Human Herpesvirus 8 Interferon Regulatory Factor-Mediated BH3-Only Protein Inhibition via Bid BH3-B Mimicry

Viral replication efficiency is in large part governed by the ability of viruses to counteract pro-apoptotic signals induced by infection of host cells. For HHV-8, viral interferon regulatory factor-1 (vIRF-1) contributes to this process in part via inhibitory interactions with BH3-only protein (BOP) Bim, recently identified as an interaction partner of vIRF-1. Here we recognize that the Bim-binding domain (BBD) of vIRF-1 resembles a region (BH3-B) of Bid, another BOP, which interacts intramolecularly with the functional BH3 domain of Bid to inhibit it pro-apoptotic activity. Indeed, vIRF-1 was found to target Bid in addition to Bim and to interact, via its BBD region, with the BH3 domain of each. In functional assays, BBD could substitute for BH3-B in the context of Bid, to suppress Bid-induced apoptosis in a BH3-binding-dependent manner, and vIRF-1 was able to protect transfected cells from apoptosis induced by Bid. While vIRF-1 can mediate nuclear sequestration of Bim, this was not the case for Bid, and inhibition of Bid and Bim by vIRF-1 could occur independently of nuclear localization of the viral protein. Consistent with this finding, direct BBD-dependent inactivation by vIRF-1 of Bid-induced mitochondrial permeabilization was demonstrable in vitro and isolated BBD sequences were also active in this assay. In addition to Bim and Bid BH3 domains, BH3s of BOPs Bik, Bmf, Hrk, and Noxa also were found to bind BBD, while those of both pro- and anti-apoptotic multi-BH domain Bcl-2 proteins were not. Finally, the significance of Bid to virus replication was demonstrated via Bid-depletion in HHV-8 infected cells, which enhanced virus production. Together, our data demonstrate and characterize BH3 targeting and associated inhibition of BOP pro-apoptotic activity by vIRF-1 via Bid BH3-B mimicry, identifying a novel mechanism of viral evasion from host cell defenses.

In addition to its other cellular binding partners, vIRF-1 also interacts with the pro-apoptotic BH3-only protein (BOP) Bim [23], a protein also targeted for suppression by v-chemokine signaling and demonstrated to be both induced during lytic replication and a very powerful negative regulator of viral replication efficiency [8]. Bim, like other BOPs, functions by virtue of its BH3 domain to target anti-apoptotic members of the Bcl-2 family and to disrupt their interactions with apoptotic executioner proteins Bax and Bak, liberating them for oligomerization and mitochondrial permeabilization [24,25]. However, Bim can also interact with and activate Bax and Bak directly, via induced conformational changes [26][27][28]. This property of direct activation of Bax and/or Bak is shared by BOPs Bid and Puma, although other BOPs appear to act indirectly via BH3-mediated interactions with Bcl-2-family proteins [26,27,29,30]. Activities of

Results
Similarities between vIRF-1 BBD and Bid BH3-B We noted previously the amphipathic a-helical structure of the Bim-binding domain (BBD, residues 170-187) of vIRF-1 [23]. This type of structure also is apparent in the so-called BH3-B domain of Bid, which interacts intramolecularly with the BH3 domain to effect inhibition of Bid activity [40]. Indeed, the sequences of BBD and BH3-B are similar to each other and to BH3 domains of other proteins (Fig. 1). Particularly noteworthy are the BH3-conserved hydrophobic and BH3-B-conserved basic residues of the BBD core sequence (Fig. 1). The structural similarities of BBD and BH3-B suggested the possibility that BBD might interact with Bim via its BH3 domain and that vIRF-1 might target Bid (and possibly other BOPs) in addition to Bim.
To confirm interaction of full-length vIRF-1 and Bid proteins, as we had done previously for vIRF-1 and Bim [23], appropriate expression plasmids were used to transfect HEK293T cells, and cell lysates were used for co-precipitation assays. Immunoprecipitation of Flag epitope-tagged Bid, as well as Bim (positive control), enabled co-precipitation of vIRF-1, demonstrating interaction between vIRF-1 and Bid (Fig. 2C).

Functional equivalence of BBD and BH3-B
The relationship between vIRF-1 BBD and Bid BH3-B was tested by substitution of the latter with the former in the context of full-length, uncleaved Bid (Bid L ) and testing the constructions (Fig. 3A) for pro-apoptotic activities in appropriately transfected cells. Apoptotic activity of Bid was measured by a GFP-based assay, in which loss of GFP fluorescence in GFP vectorcotransfected cells correlates with loss of cell viability and corresponds to rates of apoptosis, e.g. as measured by TUNEL assay [23]. Transfection of Bid L and GFP expression vectors into HEK293T cells led to substantially reduced GFP fluorescence (,39%) relative to empty vector plus GFP control, set at 100% (Fig. 3B), consistent with previously reported apoptotic activity of uncleaved Bid [45,40]. However, this activity was increased substantially by introduction of Bid-BH3 binding-abrogating mutations (GHE 41 VLA [40]) into BH3-B, suppressing GFP

Author Summary
Viruses possess mechanisms of subverting host cell defenses against infection and virus replication; these mechanisms are essential to the virus life cycle. Here, we identify and characterize a novel mechanism of HHV-8 mediated inhibition of virus-induced programmed cell death (apoptosis). This function is specified by viral interferon regulator factor homologue vIRF-1, which binds to and directly inhibits pro-death activities of so-called BH3-only proteins (BOPs), induced and activated by stress signals such as those occurring in infected cells. The BH3 domains of BOPs mediate their pro-apoptotic functions, and it is these domains that are targeted by vIRF-1, via a region resembling a BH3-interacting and -inhibitory domain, termed BH3-B, present in one of the vIRF-1 targeted BOPs, Bid. The targeted BOP BH3 domains share characteristic and conserved features. As shown previously for Bim, depletion of Bid leads to enhanced HHV-8 productive replication, demonstrating that Bid, also, is a biologically significant negative regulator of virus replication and suggesting that its control by vIRF-1 is of functional importance. To our knowledge, this is the first report of viral targeting and inhibition of BOP activity via Bid BH3-B mimicry; our studies therefore expand the known mechanisms of viral evasion from antiviral defenses of the host.
fluorescence to ,20% [ Fig. 3B, Bid(mBH3-B)]. Importantly, BBD could substitute fully for BH3-B in this assay, inhibiting BH3mediated Bid apoptotic activity more effectively than native BH3-B (75% GFP fluorescence relative to 39%). Increased inhibition by BBD indicates that it may bind with higher affinity than BH3-B to Bid BH3. Although it is more likely that BBD and BH3-B mediated inhibition of Bid L activity occur via intramolecular interactions with Bid BH3, it is also possible that trans-inhibition may occur. Introduction of mutation GK 179 AA (previously shown to abrogate Bim interaction [23]) into BBD (mBBD) abolished its inhibition of Bid L activity, leading to GFP fluorescence (cell viability) levels similar to those obtained upon mutation of BH3-B.
Similar transfections with these constructions were undertaken to confirm apoptotic inhibitory activity of BBD in the context of Bid L . Annexin V-Cy3 staining (Fig. 3C) and cytochrome c release assays (Fig. 3D) were employed to quantify apoptosis and to monitor induction of the apoptotic pathway, respectively. The results derived from annexin V-Cy3 staining mirrored those obtained from the GFP-based assay (Fig. 3B), demonstrating full functional substitution of Bid BH3-B by vIRF-1 BBD. Apoptosis induced by tBid, included in this experiment, was notably higher than that of Bid L , Bid L -mBH3-B and Bid L -mBBD, as expected because of the complete absence of the inhibitory N-terminal region of Bid and efficient mitochondrial targeting of the truncated Figure 1. vIRF-1 BBD resembles the BH3-related BH3-B domain of Bid. Alignments of the primary sequence of vIRF-1 BBD with those of Bid BH3-B and BOP BH3 domains and comparison of the predicted secondary structure of BBD with the BH3-B a-helix. Collinear hydrophobic residues are indicated by grey shading. For BBD and BH3-B sequences and helical wheels, collinear hydrophobic and basic residues are indicated by darkly and lightly shaded circles, respectively. Matched shading on helical wheels indicates hydrophobic (diamonds) and hydrophilic [basic (pentagons) and acidic (triangles)] residues, respectively. Helical wheels were drawn using web-based software created by Don Armstrong and Raphael Zidovetzki. doi:10.1371/journal.ppat.1002748.g001 form. Congruent results were obtained from the cytochrome c release assays, confirming the ability of BBD to substitute functionally for BH3-B in the context of Bid L (Fig. 3D).
Combined, the data presented in Figure 3 demonstrate functional equivalence of Bid BH3-B and vIRF-1 BBD and provide further evidence, in a biologically relevant context, of BBD interaction with Bid BH3.

