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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, April 1999, p. 822-829, Vol. 43, No. 4
0066-4804/99/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Antiviral Effect of Hyperthermic Treatment in Rhinovirus
Infection
C.
Conti,1
A.
de Marco,2
P.
Mastromarino,1
P.
Tomao,1 and
M. G.
Santoro2,3,*
Institute of Microbiology, School of
Medicine, University "La Sapienza," 00185,
Rome,1 and Department of Biology,
University of Rome Tor Vergata,2 and
Institute of Experimental Medicine,
CNR,3 00133 Rome, Italy
Received 31 July 1998/Returned for modification 19 October
1998/Accepted 4 February 1999
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ABSTRACT |
Human rhinoviruses (HRV) are recognized as the major etiologic
agents of the common cold. Starting from the observation that local
hyperthermic treatment is beneficial in patients with natural and
experimental common colds, we have studied the effect of brief hyperthermic treatment (HT) on HRV replication in HeLa cells. We report
that a 20-min HT at 45°C is effective in suppressing HRV
multiplication by more than 90% when applied at specific stages of the
virus replication cycle. Synthesis of virus proteins is not affected by
HT, indicating that the target for treatment is a posttranslational
event. The antiviral effect is a transient cell-mediated event and
is associated with the synthesis of the 70-kDa heat shock protein
hsp70. Unlike poliovirus, rhinovirus infection does not inhibit the
expression of hsp70 induced by heat. The possibility that hsp70 could
play a role in the control of rhinovirus replication is suggested by
the fact that a different class of HSP inducers, the cyclopentenone
prostaglandins PGA1 and
12-PGJ2,
were also effective in inhibiting HRV replication in HeLa cells.
Inhibition of hsp70 expression by actinomycin D prevented the antiviral
activity of prostaglandins in HRV-infected cells. These results
indicate that the beneficial effect of respiratory hyperthermia may be
mediated by the induction of a cytoprotective heat shock response in
rhinovirus-infected cells.
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INTRODUCTION |
The human rhinoviruses (HRVs),
members of the Picornaviridae family, are the major
etiologic agents of the common cold (29). They include over
100 immunologically non-cross-reactive serotypes, classified into a
minor and a major group according to membrane receptor recognition
(5, 32). HRVs contain four nonglycosylated structural
proteins, VP1, VP2, VP3, and VP4, forming a capsid with icosahedral
symmetry. Within the capsid lies a single-stranded RNA genome which
serves as a monocistronic mRNA for the synthesis of the structural and
nonstructural proteins of the virus. Upon entry into the host cell, the
viral RNA is translated into a large polyprotein which is subsequently
cleaved by virus-encoded proteases (19). Unlike other types
of picornaviruses, the human rhinoviruses are adversely affected by
acidic pH and replicate optimally at 33°C or colder. This may partly
account for their predilection for the cooler environment of the nasal
mucosa, limiting rhinoviruses to upper respiratory infections.
Although there is an abundance of remedies for the common cold from
nasal vasoconstrictors to vitamin C, no specific antiviral therapy has
been found to be effective. Also, the large variety of immunologically
non-cross-reactive rhinovirus serotypes and apparent antigenic drift in
rhinoviral antigens cause major problems for the development of an
effective vaccine (5). A different approach against
rhinovirus infection was reported by Tyrrell et al., who demonstrated a
beneficial role for local hyperthermia (20 to 30 min at 43°C) in
improving the course of the disease in clinical trials in patients with
natural and experimental common colds (31). In this case,
brief hyperthermic treatment (HT) did not alter the frequency of
antibody response in volunteers, suggesting either a direct effect of
HT on rhinovirus replication or an inhibitory effect on inflammatory
processes and the ensuing symptomatology. However, the mechanism of the
anti-HRV activity of hyperthermia is not known.
Eukaryotic and prokaryotic cells respond to an increase in
environmental temperature by expressing a specific set of
cytoprotective proteins referred to as heat shock proteins (HSP) or
stress proteins (13). HSP are utilized in the repair process
following different types of injury to prevent damage resulting from
the accumulation of nonnative proteins. In mammalian cells, HSP are
induced in a variety of pathophysiological conditions, including fever,
inflammation, oxidant injury, and virus infection (7).
Induction requires the activation, translocation to the nucleus, and
phosphorylation of a transregulatory protein, the heat shock
transcription factor HSF (17). The 70-kDa heat shock
proteins (hsp70) function as molecular chaperones and are encoded by a
multigene family, including the constitutively expressed hsc70, the
major inducible hsp70, the inducible hsp72, the glucose-regulated
grp78/BiP, and the mithocondrial hsp75 (7, 13). A
cytoprotective role of hsp70 in a variety of human diseases, including
ischemia, inflammation, and infection, is widely recognized (7,
17).
