5 × 105 cells per well in a 0.5-ml volume in a 24-well plate and incubated for 24 h at 28°C with 5% CO2. Each well was transfected with 1 µg of RNA reporter construct diluted in 100 µl of Optimem with 1 µl of Mirus Bio mRNA boost and 1 µl of Mirus Bio mRNA TransIT reagent. Lipid complexes were allowed to assemble for 3min before being added to cells. Transfected cells were incubated at 28°C with 5% CO2 for 24 h. Cell supernatant was removed and cells were lysed in 100 µl of NanoLight firefly luciferase reagent. Luminescence was determined on a Tecan Spark plate reader.
l-[35S]methionine pulse treatment.
W− and W+ cells were seeded at 5 × 105 cells/well in a 12-well plate and incubated for 24 h at 28°C with 5% CO2. Cells were methionine starved in Grace’s insect medium (-Met) supplemented with 1× nonessential amino acids for 1 h. Twenty-five microcuries of EasyTag l-[35S]methionine was added per well in Grace’s insect medium (-Met) for 30 min. To isolate Wolbachia versus host translation, 22.5 µM TET, 10 µM CHX, or both (C/T) were added to cells throughout starvation and l-[35S]methionine pulse. After the l-[35S]methionine pulse, cell supernatant was removed and cells were lysed in 100µl NP-40 lysis buffer with protease inhibitor for 5 min. Lysate was pelleted at 10,000 RCF to remove nuclei, and supernatant was collected. Supernatant was diluted in SDS loading buffer and heated to 95°C for 5 min. Protein lysate was run through a 10% SDS-PAGE gel and stained with Coomassie R-250 for 1 h. The gel was destained overnight in water and then imaged to measure total protein on a Licor Odyssey system in the 700-nm channel. The gel was dried at 80°C for 3 h on a vacuum drier. The dried gel was exposed to a phosphorimager for 2.5 h, and radioactive decay was read on a Bio-Rad imager. Radioactive decay was measured based on the intensity per lane and normalized to total protein per lane measured by Coomassie staining. C/T treatment showing background was subtracted from each lane per experiment. Means and standard deviations of three independent experiments were calculated in GraphPad Prism. One-way ANOVA followed by Tukey’s test determined statistical differences across samples.
Footnotes
Citation Schultz MJ, Tan AL, Gray CN, Isern S, Michael SF, Frydman HM, Connor JH. 2018. Wolbachia wStri blocks Zika virus growth at two independent stages of viral replication. mBio 9:e00738-18. https://doi.org/10.1128/mBio.00738-18.
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