vIRF-1 effects on nuclear-cytoplasmic distribution of Bid
In HHV-8 lytically reactivated endothelial cells, Bim is found predominantly in the nucleus, and nuclear location of Bim can be induced by vIRF-1 in transfected HEK293T cells [23]. As nuclear-localized Bim is inactive in respect of apoptotic induction, its nuclear sequestration represents a mechanism of BOP inactivation. To determine the nuclear-cytoplasmic distribution of Bid during HHV-8 lytic reactivation, dual-label immunofluorescence assays (IFA) were undertaken to identify Bid induction and distribution in reactivated cells expressing lytic antigen (vIRF-1). Like Bim, Bid was induced during lytic reactivation in telomerase-immortalized endothelial (TIME) cells [46], here engineered to express HHV-8 immediate-early protein RTA in response to doxycycline (see Materials and Methods and Fig.S1) In vitro co-precipitation assays were undertaken using bacterially-derived and purified recombinant vIRF-1 BBD and Bim BH3 domains fused to T7 epitope-tagged DsRed and GFP-chitin-binding domain (CBD), respectively. T7/ DsRed-fused Bid BH3-B (Bid BH3-interacting) was also included, and BBD-AA (GK 179 AA, Bim BH3-refractory) and GFP-CBD were used as negative controls. Chitin bead-precipitated material was analyzed by immunoblotting to detect co-precipitated T7-tagged protein; wild-type BBD alone could be co-precipitated with Bim BH3-CBD. (B) Analogous experiments carried out using Bid BH3-GFP-CBD as ''bait'' identified similar interaction between BBD and Bid BH3, as detected also between Bid BH3-B and its cognate BH3 interaction partner (positive control). (C) Immunoprecipitation (IP) assays applied to transfected cell lysates were used to detect interactions between full-length vIRF-1 and Flag-tagged Bid EL and Bim EL [68,69]. Coprecipitated vIRF-1 was detected by immoblotting using vIRF-1 antiserum, and a-Bim and a-Bid antibodies were used to confirm Flag antibodymediated immunoprecipitation of the respective proteins. Immunoblotting for Flag and vIRF-1 verified appropriate expression of proteins in cell lysates. doi:10.1371/journal.ppat.1002748.g002  Fig. 4A). However, little or no nuclear localization of Bid was apparent, in sharp contrast to the predominant nuclear localization of Bim in lytically reactivated cultures [23] (Fig. 4A). In cells transfected with Bid L or tBid expression vectors together with an empty or vIRF-1 expression plasmid, the nuclear-cytoplasmic distribution of each Bid protein was refractory to vIRF-1 influence (Fig. 4B). It is notable that some nuclear localization of Bid L was apparent, consistent with previous reports of nuclear localization and associated activities of Bid [47][48][49], but no nuclear staining was evident for tBid. In contrast to Bid, and consistent with previous findings [23], Bim distribution was altered in the presence of vIRF-1, with strong nuclear staining apparent exclusively with vIRF-1 co-expression (Fig. 4B). That vIRF-1 indeed did not influence nuclear-cytoplasmic distribution of Bid was verified by using immunoblotting of cytoplasmic and nuclear fractions of transfected cells. Again, while nuclear localization of a proportion of Bid L was detected, this was not detectably influenced by vIRF-1 co-expression, and tBid localization was restricted to the cytoplasm in the absence and presence of vIRF-1 (Fig. 4C). Furthermore, a nuclear localization-defective vIRF-1 variant (see below) also did not influence the nuclear-cytoplasmic distribution of Bid L , although induction of Bim nuclear localization was abolished (Fig. 4C).

Nuclear translocation-independent inactivation of Bid and Bim
Targeting of BH3 domains of Bim and Bid by vIRF-1, coupled with the inability of vIRF-1 to induce significant Bid nuclear localization, suggested the possibility of direct inactivation of BOP apoptotic activity by vIRF-1 binding. To address this issue, we generated a nuclear localization-defective version of vIRF-1 for use in functional assays. Each of four potential nuclear localization signals (NLS) was mutated (Fig. 5A), and the respective vIRF-1 proteins were tested for nuclear localization in expression vectortransfected cells. vIRF-1(RGRRR 163 AGAAA) was found to be defective for nuclear localization, as determined by IFA (Fig. 5B). This was verified using a functional assay based on p53-inhibitory activity of vIRF-1; while wild-type vIRF-1 was able to suppress reporter-detected transactivation by nuclear p53, NLS-mutated vIRF-1 was completely inactive (Fig. 5C). As mentioned above, the vIRF-1 variant was also confirmed to be unable to induce nuclear localization of Bim (Fig. 4C). The wild-type and NLS-mutated versions of vIRF-1 were used in GFP-based viability assays to compare their abilities to inhibit Bim and Bid activities. Both vIRF-1 proteins were able to protect cells from Bim-and Bidinduced apoptosis, with very similar dose-activity profiles (Fig. 5D). Therefore, vIRF-1 inhibition of both Bim and Bid can be mediated independently of nuclear-localization and nuclearlocalized functions of vIRF-1.