In the case of viral infection, evidence for the presence of HSP in
intact virions or association of HSP with virus proteins during
infection, as well as for the modulation of HSP synthesis by viruses,
has been reported (23). However, the role of HSP in viral
infection is still controversial. The possibility that elevated levels
of hsp70 may interfere with viral replication has been suggested by a
variety of studies describing the antiviral activity of cyclopentenone
prostaglandins and other inducers of the heat shock response in
negative-strand RNA viruses (reviewed in references
23 and 24). In the case of
picornaviruses, induction of the heat shock response has been studied
mainly during poliovirus infection. Constitutive hsp70 was
shown to be associated with newly synthesized capsid precursor P1 of
poliovirus, and the hsp70-P1 complex was found to be part of an
assembly intermediate (14). On the other hand, poliovirus
infection was shown to inhibit constitutive or heat shock-induced hsp70
synthesis starting 2 to 3 h after infection (14, 18).
Infection with poliovirus type 2 was recently shown to prevent HSP
induction also by cyclopentenone prostaglandins (4).
Starting from the observation that HT is beneficial in patients with
common colds, we have studied the induction of the heat shock response
by hyperthermia and cyclopentenone prostaglandins during HRV infection
in human cells. We provide evidence that, unlike poliovirus, rhinovirus
infection does not inhibit the expression of hsp70 induced by heat or
cyclopentenone prostaglandins and that both hyperthermia and
prostaglandin treatment result in inhibition of HRV replication. The
antiviral effect is a transient cell-mediated event, associated with
hsp70 synthesis.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Cell cultures.
HeLa (Ohio) cells were grown at 37°C in a
5% CO2 atmosphere in Eagle's minimal essential medium
(MEM) supplemented with 10% fetal calf serum (FCS), 2 mM glutamine,
100 IU of penicillin G per ml, and 100 µg of streptomycin per ml.
Virus infection and titration.
Confluent HeLa cell
monolayers were infected with HRV serotype 1B or 14 (3) for
1 h at 33°C at a multiplicity of infection (MOI) of 1, 5, or 10 PFU/cell. The viral inoculum was removed, and cell monolayers
were washed three times with phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) and
incubated with MEM containing 2% FCS at 33°C. Prostaglandin
A1 (PGA1) and 9-deoxy-
9,
12-13,14-dihydro-prostaglandin D2
(
12-PGJ2) (Cayman Chemical Co.) were stored
in absolute ethanol and diluted to the appropriate concentration at the
time of use. Control media contained the same concentration of ethanol
diluent, which did not affect cell metabolism or virus replication. For
the heating procedure, flasks were immersed in a temperature-controlled
water bath (Grant Instruments) for 20 min at 45 ± 0.01°C,
unless specified otherwise. HT (45°C, 20 min) was not cytotoxic to
uninfected HeLa cells as shown by the trypan blue exclusion technique
24 h after heat shock (data not shown). Virus production was
determined by plaque assay as described previously (3).
Briefly, after three cycles of freezing and thawing, serial 10-fold
dilutions of HRV were prepared and inoculated on confluent HeLa
cell monolayers in 35-mm-diameter plates. After 1 h at 33°C, the
inoculum was removed, and cells were washed three times with PBS before
the addition of MEM containing 2% FCS and 1% SeaPlaque
agarose (Miles). After 3 days of incubation at 33°C in a 5%
CO2 atmosphere, plaques were stained with 0.33% neutral
red solution. For virus purification, HeLa cells infected with 10 PFU
of HRV serotype 1B were labeled with [35S]methionine (25 µCi/ml/5 × 105 cells, 20-h pulse) in the presence
of actinomycin D (0.5 µg/ml) starting 5 h postinfection
(p.i.). After three cycles of freezing-thawing and
clarification at 6,000 × g for 20 min at 4°C, the
supernatants diluted in PBS were centrifuged at 12,000 × g for 20 min and the virus was pelleted by centrifugation at
100,000 × g for 4 h at 4°C. Unless otherwise
specified, HRV serotype 1B was utilized for the experimental protocols.
DNA, RNA, and protein synthesis.
Confluent monolayers of
uninfected or virus-infected HeLa cells (10 PFU/cell) were labeled
for 12 h, starting soon after virus infection, with
[3H]thymidine, [3H]uridine, or
[35S]methionine (Amersham International) at a
concentration of 5 µCi/5 × 105 cells for DNA, RNA,
or protein synthesis, respectively, and the radioactivity
incorporated into trichloroacetic acid (TCA)-soluble (uptake) and
-insoluble (incorporation) material was determined as described
previously (16).
Protein synthesis and SDS-PAGE analysis.
Confluent cell
monolayers were labeled with [35S]methionine (1-h pulse,
5 µCi/ml/5 × 105 cells) at hourly intervals from 0 to 11 h p.i. in methionine-free medium containing 2% dialyzed
FCS. Cells were usually preincubated for 15 min in methionine-free
medium. After labeling, cells were washed and lysed in lysis buffer
(2% sodium dodecyl sulfate [SDS], 10% glycerol, 0.001% bromophenol
blue, 0.1 M dithiothreitol, 0.0625 M Tris HCl [pH 6.8]) and the
radioactivity incorporated into TCA-insoluble material was determined.
Samples were analyzed by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis
(SDS-PAGE) in a vertical slab gel apparatus (3% stacking gel, 10 or
12% resolving gel) and processed for autoradiography, as described
previously (2). Autoradiograms were quantified densitometrically with a laser beam densitometer (Ultroscan XL; LKB)
(2), and bands were expressed as relative peak areas. Virus
proteins were identified on the basis of Mr and
in relation to the position of viral marker proteins from
[35S]methionine-labeled purified HRV serotype 1B.
