Bacterial RecA Protein Promotes Adenoviral Recombination during In Vitro Infection

Adenoviruses are common human mucosal pathogens of the gastrointestinal, respiratory, and genitourinary tracts and ocular surface. Here, we report finding Chi-like sequences in adenovirus recombination hot spots. Adenovirus coinfection in the presence of bacterial RecA protein facilitated homologous...

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Main Authors: Jeong Yoon Lee, Ji Sun Lee, Emma C. Materne, Rahul Rajala, Ashrafali M. Ismail, Donald Seto, David W. Dyer, Jaya Rajaiya, James Chodosh
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: American Society for Microbiology 2018-06-01
Series:mSphere
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1128/mSphere.00105-18
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spelling doaj-2079795709164942a23d5c6512f38e1a2020-11-25T00:36:26ZengAmerican Society for MicrobiologymSphere2379-50422018-06-0133e00105-1810.1128/mSphere.00105-18Bacterial RecA Protein Promotes Adenoviral Recombination during In Vitro InfectionJeong Yoon LeeJi Sun LeeEmma C. MaterneRahul RajalaAshrafali M. IsmailDonald SetoDavid W. DyerJaya RajaiyaJames ChodoshAdenoviruses are common human mucosal pathogens of the gastrointestinal, respiratory, and genitourinary tracts and ocular surface. Here, we report finding Chi-like sequences in adenovirus recombination hot spots. Adenovirus coinfection in the presence of bacterial RecA protein facilitated homologous recombination between viruses. Genetic recombination led to evolution of an important external feature on the adenoviral capsid, namely, the penton base protein hypervariable loop 2, which contains the arginine-glycine-aspartic acid motif critical to viral internalization. We speculate that free Rec proteins present in gastrointestinal secretions upon bacterial cell death facilitate the evolution of human adenoviruses through homologous recombination, an example of viral commensalism and the complexity of virus-host interactions, including regional microbiota.Adenovirus infections in humans are common and sometimes lethal. Adenovirus-derived vectors are also commonly chosen for gene therapy in human clinical trials. We have shown in previous work that homologous recombination between adenoviral genomes of human adenovirus species D (HAdV-D), the largest and fastest growing HAdV species, is responsible for the rapid evolution of this species. Because adenovirus infection initiates in mucosal epithelia, particularly at the gastrointestinal, respiratory, genitourinary, and ocular surfaces, we sought to determine a possible role for mucosal microbiota in adenovirus genome diversity. By analysis of known recombination hot spots across 38 human adenovirus genomes in species D (HAdV-D), we identified nucleotide sequence motifs similar to bacterial Chi sequences, which facilitate homologous recombination in the presence of bacterial Rec enzymes. These motifs, referred to here as ChiAD, were identified immediately 5′ to the sequence encoding penton base hypervariable loop 2, which expresses the arginine-glycine-aspartate moiety critical to adenoviral cellular entry. Coinfection with two HAdV-Ds in the presence of an Escherichia coli lysate increased recombination; this was blocked in a RecA mutant strain, E. coli DH5α, or upon RecA depletion. Recombination increased in the presence of E. coli lysate despite a general reduction in viral replication. RecA colocalized with viral DNA in HAdV-D-infected cell nuclei and was shown to bind specifically to ChiAD sequences. These results indicate that adenoviruses may repurpose bacterial recombination machinery, a sharing of evolutionary mechanisms across a diverse microbiota, and unique example of viral commensalism.https://doi.org/10.1128/mSphere.00105-18adenovirusescommensalhomologous recombination
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jeong Yoon Lee
Ji Sun Lee
Emma C. Materne
Rahul Rajala
Ashrafali M. Ismail
Donald Seto
David W. Dyer
Jaya Rajaiya
James Chodosh
spellingShingle Jeong Yoon Lee
Ji Sun Lee
Emma C. Materne
Rahul Rajala
Ashrafali M. Ismail
Donald Seto
David W. Dyer
Jaya Rajaiya
James Chodosh
Bacterial RecA Protein Promotes Adenoviral Recombination during In Vitro Infection
mSphere
adenoviruses
commensal
homologous recombination
author_facet Jeong Yoon Lee
Ji Sun Lee
Emma C. Materne
Rahul Rajala
Ashrafali M. Ismail
Donald Seto
David W. Dyer
Jaya Rajaiya
James Chodosh
author_sort Jeong Yoon Lee
title Bacterial RecA Protein Promotes Adenoviral Recombination during In Vitro Infection
title_short Bacterial RecA Protein Promotes Adenoviral Recombination during In Vitro Infection
title_full Bacterial RecA Protein Promotes Adenoviral Recombination during In Vitro Infection
title_fullStr Bacterial RecA Protein Promotes Adenoviral Recombination during In Vitro Infection
title_full_unstemmed Bacterial RecA Protein Promotes Adenoviral Recombination during In Vitro Infection
title_sort bacterial reca protein promotes adenoviral recombination during in vitro infection
publisher American Society for Microbiology
series mSphere
issn 2379-5042
publishDate 2018-06-01
description Adenoviruses are common human mucosal pathogens of the gastrointestinal, respiratory, and genitourinary tracts and ocular surface. Here, we report finding Chi-like sequences in adenovirus recombination hot spots. Adenovirus coinfection in the presence of bacterial RecA protein facilitated homologous recombination between viruses. Genetic recombination led to evolution of an important external feature on the adenoviral capsid, namely, the penton base protein hypervariable loop 2, which contains the arginine-glycine-aspartic acid motif critical to viral internalization. We speculate that free Rec proteins present in gastrointestinal secretions upon bacterial cell death facilitate the evolution of human adenoviruses through homologous recombination, an example of viral commensalism and the complexity of virus-host interactions, including regional microbiota.Adenovirus infections in humans are common and sometimes lethal. Adenovirus-derived vectors are also commonly chosen for gene therapy in human clinical trials. We have shown in previous work that homologous recombination between adenoviral genomes of human adenovirus species D (HAdV-D), the largest and fastest growing HAdV species, is responsible for the rapid evolution of this species. Because adenovirus infection initiates in mucosal epithelia, particularly at the gastrointestinal, respiratory, genitourinary, and ocular surfaces, we sought to determine a possible role for mucosal microbiota in adenovirus genome diversity. By analysis of known recombination hot spots across 38 human adenovirus genomes in species D (HAdV-D), we identified nucleotide sequence motifs similar to bacterial Chi sequences, which facilitate homologous recombination in the presence of bacterial Rec enzymes. These motifs, referred to here as ChiAD, were identified immediately 5′ to the sequence encoding penton base hypervariable loop 2, which expresses the arginine-glycine-aspartate moiety critical to adenoviral cellular entry. Coinfection with two HAdV-Ds in the presence of an Escherichia coli lysate increased recombination; this was blocked in a RecA mutant strain, E. coli DH5α, or upon RecA depletion. Recombination increased in the presence of E. coli lysate despite a general reduction in viral replication. RecA colocalized with viral DNA in HAdV-D-infected cell nuclei and was shown to bind specifically to ChiAD sequences. These results indicate that adenoviruses may repurpose bacterial recombination machinery, a sharing of evolutionary mechanisms across a diverse microbiota, and unique example of viral commensalism.
topic adenoviruses
commensal
homologous recombination
url https://doi.org/10.1128/mSphere.00105-18
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