Mitochondrial localization of vIRF-1
To address the hypothesis that vIRF-1 may act directly at the mitochondrion to suppress BOP-induced apoptosis, we isolated mitochondria from vIRF-1 vector-transfected HEK293T cells and undertook SDS-PAGE and Western analysis for detection of vIRF-1 in the mitochondrial fraction. Both wild-type and Bim-refractory (GK 179 AA) vIRF-1 proteins were present in mitochondrial fractions, representing approximately 2% of total vIRF-1 present in the transfected cell lysates (Fig. 6A). To assess whether this vIRF-1 was likely to be membrane inserted/associated or mitochondrial outer membrane (OM) protein associated, in vitro mitochondrial binding assays were used. These assays employed purified recombinant vIRF-1 (T7 epitope-tagged) added to isolated mitochondria prior to and after proteinase K treatment. Binding of vIRF-1 to mitochondria, apparent absent treatment, was completely abrogated by proteinase K pre-treatment (Fig. 6B), indicating mitochondrial association of vIRF-1 via interaction with a cytoplasmic-exposed mitochondrial protein. Furthermore, endogenously-expressed vIRF-1 was present in mitochondrial fractions prepared from HHV-8 + primary effusion lymphoma (PEL) cells, BCBL1-TRE/RTA [50], with or without lytic induction (+Dox), and this vIRF-1 was susceptible to proteinase K digestion, demonstrating peripheral association of vIRF-1 with mitochondria in HHV-8 infected cells (Fig. 6C). vIRF-1 has been reported previously to be expressed during latency in PEL cells but to be induced during lytic reactivation [51], consistent with our detected patterns of vIRF-1 expression in BCBL1-TRE/RTA cells. Mitochondrial localization of vIRF-1 was verified by IFA in TIME-TRE/vIRF-1 cells [23] in which vIRF-1 expression is inducible upon addition of doxycycline to culture medium. These results demonstrated localization of detectable levels of vIRF-1 to a subset of loci staining positively for mitochondrial marker TOM20 (Fig. 6D). In both Dox-inducible BCBL1-TRE/RTA PEL cells and HHV-8-infected TIME-TRE/RTA endothelial cells (see Materials and Methods and Fig.S1), vIRF-1 was found by immunoblotting of mitochondrial fractions to localize in part to mitochondria during productive replication (Fig. 6E). The proportion of vIRF-1 localizing to mitochondria in the BCBL-1 cells was comparable with that measured in transfected cells (Fig. 6A); the level in the TIME cells (+Dox) was .4 times higher at 9%. For the PEL cells, which express vIRF-1 also during latency but at reduced levels, the proportion of mitochondrial-localized vIRF-1 was increased from 0.9% to 2% in Dox-treated, lytically-induced cultures, possibly reflecting biological significance of vIRF-1 activity at this site during productive replication. It should be noted that as only a subset of these cells support lytic reactivation, the proportion of vIRF-1 localized to mitochondria in lytically infected cells is likely to be substantially greater than the 2% level observed for the culture as a whole. Similar fractionation experiments in HHV-8 + TIME-TRE/RTA cells treated with Dox verified Bid, as well as vIRF-1, localization to mitochondria during lytic reactivation (Fig. 6F). Confocal immunofluorescence microscopy detected at least some colocalization of vIRF-1 and Bid in these cells (Fig.S2). Combined, our data provide evidence of mitochondrial association of vIRF-1, in both transduced and infected cells, and indicate that vIRF-1 may target BOPs for inhibition at this site.
induced apoptosis and a control for effects of transfection (by comparison to empty vector-transfected cultures). Cy3 + cells were counted from three random fields for each condition to generate the presented data; error bars show standard deviations from mean values obtained from individual fields. (D) Apoptotic inhibitory activity of vIRF-1 BBD in the context of Bid L was further confirmed using a cytochrome c release assay. HEK293T cells were transfected with the indicated plasmids and harvested after 18 h. Dounce-derived extracts were either untreated or processed by centrifugation to derive total or S100 (soluble, sol.) samples for SDS-PAGE and immoblotting. Soluble sample blots were probed with antibodies specific for cytochrome c (cytC) or b-actin (loading control), and total cell extracts were probed with Flag antibody to detect and confirm expression of Flagtagged Bid proteins. doi:10.1371/journal.ppat.1002748.g003 Figure 4. Bid localization in lytically reactivated and vIRF-1 transfected cells. (A) TIME-TRE/RTA cells were infected with HHV-8 and latency was allowed to establish. Cells were then reactivated by addition of 1 mg/ml doxycycline (Dox) to culture media and after 48 h cells were fixed and dually immunostained for detection of Bid and lytic antigen (vIRF-1). HHV-8 + TIME-TRE/RTA cells were also stained for detection of Bid or Bim in the absence and presence of Dox. Both BOPs were induced by Dox treatment (right panels), with general coincidence of Bid and lytic antigen immunofluorescence (left panels). Strong nuclear staining was evident only for Bim, with Bid localization remaining predominantly cytoplasmic. (B) HEK293T cells were transfected with expression vectors for Flag-tagged Bim L or tBid and either empty vector (2vIRF-1) or vIRF-1 expression plasmid (+vIRF-1). Cells were immunofluorescence-stained to detect Flag (green) and vIRF-1 (red) and counterstained with DAPI to visualize nuclei (blue). Representative examples are shown. Nuclear localization of Bim but not Bid was induced by vIRF-1. (C) Nuclear and cytoplasmic extracts of similarly transfected cells were prepared and immunoblotted to provide independent analysis of potential vIRF-1 influence on Bid L and tBid nuclearcytoplasmic distribution. Extracts were prepared and fractionated as described in Materials and Methods and quality-checked by probing with cytoplasmic-localized lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) and nuclear-localized histone deacetylase 1 (HDAC1). Bim but not Bid relocalization in the presence of vIRF-1 co-expression was detected. Included in this experiment was a nuclear localization-defective variant of vIRF-1, vIRF-1.NLS X (see