Immunoblot analysis.
For immunoblot analysis, an equal
amount of protein from each sample was separated by SDS-PAGE and
blotted onto nitrocellulose, as described previously (27).
After transfer, the filters were incubated with anti-hsp70
monoclonal antibodies (diluted 1:500) from HeLa cells (Amersham) in
Ten-Tween 20 buffer (0.05 M Tris-HCl [pH 7.4], 5 mM EDTA, 0.15 M
NaCl, 0.05% Tween 20), and the bound antibody was detected by using
horseradish peroxidase-linked sheep antimouse antibody (Amersham
International). Molecular weights were calculated by using Bio-Rad
low-Mr markers.
Statistical analysis.
Statistical analyses were performed by
using Student's test for unpaired data. Data are expressed as the
means ± standard deviations (SDs) of at least duplicate samples.
P values of <0.05 were considered significant.
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RESULTS |
Inhibition of HRV replication by brief HT in HeLa cells.
The
effect of brief HT on rhinovirus production in human cells was
evaluated under one-step growth conditions. HeLa cells infected with
HRV serotype 1B (10 PFU/cell) were subjected to a 45°C HT (20 min)
soon after the adsorption period (time 0) or at 3, 6, and 9 h p.i.
Cells were incubated at 33°C, and virus yield was quantitated by
plaque assay at 12 h p.i. Figure 1A
shows that HT, when applied in specific stages of the virus cycle, was strongly effective in inhibiting HRV replication for at least 12 h. The most dramatic effect was observed at 6 h p.i., with a
reduction in virus yield of more than 99% relative to that of the
control. HT applied at later times of the virus growth cycle (9 h p.i.)
resulted in a decreased inhibitory effect (approximately 80% reduction
relative to the control), whereas treatment soon after infection (time
0) had no significant effect on virus yield, indicating that inhibition
of rhinovirus replication is not due to an aspecific cytotoxic effect
of heat.

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FIG. 1.
Effect of HT during HRV replication in human cells. (A)
HeLa cell monolayers were infected with HRV serotype 1B (10 PFU/cell)
and subjected to HT (45°C, 20 min) soon after the adsorption period
(time 0) or at 3, 6, or 9 h p.i. Virus titers were determined
12 h p.i. Bar C, untreated cells. Data represent the mean ± SD of duplicate samples of two independent experiments. (B)
Temperature-dependent inhibition of HRV replication. HeLa cells were
infected with HRV at 1 ( ) or 10 ( ) PFU/cell and either kept at
33°C or subjected to 20 min of HT at different temperatures (37, 43, or 45°C) 6 h after infection. Virus titers were determined
12 h p.i. (C) HeLa cells were infected with HRV at 1 ( and )
or 10 ( and ) PFU/cell and either kept at 33°C ( and ) or
subjected to 20 min of HT at 45°C ( and ) 6 h after
infection. Virus titers were determined 12 or 24 h p.i. Data
represent the mean ± SD of at least duplicate samples. *,
P < 0.05.
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To investigate whether this effect was temperature dependent and was
influenced by the MOI of the virus, confluent HeLa monolayers were
infected with HRV at an MOI of 1 or 10 PFU/cell for 1 h at 33°C
and, at 6 h p.i., were subjected to HT at 37, 43, or 45°C for 20 min. Inhibition of virus replication, determined 12 h p.i. by
plaque assay, was found to be temperature dependent, and a 2-log
reduction in HRV yield was obtained after treatment at 45°C (Fig.
1B). Heat treatment at 43°C appeared to be less effective in cells
infected with 10 PFU of HRV (approximately 40% reduction in virus
yield relative to untreated control) than in cells infected with 1 PFU
(~70% reduction), whereas heat treatment at 45°C was similarly
effective at low and high MOIs (Fig. 1B). Inhibition of virus
replication by HT is transient. In fact, when virus yields from
parallel cultures were measured at 24 h p.i., virus titers of
heat-stressed cells were comparable to that of untreated control cells (Fig. 1C), indicating that brief HT results in the delay, but not
in the irreversible block, of HRV replication. The fact that inhibition
of virus replication is transient further indicates that the reduction
in virus yield is not caused by an aspecific irreversible cytotoxic
effect of hyperthermia in HeLa cells.
To investigate whether the antirhinoviral activity of hyperthermia was
a general effect or was specific for serotype 1B which belongs to the
HRV minor group according to membrane receptor recognition, the effect
of HT was tested on HRV serotype 14, a representative member of the
major HRV group (32). HeLa cells infected with HRV serotype
14 (1 PFU/cell) were subjected to a 43°C HT (20 min) at 6 h
p.i. Cells were incubated at 33°C, and virus yield was quantitated by
plaque assay at 12 h p.i. HT was found to reduce the HRV serotype
14 yield by more than 90% at this time (control, 1.50 × 106 ± 0.40 × 106 PFU/ml; HT, 1.36 × 105 ± 0.50 × 105 PFU/ml).