Direct inhibition of BOP activity by vIRF-1
Bid and Bim BH3 domain-targeting by vIRF-1, nuclear localization-independent inhibition of BOP pro-apoptotic activity, and partial mitochondrial localization of vIRF-1 suggested the likelihood of direct BOP inactivation via BBD:BH3 association. This was tested by using an in vitro mitochondrial permeabilization assay to assess the abilities of wild-type and a DBBD (BOPrefractory) variant of vIRF-1 to inhibit tBid-induced cytochrome c release. The vIRF-1 proteins and tBid were expressed as T7/ intein/CBD and thioredoxin/His 6 /S-tag fusion proteins in bacteria and were subsequently purified and cleaved to release the respective T7-and S-tagged proteins (see Materials and Methods). SDS-PAGE and Coomassie staining (Fig. 7A) verified their purity prior to use. Addition of recombinant tBid (1.5 mg/ml, 100 nM) to mitochondrial preparations induced the release of cytochrome c into the soluble fraction of the mitochondrial suspension and led to a corresponding decrease in the level of cytochrome c in the mitochondrial pellet, as determined by Western analysis (Fig. 7B). Inclusion of vIRF-1 (8 mg/ml, 100 nM) blocked all detectable cytochrome c release, but vIRF-1DBBD was inactive in respect of tBid inhibition. These data demonstrate that BBD:BH3 interaction alone is sufficient to inhibit tBid-induced apoptosis.
Further experiments were undertaken to determine if BH3-B could substitute functionally for BBD in the context of vIRF-1 to block tBid-induced mitochondrial permeabilization and also to confirm direct inhibitory activities of the BBD and BH3-B domains, expressed as fusions with GST. The recombinant proteins were isolated and purified from bacterial extracts and their purities and concentrations checked prior to experimental use (Fig. 7C). T7-fused wild-type vIRF-1 and its BBD-substituted counterpart each were able to inhibit tBid-induced cytochrome c   Homogenates of HEK293T cells transfected with wild-type or BBD-mutated (GK 179 AA) vIRF-1 (or empty vector control, vIRF-1-negative) were subjected to differential and Optiprep gradient centrifugation to isolate enriched mitochondrial fractions (see Materials and Methods). These were analyzed by immunoblotting with vIRF-1-specific rabbit antiserum for the presence of vIRF-1 protein, and also with antibody to mitochondrial protein VDAC1 [voltage-dependent anion-selective channel protein 1; integral mitochondrial outer membrane (int. OM) protein] to provide a positive control. Normalization of vIRF-1 amounts in lysates versus mitochondrial fractions from these transfected cells was achieved using a ratio of 1:50 (bottom). (B) In vitro mitochondrial binding assays using enriched mitochondria, untreated or pretreated with proteinase K (Prot. K), and recombinant T7-tagged vIRF-1 for assessment of the requirement for surface protein integrity for mitochondrial binding by vIRF-1. Total protein released from mitochondria was precipitated with trichloroacetic acid (TCA) for direct quantitative comparison with protein from mitochondrial pellets. Blots were probed with antibodies to mitochondrial outer membrane (OM)-associated Bax and inner membrane (IM)-localized prohibitin to provide controls for appropriate fractionation, mitochondrial integrity, and proteinase K activity. (C) Generation and Western analysis of mitochondrial preparations from HHV-8 + BCBL-1-TRE/RTA cells [70] revealed mitochondrial association of endogenous vIRF-1, both in resting (latent) and lytically reactivated (+Dox) cultures; the latter, as expected, expressed higher levels of vIRF-1. In both cases, mitochondrial-associated vIRF-1 was susceptible to protease digestion, consistent with peripheral binding to mitochondria. Immunodetection of Bim verified peripheral protein susceptibility to proteinase K digestion. (D) Mitochondrial localization of vIRF-1 as determined using immunoflourescence assay for detection of vIRF-1 and mitochondrial marker TOM20 in TIME-TRE/vIRF-1 endothelial cells, +Dox. Arrows indicate examples of vIRF-1/TOM20 co-localization. (E) Western analyses of total cell and mitochondrial extracts of HHV-8 + TIME-TRE/RTA and BCBL1-TRE/RTA cells, untreated or treated with Dox for 2 days, were undertaken to quantify the relative amounts of mitochondrial-localized vIRF-1 in these latently and lytically infected cells. For TIME and BCBL-1 cells, 10-and 50-fold excess of mitochondrial extract over total extract, respectively, was loaded onto the gels to achieve near normalization. Relative signal intensities of bands were obtained from digitally captured images and calculated values of mitochondrial relative to total vIRF-1 levels are shown under the vIRF-1 blots. vIRF-1 was detected in latency (2Dox) only in the BCBL-1 (PEL) cells, and mitochondrial:total vIRF-1 was increased upon Dox addition. Immunoblotting for VDAC1 (mitochondrial), histone deacetylase-1 (HDAC1, nuclear), calreticulin (endoplasmic reticulum) and b-actin (cytoplasmic) provided quality controls for mitochondrial and total cell extracts.  release from mitochondrial preparations (Fig. 7D, top). Similarly, both GST-BBD and GST-BH3-B were able to inhibit tBidinduced cytochrome c release in this assay (Fig. 7D, bottom). These data confirm the functional equivalence of BBD and BH3-B, in the context of vIRF-1, and the direct role of these domains and their interaction with Bid BH3 in the inhibition of Bid proapoptotic activity.
Range and specificity of BH3 recognition by vIRF-1 BBD We next investigated whether BBD could target additional BH3 domains, in particular those of other BOPs. The respective BH3 coding sequences were cloned in-frame with the GFP open reading frame in plasmid vector pTYB4 and expressed in and purified from bacteria; BBD was expressed and isolated similarly, as a GST fusion protein (Materials and Methods). BH3 domains tested comprised those of BOPs Bad, Bmf, Bnip3L, Hrk and Noxa, along with Bim, Bid and ''BH3-only'' beclin [52], and BH3s from multi-BH domain proteins Bcl-2 and Mcl-1 (anti-apoptotic) and Bak, Bax and Bok (pro-apoptotic). Results from these coprecipitation assays identified Bik, Bmf, Hrk and Noxa BH3 domains as additional targets of BBD interaction (Fig. 8A).
Interactions between the corresponding full-length proteins and vIRF-1 were tested by co-immunoprecipitation of vIRF-1 with Flag-tagged BOPs from transfected cell lysates; all but Bik were able to co-precipitate vIRF-1 in this experiment (Fig. 8B). Bcl-2 was essentially negative, with barely detectable levels of vIRF-1 in the co-precipitate, as was BOP Puma [not included in the BBD:BH3 experiment (Fig. 8A)]. Therefore, of the Bcl-2 protein family members tested, BOPs Bim, Bid, Bmf, Hrk and Noxa are demonstrably targeted by vIRF-1, via BBD:BH3 association, and Bik BH3 can also bind BBD.

Determinants of BH3 recognition by vIRF-1 BBD
Comparisons of the BH3 domains of vIRF-1/BBD-interacting BOPs identified a single unique and conserved residue among the BBD-binding BH3 sequences, namely an alanine at position w1+1 (Fig. 9A, left). Mutagenesis of this position within the context of Bim BH3 was undertaken to determine its significance with respect to BBD binding; it was changed to each of the collinear residues of the non-binding BH3 domains. Additionally, residues w1+1 to w1+3 (SEC) of BBD-refractory Bax BH3 were changed to the equivalents (AQE) in closely related Bim BH3 and the reciprocal changes were made in Bim BH3 to determine if these ''diverged'' residues in combination could, respectively, confer and abrogate BBD binding. The various changes made are shown in Fig. 9A (right). As before, these sequences were expressed as GFP fusions for use in GST-BBD-based coprecipitation assays. Other than wild-type Bim BH3, glutathione bead-precipitated GST-BBD was able to efficiently co-precipitate only cysteine-and serinesubstituted alanine w1+1, with weak binding apparent for the pro-and anti-apoptotic Bcl-2 family members were used together with GST-BBD (or GST, negative control) in co-precipitation assays, as illustrated. In addition to Bid and Bim, Bik, Bmf, Hrk and Noxa were co-precipitated with glutathione bead-sedimented GST-BBD (but not by GST alone). None of the non-BOP BH3 domains tested were co-precipitated. (B) Largely reflecting the in vitro binding data, Flag-tagged full-length BOPs containing the BBDbinding BH3 domains were, with the exception of Bik, able to co-precipitate vIRF-1 from lysates of HEK293T cells co-transfected with the appropriate expression vector pairs. Puma was included as an additional potential BOP target of vIRF-1. Bcl-2 served as a negative control. Arrows indicate bands corresponding to the full-length proteins of the expected sizes. doi:10.1371/journal.ppat.1002748.g008 leucine-substituted BH3 (Fig. 9B). The AQE substitution of Bax SEC residues was able to confer at least some BBD-binding capacity to Bax, demonstrating the contribution of these residues, either directly or via structural influence, to binding; the converse substitution in Bim abrogated binding. Interestingly, a sequence isolated from a phage-display dodecamer-peptide library using GST-BBD as bait had some resemblance to BH3 sequences in respect of conserved basic residues and, importantly, possessed an alanine residue at the equivalent of position w1+1. This sequence also showed some binding in the in vitro coprecipitation assay. Taken together, these data indicate the likely central importance of alanine at position w1+1 for BBD interaction, although the residue's contribution is likely indirect and evidently context dependent, as particular collinear small side-chain residues (serine and cysteine) from non-binding BH3 domains can substitute for alanine in Bim BH3 and the AQE motif from Bim can confer only weak binding to the closely related BH3 domain of Bax.