Effect of brief HT on cellular and viral protein synthesis.
Inhibition of virus replication after HT has been previously associated
with induction of HSP (6, 23). On the other hand, it has
been shown that infection with different members of the Picornaviridae family, the polioviruses, prevents the
expression of HSP stimulated by hyperthermia or chemical inducers of
the heat shock response (4, 18). To investigate whether HRV
infection could interfere with HSP expression and whether brief HT
would affect HRV protein synthesis, HeLa cells infected with HRV (10 PFU/cell) were either kept at 33°C or subjected to HT (45°C, 20 min) at 6 h p.i. After a 1-h recovery period at 33°C, cells were labeled with [35S]methionine (1-h pulses at 33°C) at
different times p.i. Uninfected cells were treated identically. Virus
yield was quantitated by plaque assay at 12 h p.i. HT caused the
expected reduction of virus yield at 12 h p.i. (Fig.
2D). As determined by
[35S]methionine incorporation into TCA-insoluble
material, heat stress was found to moderately (<30%) inhibit protein
synthesis in uninfected HeLa cells for a period of approximately 3 h (Fig. 2A). Under the conditions described, rhinovirus infection
caused progressive inhibition of HeLa cell protein synthesis, and no
difference between untreated and HT-treated cells was detected (Fig.
2A). Samples containing an equal amount of radioactivity were processed
for SDS-PAGE analysis and autoradiography. As expected, in uninfected HeLa cells, HT induced the synthesis of a 72-kDa protein,
identified as hsp70 by Western blot analysis with anti-hsp70
monoclonal antibodies (data not shown). hsp70 synthesis started
1 h after heat shock and continued at a lower level for the
following 3 to 4 h (Fig. 2B and C). HRV infection did not induce
HSP synthesis in HeLa cells. HRV-infected cells were able to respond to
HT by synthesizing hsp70 in an amount comparable to that of uninfected
cells (Fig. 2B and C), indicating that rhinoviruses, unlike
polioviruses, do not interfere with HSP expression even in relatively
late stages of infection in human cells. Levels of actin synthesis were
instead decreased in HRV-infected cells (Fig. 2B). Finally, even
though it greatly reduced virus yield, HT caused only a modest
inhibition of HRV protein synthesis at 7 h p.i., whereas no
difference in viral protein synthesis was detected between
untreated and HT-treated cells at later times of
infection (Fig. 2B and C), suggesting that HT could affect a
posttranslational event in the replication cycle, possibly by
interfering with the virus assembly process or with virus release from
infected cells.

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FIG. 2.
Effect of HT on HRV protein synthesis. Cell monolayers
infected with HRV (10 PFU/cell) were either kept at 33°C or subjected
to HT (45°C, 20 min) 6 h after the adsorption period and labeled
with [35S]methionine (1-h pulse) at 33°C at different
times p.i. (A) Determination of radioactivity incorporated into
TCA-insoluble material in uninfected ( and ) and infected ( and ) cells either untreated ( and ) or treated with HT ( and ). (B) Quantitative determination of viral proteins VP1 ( and
) and VP3 ( and ), as measured by densitometric analysis of
autoradiographic patterns shown in panel C. Data are expressed as
percentage of total proteins in untreated ( and ) or HT-treated
( and ) cells. Quantitative determination of hsp70 in uninfected
( ) and HRV-infected ( ) cells is also shown. Levels of actin in
uninfected ( ) and HRV-infected ( ) untreated cells are shown as a
control. (C) SDS-PAGE analysis and autoradiography of samples
containing an equal amount of radioactivity from uninfected (U) and
HRV-infected (HRV) HeLa cells, maintained at 33°C ( HS) or subjected
to HT (+HS). hsp70 and HRV proteins VP1, VP2, and VP3 are indicated.
(D) In the same experiment, virus titers were determined 12 h p.i.
by plaque assay. Data represent the mean ± SD of duplicate
samples. *, P < 0.05.
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In a parallel experiment, HeLa cells were infected with HRV
at a low MOI (1 PFU/cell) and, after the 1-h adsorption period, were either kept at 33°C or subjected to HT (45°C, 20 min) at 6 h p.i. After a 1-h recovery period at 33°C, the cells
were labeled with [35S]methionine for the following
2 h at 33°C. Uninfected cells were treated identically. Samples
containing an equal amount of radioactivity were processed for SDS-PAGE
analysis and autoradiography. As shown in Fig.
3A, the levels of hsp70 synthesis were
comparable in uninfected and HRV-infected cells. For hsp70
identification, equal amounts of protein from each sample were
separated by SDS-PAGE and processed for immunoblot analysis using
anti-hsp70 monoclonal antibodies (Fig. 3B). Although virus proteins
were not detectable by SDS-PAGE under these conditions, the
synthesis of two polypeptides (indicated in Fig. 3A), whose
identification is presently under investigation, was evident in
untreated, but not in HT-treated, infected cells.

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FIG. 3.
Effect of HT on hsp70 synthesis in HRV-infected cells.