Biological relevance of Bid to HHV-8 productive replication
Previous studies from this laboratory identified Bim as a potent inhibitor of virus productive replication and the importance of vIRF-1 BBD-mediated interactions in countering lytic cycleinduced apoptosis and promoting HHV-8 production in TIME cells [23,8]. In view of the present findings that vIRF-1 inhibits Bid activity in a BBD-dependent fashion (Fig. 7) and that Bid is induced in lytically reactivated TIME cells (Fig. 4A), we wanted to test the significance of Bid in HHV-8 replication. To do this, we utilized lentiviral vector-delivered shRNAs directed to Bid mRNA sequences to deplete Bid in HHV-8 + (latently infected) TIME cells and compared levels of cell-released encapsidated viral genomes produced following TPA induction to those obtained from nonsilencing (NS) shRNA-transduced control cultures. Bim shRNAtransduced TIME cells were also included to provide a positive control for the experiment. The data from this experiment Mutual substitution of w1+1 to w1+3 residues in the BH3 domains of Bim and closely related Bax were also generated. The altered and native Bim and Bax BH3 sequences were cloned into a bacterial expression vector for generation of recombinant GFP-BH3 fusion proteins. Grey-shaded bars in the sequence alignment correspond to coaligned hydrophobic residues; black shading indicates conserved colinear amino acids. (B) In vitro coprecipitation assays utilizing recombinant GFP-BH3 and GST-BBD fusion proteins were utilized to analyze BH3:BBD interactions. Lane labels correspond to wild-type (wt) and mutated Bim (1-7) and Bax (mt) BH3 sequences indicated in panel A; GFP alone (v, vector) was used as a negative control. A BH3-related peptide sequence isolated from a phage-display library using GST-BBD as bait (see Materials and Methods) was also included in the binding assay (w-seq*). doi:10.1371/journal.ppat.1002748.g009 (Fig. 10A) revealed that each of the two Bid shRNAs led to small but significant increases in virus production from TPA-treated TIME cells; as before, Bim depletion led to substantial amplification of virus titers. Similar experiments were undertaken in TIME-TRE/RTA cells to confirm the effect on replication of Bid depletion; here, lytic replication was induced by addition of doxycycline to the cultures. Again, Bid depletion led to increased virus production (Fig. 10B), measured in this experiment by titration of released infectious virus in culture media via inoculation of naïve TIME cells and detection of virus infection by immunofluorescence assay for latency-associated nuclear antigen (LANA). These data demonstrate that Bid, in addition to Bim, is a contributor to negative regulation of HHV-8 infection and suggest that its control by vIRF-1 is likely to be important for optimal virus productive replication. It is important to note, however, that the positive effects on virus replication of Bid and Bim depletion by shRNA transduction demonstrate also that vIRF-1 is not completely effective at suppressing the activities of these BOPs. This situation is not unexpected and is probably universal amongst such viral regulators of cellular activities.