Cell monolayers either uninfected (lanes 1 and 3) or infected with HRV
at a low MOI (1 PFU/cell) (lanes 2 and 4) were kept at 33°C
(lanes 1 and 2; HS) or subjected to HT (45°C, 20 min) (lanes 3 and
4; +HS) 6 h after the adsorption period and labeled with
[35S]methionine (2-h pulse) at 33°C 1 h after heat
treatment. (A) Samples containing an equal amount of radioactivity were
separated by SDS-PAGE analysis and processed for autoradiography. (B)
Hsp70 was identified by immunoblot analysis using monoclonal anti-hsp70
antibodies.
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Effect of PGA1 on rhinovirus infection.
To
investigate whether the antiviral effect of HT was a consequence of
the induction of a heat shock response and HSP expression in the
infected cell, we tested the effect of the cyclopentenone PGA1, which is a potent inducer of hsp70 synthesis
(27), on HRV production after one cycle of virus growth.
Confluent monolayers of HeLa cells were infected with HRV (10 PFU/cell)
and, after the 1-h adsorption period, were treated with different
concentrations of PGA1 or control diluent at 33°C. Virus
yield was determined by plaque assay at 12 h p.i. PGA1
was found to reduce HRV production dose dependently, and an inhibition
of more than 80% was observed at the concentration of 10 µg of
PGA1/ml (Fig. 4A). As shown
above for HT, the antiviral effect of PGA1 was transient,
and, at 24 h p.i., the virus yield in cells treated with 10 µg
of PGA1/ml (30 µM) was equal to 70% of that of control
cells. However, the readdition of PGA1 to infected cells at
12 h p.i. resulted in a virus yield reduction of more than
80% up to 24 h p.i. (data not shown).

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FIG. 4.
Effect of PGA1 on HRV replication in HeLa
cells. (A) Dose-dependent inhibition of HRV replication by
PGA1. Confluent monolayers of HeLa cells were infected with
HRV (10 PFU/cell) for 1 h at 33°C and treated with different
doses of PGA1 or control diluent soon after the 1-h
adsorption period. Virus yield was determined 12 h p.i. by plaque
assay. Data represent the mean ± SD of duplicate samples of a
representative experiment. *, P < 0.05. Each
experiment was repeated three times with the same results. The effect
of PGA1 (10 µg/ml, 30 µM) (+PGA1) or
ethanol diluent ( PGA1) added directly to the agar overlay
on the reduction of HRV plaque size and number is shown in the inset.
Approximately 100 plaques were measured in triplicate cultures for each
sample. (B) Confluent monolayers of HeLa cells, either uninfected (U)
or infected with HRV (5 PFU/cell) for 1 h at 33°C (HRV), were
treated with PGA1 (10 µg/ml) (+PGA1) or
control diluent ( PGA1) soon after the 1-h adsorption
period and labeled with [35S]methionine (1-h pulse) at
33°C at different times p.i. Samples containing an equal amount of
radioactivity were separated by SDS-PAGE analysis and processed for
autoradiography. HRV proteins VP1 and VP3 are indicated. hsp70 is
indicated by the arrow.
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In a different type of experiment, HeLa cells were infected with HRV
(100 PFU/dish) and, after the adsorption period (1 h, 33°C),
were incubated with a semisolid medium containing agarose (1%) and
PGA1 (10 µg/ml) or control diluent. The number and the size of viral plaques were determined after neutral red staining at 48 and 72 h p.i. Under these conditions, PGA1 treatment
inhibited HRV replication and caused a dramatic reduction in the number of plaques at 48 h p.i. (control cells, 98 ± 12 plaques/dish; PGA1-treated cells, 8 ± 3 plaques/dish)
(Fig. 4A, inset). At later times of infection (72 h p.i.), the number
of plaques in PGA1-treated cells increased and was
comparable to 60% of that in control cells; however, the plaque
size was reduced by more than 50% in treated cells relative to
that of the control.
Under the conditions described above, PGA1 was shown not to
be toxic to uninfected human cells, as determined by microscopic examination and vital dye uptake (Fig. 4A, inset). At the effective antiviral concentration, PGA1 also did not appear to affect
nucleic acid or protein synthesis in HRV-infected cells at 12 h
p.i. (Fig. 5). Confluent monolayers of
HeLa cells uninfected or infected with HRV (10 PFU/cell) were treated
with PGA1 (10 µg/ml) or with a different
cyclopentenone prostaglandin,
12-PGJ2
(4 µg/ml), 1 h after the adsorption period and then labeled with
[3H]thymidine, [3H]uridine, or
[35S]methionine for the following 12 h, as
described in Materials and Methods. The results shown in Fig. 5
indicate that, at the doses tested, neither prostaglandin
significantly affected either the uptake of [3H]thymidine
or [35S]methionine or DNA or protein synthesis in
uninfected and HRV-infected cells. Both prostaglandins caused a modest
reduction in RNA synthesis in mock-infected cells, which did not appear
to be due to a reduction in the uptake of precursors, since
intracellular [3H]uridine levels were not decreased
in prostaglandin-treated cells (Fig. 5C and D).

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FIG. 5.
Effect of PGA1 and
12-PGJ2 on DNA, RNA, and protein synthesis
in uninfected and HRV-infected HeLa cells. Confluent cell monolayers,
either uninfected (U) or infected with HRV (10 PFU/cell) for 1 h
at 33°C (HRV), were treated with PGA1 (10 µg/ml, 30 µM) ( ), 12-PGJ2 (4 µg/ml, 12 µM)
( ), or control diluent ( ) soon after the 1-h adsorption period
and then labeled with [3H]thymidine (A and B),
[3H]uridine (C and D), or [35S]methionine
(E and F) for the following 12 h. (A, C, and E) Uptake of
precursors by uninfected or HRV-infected cells. (B, D, and F)
Incorporation of precursors into DNA, RNA, and proteins, respectively.
Data represent the mean ± SD of duplicate samples.
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Effect of PGA1 on host cell and HRV protein
synthesis.
To determine the effect of PGA1 treatment
on the kinetics of HRV protein synthesis, HeLa cells were infected with
HRV (5 PFU/cell) and treated with PGA1 (10 µg/ml) or
control diluent after the 1-h adsorption period. Cells were then
labeled with [35S]methionine (1-h pulse) at different
times p.i. In uninfected cells, as already described for the same cell
line kept at 37°C (4), treatment with PGA1 at
33°C did not greatly affect the overall electrophoretic protein
profile, but it induced the synthesis of a 72-kDa cellular protein,
which was identified as hsp70 by immunoblot analysis (data not shown).
In HRV-infected cells, hsp70 synthesis started 4 h after
PGA1 treatment and continued for up to 10 h (Fig. 4B),
confirming that, unlike poliovirus, rhinovirus infection does not
interfere with hsp70 expression. Under these conditions in control
cells virus protein synthesis started 6 h after infection and
several virus proteins were evident at 8 to 10 h p.i.
PGA1 treatment was found to cause a delay in the synthesis
of HRV proteins, which was not detected for up to 10 h p.i.
Since the antiviral activity of cyclopentenone prostaglandins in
negative-strand RNA virus models has been shown to be dependent on
the induction of hsp70 synthesis (2, 20), we investigated the effect of actinomycin D, which is known to inhibit
PGA1-induced HSP expression (2, 16), on HRV
production. HeLa cells infected with HRV (10 PFU/cell) were treated
with PGA1 (10 µg/ml) or control diluent soon after the
1-h adsorption period in the presence or absence of actinomycin D (2 µg/ml). Virus yields were determined at 12 h p.i. As shown in
Fig. 6A, treatment with actinomycin D by
itself did not affect HRV replication. Actinomycin D, however, completely prevented the inhibitory effect of PGA1,
indicating that the antiviral activity is dependent on efficient
cellular transcription and translation. In a parallel experiment,
HRV-infected cells treated with PGA1 or control diluent
were labeled with [35S]methionine for 12 h in
the presence or the absence of 2 µg of actinomycin D/ml. SDS-PAGE
analysis of [35S]methionine-labeled proteins showed that
treatment with actinomycin D prevented PGA1-induced hsp70
synthesis in HeLa cells (Fig. 6B), suggesting that hsp70 could be
involved in the control of HRV replication.

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FIG. 6.
Effect of PGA1 and actinomycin D on HRV
replication. Confluent HeLa cell monolayers untreated (lanes 1 and 3)
or pretreated with actinomycin D (2 µg/ml) (lanes 2 and 4) for 1 h at 37°C were infected with HRV (10 PFU/cell) for 1 h at 33°C
and treated with PGA1 (10 µg/ml) (lanes 3 and 4) or
control diluent (lanes 1 and 2). Actinomycin D was kept in the medium
for the duration of the experiment. (A) Virus titers were determined
12 h p.i. by plaque assay. (B) In the same experiment, cells were
labeled with [35S]methionine soon after PGA1
treatment for 12 h at 33°C. Samples containing an equal amount
of radioactivity were separated by SDS-PAGE analysis and processed for
autoradiography. A section of the fluorogram from native gels is shown.
The position of hsp70 is indicated.
|
|
Effect of
12-PGJ2 on HRV
replication.
To determine whether cyclopentenone
prostaglandins other than PGA1 could inhibit rhinovirus
replication, we investigated the effect of
12-PGJ2 on HRV infection. HeLa cells
infected with 10 PFU of HRV/cell were treated with different
concentrations of
12-PGJ2 or ethanol diluent
after the 1-h adsorption period. Virus yield was determined by plaque
assay at 12 h p.i. Treatment with
12-PGJ2 was found to reduce HRV production
dose dependently, and an inhibition of approximately 90% was
observed at the concentration of 4 µg of
12-PGJ2/ml (12 µM) (Fig.
7A). At this concentration,
12-PGJ2 was not toxic to uninfected
HeLa cells and, as described above, did not significantly affect
nucleic acid and protein synthesis in either uninfected or HRV-infected
cells (Fig. 5). To investigate whether the antiviral activity of
12-PGJ2 was also dependent on cellular
protein expression, HRV-infected HeLa cells (10 PFU/cell) were treated
with 4 µg of
12-PGJ2/ml in the presence
or absence of actinomycin D (2 µg/ml) for 12 h after
infection. Treatment with actinomycin D completely prevented
12-PGJ2-induced inhibition of
rhinovirus replication, indicating that, as shown above for
PGA1, the antiviral activity of
12-PGJ2 is cell mediated (Fig. 7B).