Discussion
Viruses have numerous and diverse mechanisms of apoptotic inhibition, necessitated by the pro-apoptotic signals induced upon de novo infection of a cell and by the processes associated with virus replication (reviewed in [53][54][55]). These mechanisms include inhibition by various means of interferon induction and signaling and inactivation and suppression of p53, pro-apoptotic proteins such as BOPs, and caspase mediators of apoptotic signaling. Examples are p53-inhibitory activities of simian virus 40 T-antigen and adenovirus E1B-55K [56,57], caspase inhibition by HHV-8 specified K7/vIAP and gammaherpesvirus viral FLICE inhibitory (vFLIP) proteins [6,7,58,59], and the Bcl-2 homologues specified by herpesviruses (gammaherpesvirus vBcl-2s and human cytomegalovirus UL37x1/vMIA), poxviruses (e.g., fowlpox virus 039), African swine fever virus (A179L), adenovirus (E1B-19K), and others [60,61]. These viral Bcl-2 homologues, while not necessarily readily identifiable at the amino acid sequence level, have been demonstrated or are believed to preserve the essential BH-like helical domains and overall three-dimensional hydrophobic groove structure of cellular Bcl-2 proteins to allow their interactions with and inhibition of pro-apoptotic BH3-only proteins and/or apoptotic executioners Bax and Bak. Thus, Bcl-2 ''mimicry'' is a commonly used mechanism of viral evasion from innate host cell defenses via apoptotic induction. However, alternative mechanisms of direct BOP inhibition by viral proteins have not previously been reported, to our knowledge.
HHV-8 specifies a number of proteins that have predicted abilities to inhibit apoptosis induced by virus de novo infection and lytic replication and therefore have the potential to promote virus infection and establishment of latency and/or productive replication [62]. However, demonstration of such activities in the context of virus infection is largely lacking, although vIRF-1, in part via BBD-dependent interactions, has been found to promote cell survival under lytic-induced stress and to enhance HHV-8 productive replication in culture [23]. Our previous studies identified Bim as a potent negative regulator of HHV-8 productive replication, mapped the binding domain (BBD, residues 170-187) involved in its inhibition, and noted induced nuclear localization of Bim as a means of its inactivation by vIRF-1 to promote HHV-8 replication and cell survival [23,8]. However, the region of Bim interacting with vIRF-1 was not mapped and the possibility of direct inhibition of Bim activity, in addition to inhibition via vIRF-1-induced nuclear sequestration, was not considered.
The present identification of BH3 as the target of BBD binding to Bim, as well as Bid and other BOPs, and finding of direct inactivation by vIRF-1 of Bid-induced mitochondrial permeabilization in vitro, Bim and Bid inhibition by nuclear localizationdefective vIRF-1, and inability of vIRF-1 to induce significant Bid (Bid L , tBid) nuclear localization, demonstrate that vIRF-1 can inhibit BOPs independently of nuclear translocation. Indeed, in contrast to Bim, [23], nuclear localization of Bid was not apparent in lytically infected cells (Fig. 4). The mechanism of induced nuclear translocation of Bim could comprise cytoplasmic-tonuclear chaperoning by vIRF-1 and/or nuclear capture of Bim translocating independently or by other means. The latter would be analogous to HHV-8 latency-associated nuclear antigen (LANA)-induced nuclear localization of predominantly cytoplasmic GSK3b [63], for example. The fact that Bid has been reported to localize in part to the nucleus, and indeed to function here as a component of the DNA repair machinery and as an apoptotic mediator in response to DNA damage [47][48][49], indicates that simple ''nuclear capture'' by vIRF-1 is unlikely to be a mechanism of vIRF-1-induced nuclear sequestration of Bim, as this would be expected to operate for Bid also. Specificity of Bim nuclear chaperoning by vIRF-1 is, similarly, difficult to explain, as Bim and Bid interactions with vIRF-1 occur by the same means (BH3:BBD binding) and these BOPs, able to move between cellular compartments, appear to be equally susceptible to translocation. It is possible that while both BOPs can enter the nucleus, independently or promoted by vIRF-1, only Bim can, via its association with vIRF-1, form stable interactions with other nuclear proteins to effect its sequestration in this compartment. In trying to resolve this issue, it would be informative to determine whether vIRF-1 can induce nuclear translocation of any of the other BBD-targeted BOPs or if this activity is restricted to Bim. Regardless of mechanism, however, it is apparent that vIRF-1induced nuclear sequestration of Bim represents a mechanism of inactivation of its pro-apoptotic activity, in addition to its direct inactivation via BH3 binding. It is possible that this is necessary for biologically sufficient inhibition of this powerful negative regulator of HHV-8 productive replication. It is also conceivable that there are as-yet unrecognized nuclear functions of Bim that contribute to HHV-8 lytic replication.
An important finding of the present study is that vIRF-1 can interact, via its Bid BH3-B-like BBD region, with the BH3 domains of BOPs Bid, Bik, Bmf, Hrk and Noxa in addition to Bim BH3, while refractory to interaction with other tested Bcl-2 family members (other BOPs and multi-BH-domain proteins). Thus, the ''Bim-binding domain'' of vIRF-1 should more appropriately be referred to as the ''BOP-binding domain''. These additional interactions of BBD not only identify multiple new BOP interaction partners of vIRF-1 that could be targeted for inhibition, of likely relevance in the context of HHV-8 biology, but also provide the tools to better understand the molecular basis and specificity of BBD and BH3-B interactions with BH3 domains. Previous studies of the latter identified, via mutagenesis of murine Bid BH3-B sequences and analysis of BH3-B:BH3 interaction and Bid activity, residues L 35 (first hydrophobic, BH3/BBD-conserved) and G 39 , R 40 and/or E 41 (GHE in human Bid) as important for BH3-B:BH3 binding in vitro and for both physical and functional interactions, respectively [40]. Our own in silico, mutagenesis, and binding studies indicate that for BBD:BH3 interactions, an alanine residue corresponding to BH3 position ''w1+1'' (Fig. 9A) is both conserved and specific to all BBD-interacting BOP BH3 domains and important for BBD:BH3 interaction. An alanine at this  Bid-specific (sh1, sh2), or Bim-specific shRNAs using lentiviral vectors (see Materials and Methods). After 48 h, these TIME cultures were treated with TPA to induce lytic reactivation, and media and cells were harvested at 0, 3 and 6 days post-induction for determinations of encapsidated genome copy numbers and Bid and Bim expression, respectively. Quantitative PCR was used to determine genome copies following pre-treatment with DNase I to remove any unencapsidated, contaminating viral DNA released from disrupted cells (see Materials and Methods). Immunoblotting confirmed both induction of Bid and Bim in induced cultures (detected even though a minority of cells support lytic replication [23,8]) and their specific suppression by the respective transduced shRNAs. (B) Similar experiments were undertaken in control (NS shRNAtransduced) and Bid-depleted (Bid sh1-transduced) TIME-TRE/RTA cells using Dox (1 mg/ml) to induce lytic reactivation. Higher reactivation frequencies possible in these cells enabled relative virus titers from these cultures to be measured reliably by using an infectious assay, in which LANA + cells were detected by immunofluorescence assay. Naïve TIME cultures were inoculated with ultracentrifuge-concentrated virus from Doxtreated HHV-8 + TIME-TRE/RTA cell culture media, cumulatively collected over 5 days following Dox addition. Numbers of infected, LANA + TIME cells position was also identified in BH3-like sequences [RVAD-SLATLMMN (Fig. 9B), SIANTIASVQFM, and IFAAL-DYNLGRH; w1+1 underlined, collinear hydrophobic residues italicized) isolated from a phage-display screen using BBD as bait. However, because of its simple methyl side chain, it is likely that this alanine residue permits adoption of the required local structure and ''space'' for binding via other BBD/BH3-residue interactions rather than being involved directly in binding. Thus, while binding was abrogated by mutation of this alanine to most other collinear residues of non-binding BH3s, mutation to cysteine or serine (present in BH3s of Bok and Bax, respectively) was compatible with binding to BBD. Also, introduction of this alanine along with adjacent glutamine and glutamate residues (as present in Bim) into BBD-refractory Bax BH3 was sufficient to confer BBD interaction, although the binding was weaker than that of Bid BH3. Taken together, our data indicate that the w1+1 alanine appears to be preferred and important for BH3 interaction, but that it is unlikely to contribute directly to binding and that other residues, in appropriate context, are directly involved in BH3 association and specificity. In regard to specificity of BH3 binding, we have established definitively that while BBD can recognize Bim and Bid BH3 domains, the former is not targeted by Bid BH3-B. Alignments of BBD and BH3-B, although revealing significant similarities, with three identical and three highly-related residues within the BH3-binding core regions, also show considerable divergence within and outside these central sequences (Fig. 1). It is noteworthy that previous di-alanine scanning mutagenesis of the 174-183 region of BBD identified residues within 174-181 as essential for interaction with Bim-BH3 [23]. Interestingly, however, combined mutation of the first two conserved hydrophobic residues, L 174 (qe)I 177 , did not abrogate binding (unpublished data), although identical or related hydrophobic residues are conserved in BH3 domains and are key contributors to the amphipathicity of the predicted a-helix. Single-residue mutagenesis across BBD, to alanine or to collinear BH3-B residues would be warranted to further delineate those amino acids and associated properties contributing to interaction with BH3 domains and to Bim-and Bid-BH3 selectivity.
In summary, data presented here identify similarity between vIRF-1 BBD and Bid BH3-B, corresponding inhibitory interactions of vIRF-1 BBD with the BH3-domains of Bim and Bid (both induced during and inhibitory to HHV-8 productive replication), and additional BBD binding of the BH3 domains of BOPs Bik, Bmf, Hrk and Noxa. To our knowledge, this is the first example of BOP targeting and inhibition via Bid BH3-B domain mimicry and thereby our data reveal a novel mechanism of viral evasion from host cell, apoptosis-mediated defense against viral infection and replication.

Cell culture, transfections and viral infection
Telomerase-immortalized endothelial (TIME) cells [46] and genetically engineered derivatives were cultured in EGM-2 MV medium (Lonza; Walkersville, MD) containing 5% fetal bovine serum (FBS) and cytokine supplements. TIME cell lines expressing vIRF-1 or RTA in doxycycline (Dox)-inducible fashion were generated using the Retro-X Tet-On Advanced system (Clontech Laboratories; Mountainview, CA). Briefly, the pRetroX-Tet-On Advanced plasmid was transfected into Phoenix cells and the supernatant was used to transduce TIME cells which were selected in G418 (400 mg/ml) to obtain TIME/Tet-On cells. The RTA coding region was derived from an existing eukaryotic expression vector as an EcoR1 restriction fragment and ligated into the EcoR1 site in the pRetroX-Tight-Pur plasmid. This was transfected into Phoenix cells, virus-containing supernatant used to infect TIME/ Tet-On cultures, and transduced cells (TIME-TRE/RTA) selected in puromycin (1 mg/ml). Cloning discs were used to isolate individual colonies, and derived cells were screened by immunofluorescence assay for RTA expression following Dox induction. HeLa, HEK293, and HEK293T cells were maintained in Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium supplemented with 10% FBS and gentamicin. BCBL-1/TRE-RTA [50] cells were maintained in RPMI 1640 medium containing 15% FBS and gentamicin. HHV-8 virus stocks were derived from doxycycline induced BCBL-1/TRE-RTA cultures and used to infect TIME cells as described previously [23]. For cell viability or immunofluorescence assays, cells were transfected using Fugene 6 (Roche Applied Science; Indianapolis, IN). For immunoprecipitation, cells were transfected using standard calcium-phosphate method or Lipofectamine 2000 (Invitrogen; Carlesbad, CA). For reporter assays, HEK293 cells were transiently transfected with plasmids expressing vIRF-1 and p53 along with the PG13-luc reporter vector (Addgene; Cambridge, MA) for 24 h and then lysed with passive lysis buffer (Promega; Madison, WI). Luciferase activity was measured by standard methods using D-luciferin and luminometry. For lentivirus production, HEK293T cells were transfected with virus vector and gag/pol-encoding plasmids using standard calcium-phosphate precipitation and virus was harvested after 48 h by centrifugation at 49,0006g. Cells were transduced with lentivirus in the presence of 5 mg/ml polybrene for 12 h and then cultured in complete media.