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|
FIG. 7.
Effect of 12-PGJ2 on HRV
replication. (A) Dose-dependent inhibition of HRV replication by
12-PGJ2. Confluent monolayers of HeLa cells
were infected with HRV (10 PFU/cell) for 1 h at 33°C and treated
with different doses of 12-PGJ2 or control
diluent soon after the 1-h adsorption period. Virus yield was
determined 12 h p.i. by plaque assay. (B) Confluent cell
monolayers, either untreated (bars 1 and 3) or pretreated with
actinomycin D (2 µg/ml) for 1 h at 37°C (bars 2 and 4), were
infected with HRV (10 PFU/cell) for 1 h at 33°C and treated with
12-PGJ2 (4 µg/ml) (bars 3 and 4) or
control diluent (bars 1 and 2). Actinomycin D was kept in the medium
for the duration of the experiment. Virus titers were determined
12 h p.i. by plaque assay. Data represent the mean ± SD of
duplicate samples of a representative experiment.
|
|
 |
DISCUSSION |
The results described in the present report indicate that brief
HT, when applied at specific stages of the virus cycle, is effective in
blocking rhinovirus replication during primary infection of human
cells. The inhibitory effect of HT on HRV replication is temperature
dependent, and, under one-step multiplication conditions, a
20-min treatment at 45°C was found to be extremely effective, independently of the MOI. The most dramatic effect was observed when HT
was applied at 6 h p.i., with a reduction in virus yield of more
than 99% relative to that of the control. HT applied at later times of
the virus growth cycle (9 h p.i.) resulted in a decreased inhibitory
activity, whereas no significant effect on virus replication was
found when heat shock was applied soon after virus entry into the
cells. These results indicate that the antiviral effect is not due to a
general change in membrane fluidity or cell metabolism. In fact,
a brief exposure to high temperature (45°C for 20 min) did not damage
HeLa cells and only moderately (<30%) inhibited protein synthesis for
a period of approximately 3 h in uninfected cells. HT also did not
inhibit protein synthesis in HRV-infected HeLa cells (Fig. 2A).
In spite of the dramatic reduction of HRV yield after one cycle of
virus growth, HT of HeLa cells did not significantly alter the
synthesis of viral proteins at 9 and 11 h p.i., indicating that
the target for HRV inhibition could be a posttranslational event. This
hypothesis is also supported by the finding that no antiviral effect is
observed when HT is applied soon after virus entry into the host cell.
A posttranslational event was previously suggested as the target for
the antiviral activity of brief HT in vesicular stomatitis
virus-infected monkey epithelial cells (6). However, the
mechanism by which brief HT can control HRV replication at specific
stages of the virus cycle remains to be established. In different types
of models of acute RNA virus infection, the antiviral activity of
hyperthermia has been associated with the induction of a protective
heat shock response and the synthesis of HSP in the infected cell
(reviewed in references 23 and
24).
In the case of picornaviruses, increased levels of hsp70
have been detected in cultured neonatal myocardial cells
from BALB/c mice after infection with two different
picornaviruses, encephalomyocarditis virus and coxsackievirus B3
(11). Whether hsp70 is an unnecessary by-product of the viral infection or has a function in the viral life
cycle is as yet unclear. hsp70 was also shown to be associated with
newly synthesized capsid precursor P1 of poliovirus and coxsackievirus B1 in infected HeLa cells (14). The half-life of P1 was
increased when bound to hsp70, and hsp70-P1 complexes were uncleavable
by the viral protease. As anticipated in the introduction,
infection with polioviruses, which are known to cause a dramatic
shutoff of the host cell protein cap-dependent translation by
proteolytically inactivating the cap-binding protein complex
(22), inhibits constitutive as well as heat shock-induced
hsp70 synthesis in human cells, even though to a minor extent in
comparison to other cellular proteins (14, 18). We have
recently shown that infection with poliovirus type 2 also prevents
hsp70 synthesis after treatment with a different class of HSP inducers,
the cyclopentenone prostaglandins (4). On the other
hand, the translation of the glucose-regulated protein BiP was
found to be increased in poliovirus-infected HeLa cells, at a time
when cap-dependent translation of cellular mRNA is inhibited
(28). We have now shown that, unlike polioviruses, rhinovirus infection does not induce the expression of
glucose-regulated proteins and does not prevent heat shock-induced
hsp70 synthesis in HeLa cells. Under the conditions described herein,
comparable levels of this protein were detected in uninfected and
HRV-infected cells. Based on the hsp70-P1 complex formation described
in cells infected with other types of picornaviruses (14),
it could be hypothesized that intracellular accumulation of high
levels of hsp70 during specific stages of rhinovirus infection could
impair virus maturation and/or release from the infected cells,
possibly by hsp70 binding to viral polypeptides. Since HSP are known to be stable proteins (13), the relative time-specific effect
of heat could be a consequence of the fact that hsp70 is utilized by
the cell as a molecular chaperone as soon as it is synthesized. In this
case, the availability of large amounts of newly synthesized protein
could be essential for interaction with virus proteins or viral
components at different times of the virus cycle.
It should be emphasized that inhibition of virus replication by HT is
transient. If treatment is not repeated, HRV yields from HT-treated
cells can reach the control level at later times of infection (24 to
48 h p.i.), confirming that the reduction in virus yield is not
caused by an aspecific cytotoxic effect of hyperthermia in HeLa
cells. The fact that hsp70 synthesis after heat shock is also
transient, and it persists only for a period of 3 to 4 h after
treatment, supports the possibility that high levels of hsp70 synthesis
are necessary for the antiviral effect to persist. To investigate
the possibility that hsp70 could play a role in the control of
rhinovirus replication, we tested the effect of a different class of
HSP inducers, the cyclopentenone prostaglandins, on HRV infection.
Cyclopentenone prostaglandins of the A and J type (PGA and PGJ)
are known to possess a potent antiviral activity against a wide variety
of DNA and RNA viruses in different types of mammalian cells, as
well as in animal models (12, 21, 24-26). The antiviral activity of these molecules has been associated with their ability to
function as a signal for the induction of hsp70 synthesis via cycloheximide-sensitive activation of the transcription factor HSF1
(1, 24). Micromolar concentrations of PGA1,
which did not inhibit cell metabolism, significantly reduced HRV yield
after one cycle of virus growth while inducing hsp70 synthesis starting 4 h after the beginning of treatment. It is interesting to note that the amount of hsp70 induced by PGA1 at 33°C, the
temperature used for HRV infection, was comparable to that at 37°C,
as determined by immunoblot analysis (data not shown). Unlike
poliovirus (4), HRV infection did not prevent hsp70
induction by PGA1. As shown previously in other cell types
(2), PGA1 was a more effective inducer of hsp70
than heat, since synthesis of hsp70 persisted for at least 10 h
after the addition of PGA1 as compared to 3 to 4 h
after HT under the conditions used. PAGE analysis of HRV proteins
showed that PGA1 caused a delay of virus protein synthesis, which did not start before 10 h p.i. This indicates that, as
suggested in other virus-host cell models (23), induction of
the heat shock response may affect rhinovirus replication at more than one level. When HRV infection was allowed to proceed for up to 24 to
48 h p.i. without additional treatments, the virus yield progressively reached the level of mock-treated controls,
indicating that the antiviral effect is reversible and not due to
a cytotoxic effect of the drug. The possibility that hsp70 could be
involved in the control of HRV replication is suggested by the fact
that treatment with actinomycin D, which blocks hsp70 expression,
prevented the inhibition of HRV production in PGA1-treated
cells. Similar results were obtained with a different cyclopentenone
prostaglandin,
12-PGJ2, a natural metabolite
of PGD2, which presently occurs in human body fluids
(10). Treatment with actinomycin D also prevented the
antiviral effect of HT in HeLa cells (data not shown).
As anticipated in the introduction, Tyrrell and coworkers have
previously described that naturally acquired as well as experimental colds benefit from local HTs (43°C for 20 to 30 min) in randomized double-blind clinical trials in humans (30, 31). A
significant reduction in the mean symptom scores was observed in
treated patients. A transient reduction in virus shedding was reported
only on the day of treatment, whereas the mean titers in convalescence
and the frequencies of antibody response were not significantly
different in treated and control groups. Regulation of heat shock gene
expression was then hypothesized to be a possible target for the
antiviral activity of respiratory hyperthermia (31). On the
other hand, Hendley et al. have shown that two nasal treatments with
steam had no effect on viral shedding in volunteers with experimental rhinovirus infections (9). No beneficial effects from steam inhalation on common cold symptoms were detected in other studies (8, 15). Differences in the techniques of administering
therapy and in the strains of rhinoviruses were both hypothesized to be responsible for the discrepancy in these studies (15). Our
results, which show that HT at 45°C is effective in inhibiting HRV
replication in vitro when applied at specific stages of the virus
cycle, point out that differences in the temperature utilized and in
the time of treatment should be considered. Our results also suggest
the possibility that HSP and hsp70 in particular could participate in
an intracellular defense strategy during HRV infection. However, several questions on the mechanism by which hsp70 can interfere with
rhinovirus replication during heat stress remain to be answered. A better understanding of the role of HSP in virus replication could be useful in the comprehension of the beneficial effect of fever
or artificial pyrexia during virus infection and could indicate new
strategies in the treatment of the common cold.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
We thank Carlotta Volpi and Alessandra Fiocchetti for excellent
technical assistance.
This work was supported by the Italian Ministry of Public Health, 1997 AIDS Research Project, and by the Italian National Research Council,
P.F. "Biotechnology."
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of
Biology, University of Rome Tor Vergata, Via della Ricerca Scientifica, 00133 Rome, Italy. Phone: 39-06-7259-4822. Fax: 39-06-7259-4821. E-mail: santoro{at}bio.uniroma2.it.
 |
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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, April 1999, p. 822-829, Vol. 43, No. 4
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