Plasmids
For bacterial expression of T7-tagged proteins, coding sequences of T7 were first cloned between the NcoI and SalI sites of pTYB4 (New England Biolabs; Ipswich, MA); coding sequences of vIRF-1 or enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP) were then inserted between the SalI and SmaI sites of pTYB4-T7. The EGFP cDNA was amplified from vector pEGFP N1 (Clontech Laboratories). For bacterial expression of EGFP-fused BH3 peptides, EGFP coding sequences were inserted between the SalI and EcoRI sites of pTYB4 and BH3 sequences (ds-oligonucleotides) were then inserted between the NheI and SalI sites of pTYB4-EGFP. For the bacterial expression of Discosoma red fluorescent protein (DsRed)-fused peptides, coding sequences for DsRed were amplified from vector pDsRed2 (Clontech Laboratories) and inserted between the SalI and EcoRI sites of pTYB4-T7. Coding sequences of vIRF-1 Bim-binding domain (BBD) or Bid BH3-B domain were inserted between the EcoRI and SmaI sites of pTYB4-T7-DsRed. The BBD sequence was also inserted between the BamHI and EcoRI sites of pGEX4T-1 (GE Healthcare Life Sciences; Piscataway, NJ) for expression of GST-BBD. For generation of recombinant S-tagged tBid (see below), the coding sequence of tBid (comprising codons  of Bid L [64]) was inserted between the BamHI and EcoRI sites of pET-32a(+) (Novagen; Madison, WI). BOP and Bcl-2 cDNA sequences linked to Flag were cloned between the BamHI and EcoRI site of were counted from multiple random fields to derive average values. Results from two independent experiments are shown, with titers expressed relative to those obtained from NS shRNA-transduced cells (set at 1); the error bar represents deviation from the average NS/Bid titer ratios. Cells were harvested at day 5 for mRNA preparation and RT-PCR confirmation of Bid depletion (right). doi:10.1371/journal.ppat.1002748.g010 pcDNA3.1 (Invitrogen) for expression in transfected cells. Plasmids expressing vIRF-1 and Bim were described previously [23]. Mutagenesis was performed by a PCR-mediated method using Pfx DNA polymerase (Invitrogen) with oligonucleotide primers containing deletion or substitution mutations. Two short hairpin RNAs (shRNA) for Bid were cloned into pYNC352/puro (a derivative of pTYB6 [65,66]) using BamHI and MluI enzyme sites. The target sequences of the shRNAs correspond to 59-GGGATGAGTGCATCACAAACC -39 (sh1) and 59-CTTTCA-CACAACAGTGAATTT-39 (sh2).

Antibodies
Commercially obtained antibodies used in this study were as follow: T7, Novagen (

Immunoblotting and immunofluorescence
For immunoblotting, cells were lysed in lysis buffer (50 mM Tris-HCl [pH 8.0], 150 mM NaCl, 1 mM EDTA, 1% IGEPAL CA-630, and 0.25% sodium deoxycholate) freshly supplemented with protease inhibitor cocktail (Sigma) for 1 h on ice. After centrifugation at 12,0006g for 20 min, the supernatant was used as a whole cell extract. For immunoblotting, proteins were size fractionated by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) and transferred to a nitrocellulose or polyvinylidene fluoride membranes. Immunoreactive bands were detected with enhanced chemiluminescence solution (GE Healthcare Life Sciences) and visualized on X-ray film or digitally using a chemiluminescence imager. For immunofluorescence assays, cells were grown on a 0.1% gelatin-coated coverglass or a chamber slide and were fixed and permeabilized in chilled methanol. Following incubation with Superblock blocking buffer in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) (Thermo Scientific Inc.; Rockford, IL), coverslips were incubated with primary antibody, washed with PBS, and then incubated with appropriate fluorescent dyeconjugated secondary antibody. The coverslips were mounted in 90% glycerol in PBS containing 10 mg/ml p-phenylenediamine, an antifade reagent.

Co-precipitation assays
For immunoprecipitation, HEK293T cells transfected with plasmids encoding vIRF-1 or Flag epitope-tagged BH3-only proteins (BOPs) were lysed in lysis buffer, and cell extracts were incubated with anti-Flag M2 affinity gel (Sigma) for 3 h at 4uC. After washing with lysis buffer, immune-complexes were eluted with 30 ml of 36 Flag peptide (150 ng/ml), subjected to SDS-PAGE, and analyzed by immunoblotting using vIRF-1 antiserum or polyclonal Flag antibody. For in vitro binding assays, fluorescent protein-fused peptides or T7-tagged proteins expressed in E. coli from vector pTYB4 (New England Biolabs) were purified according to the manufacturer's protocol. Bacterially expressed glutathione-S-transferase (GST)-fused proteins were purified by standard methods. 0.5 mg of EGFP or EGFP-BH3, fused to inteinchitin binding domain (CBD) and immobilized on chitin beads, was mixed with 1 mg of purified T7-DsRed-fused BBD or BH3-B peptides and incubated for 1 h at room temperature. After washing four times with Tris-buffered saline (TBS) supplemented with 0.1% Tween 20, bead-associated proteins were sizefractionated by SDS-PAGE and analyzed by immunoblotting using T7-or GFP-specific antibodies. To screen for BBD interaction with a variety of BOP BH3 domains, 1 mg of GST or GST-BBD protein immobilized on glutathione sepharose 4B beads was mixed with 2 mg of EGFP-BH3 fusion proteins. GST-BBD and its associated proteins were eluted with 10 mM reduced glutathione in TBS, size-fractionated by SDS-PAGE, and analyzed by immunoblotting using GFP-or GST-specific antibodies.

Subcellular fractionation and associated assays
For nucleo-cytoplasmic fractionation, cells were homogenized in buffer A (20 mM Tricine-KOH [pH 7.8], 5 mM MgCl 2 , 25 mM KCl, 0.25 M sucrose, and protease inhibitor cocktail) using a Dounce homogenizer. After centrifugation at 1,0006g for 10 min, the supernatant was used as the cytoplasmic fraction, and the pellet was subjected to 25-35% iodixanol discontinuous gradient centrifugation. Nuclei were collected from the interface between 30 and 35% iodixanol and resuspended in buffer C (20 mM HEPES [pH 8.0], 1.5 mM MgCl 2 , 420 mM NaCl, 0.2 mM EDTA, and protease inhibitor cocktail). For in vitro cytochrome c release assays, mitochondria were isolated by sucrose density gradient centrifugation. Briefly, HEK293T cells grown to subconfluence in a 10 cm dish were washed in ice-cold PBS and resuspended in mitochondrial isolation buffer (MIB: 210 mM mannitol, 70 mM sucrose, 1 mM EDTA, and 10 mM HEPES [pH 7.5]) supplemented with protease inhibitor cocktail. Next, cells were homogenized with 40 strokes of Dounce homogenizer and centrifuged at 2,0006g for 10 min. The supernatant was further centrifuged at 13,0006g at 4uC for 10 min. After resuspending in MIB, the resulting pellet was layered on top of a discontinuous sucrose gradient consisting of 1.2 M sucrose in buffer H (10 mM HEPES [pH 7.5], 1 mM EDTA, and 0.1% BSA) on top of 1.6 M sucrose in buffer H. Following centrifugation at 131,0006g for 2 h at 4uC, mitochondria were recovered at the 1.6-1.2 M sucrose interface, washed in MIB, centrifuged at 13,0006g at 4uC for 10 min, and resuspended in 100 ml of MIB. For other studies, mitochondria were purified using Axis-Shield OptiPrep (Sigma) according to the manufacturer's protocol. For proteinase K treatment, mitochondria in MIB (0.5 mg/ml) were incubated on ice for 30 min with 20 mg/ml proteinase K; the reaction was stopped by the addition of 2 mM PMSF, and mitochondria were then washed twice in 1 ml of MIB and resuspended in MIB or MRM buffer (250 mM sucrose, 10 mM HEPES [pH 7.5], 1 mM ATP, 5 mM sodium succinate, 80 mM ADP, 2 mM K 2 HPO 4 ). For mitochondrial binding assays, 1 mg of recombinant T7-EGFP or T7-vIRF-1 protein was added to the proteinase K-pretreated or untreated mitochondria in MRM buffer (50 mg protein/50 ml) supplemented with PMSF and 0.1 mg/ml BSA. The mixtures were incubated for 1 h at 30uC and then centrifuged at 12,0006g for 5 min. The mitochondrial pellets were washed twice in MRM buffer, and the final washed pellets were resuspended in SDS sample buffer. Trichloroacetic acid (TCA, 10% final concentration) was added to the supernatants to precipitate proteins prior to SDS-PAGE and immunoblot analysis. For in vivo cytochrome c release assay, transfected HEK293T cells were subjected to Dounce homogenization (30 strokes) in MIB buffer. The homogenate, an aliquot of which was used as a total cell extract, was centrifuged at 10006g for 10 min at 4uC to remove nuclei and unbroken cells. The resulting supernatant was centrifuged at 100,0006g for 1 h at 4uC to yield the final soluble cytosolic fraction (S100).

In vitro cytochrome c release assay
In vitro mitochondrial permeabilization assays based on cytochrome c release were undertaken essentially as described by Arnoult [67] and outlined below. Thioredoxin/His 6 /S-tagged tBid protein encoded from pET-32a(+) was purified using Ni-NTA His-tag affinity chromatography, and S-tBid (100 mg/ml) was eluted following thrombin (0.5 unit/ml) treatment for 2 h at room temperature. Thioredoxin and His sequences were retained on the Ni-NTA resin. S-tBid was purified away from thrombin using protein S agarose, eluted with 3 M MgCl 2 , and dialyzed against dilution buffer (25 mM HEPES-KOH [pH 7.4], 0.1 M KCl). Following preincubation of 10 nM or 100 nM of S-tBid with or without 500 nM of GST-fusion peptides or 100 nM of T7-vIRF-1 proteins (wild-type or mutated) in dilution buffer supplemented with 1 mg/ml of fatty acid-free bovine serum albumin (FA-BSA), purified mitochondria were added (50 mg protein/50 ml of mitochondrial buffer: 125 mM KCl, 0.5 mM MgCl 2 , 3 mM succinic acid, 3 mM glutamic acid, 10 mM HEPES-KOH [pH 7.4], 1 mg/ml FA-BSA, and protease inhibitor cocktail). The reaction mixtures were incubated at 30uC for 30 min and then centrifuged at 12,0006g for 5 min at 4uC to pellet the mitochondria. The supernatants were quickly removed, and the pellet was resuspended in 70 ml of mitochondria lysis buffer (50 mM Tris-HCl [pH 7.4], 150 mM NaCl, 2 mM EDTA, 2 mM EGTA, 0.2% Triton X-100, and 0.3% IGEPAL CA-630). The amounts of cytochrome c in the supernatant and pellet fractions were determined by immunoblotting.

Annexin V apoptosis assay
After plasmid transfection of 293T cells on a coverslip, the cells were stained with Cy3-conjugated annexin V (Biovision Inc.; Mountain View, CA) in AV binding buffer (10 mM HEPES [pH 7.4], 140 mM NaCl, and 2.5 mM CaCl 2 ), fixed with 2% formaldehyde in AV binding buffer for 10 min, and mounted in glycerol medium containing DAPI. Annexin V-positive cells, fluorescent under UV, were counted from three randomly selected low-magnification microscopic fields.

Screening of phage display library
The Ph.D.-12 library, comprising a complexity in excess of one billion independent clones, was purchased from New England Biolabs (Beverly, MA). Screening was performed by a solutionphase panning method with affinity bead capture as described by the manufacturer's protocol. In brief, a mixture of purified GST-BBD (500 nM) and the library (2610 11 pfu) was incubated for 20 min at room temperature and added to glutathione 4B beads pre-blocked with BSA. After incubating for 15 min and washing the mixture with Tris-buffered saline (TBS) containing 0.1% Tween 20, phage were eluted and amplified. Negative selection using purified GST was performed prior to the second round of panning. After the third round of panning, the mixture was washed with TBS containing 0.5% Tween 20, and phage were eluted and plaque-purified prior to DNA preparation and sequencing.

HHV-8 replication
For HHV-8 infection, TIME cells were centrifuged at 1,0006g for 1 h in the presence of HHV-8 virions and then cultured in fresh complete medium for 7 days to allow establishment of latency in the absence of ongoing lytic replication. After lentiviral transduction of control (NS), Bid, or Bim shRNAs for 2 days into HHV-8 + TIME cells, lytic replication of HHV-8 was induced by treatment with TPA (20 ng/ml) or 1 mg/ml doxycycline (TIME-TRE/RTA cells). For determination of encapsidated HHV-8 genome copy number, viral DNA was isolated using standard phenol extraction and glycogen/ethanol precipitation methods following pre-treatment of virus suspensions with DNaseI for 20 min at 37uC to remove any unencapsidated DNA. For the determination of the viral genome copy number, all qPCRs were performed in a 96-well microplate using an ABI Prism 7500 detection system (Applied Biosystems; Foster City, CA) with SYBR green/ROX master mix (SuperArray Bioscience Corp.; Frederick, MD). For induced TIME-TRE/RTA cells, infectious virus titers were measured by application of induced culture media-derived virus to naïve TIME cells and immunofluorescence staining for HHV-8 latency-associated nuclear antigen (LANA). Figure S1 Characterization of TIME-TRE/RTA cells line. (A) TIME cells transduced with tetracycline-responsive repressor/transactivator (rtTA) expression cassette and rtTAresponsive RTA expression cassette (see Materials and Methods) were isolated as clonal cell lines and tested by immunofluorescence assay for RTA expression following treatment with doxycycline (Dox, 1 mg/ml) for 24 h. An example of analysis of one cell line, which was used in subsequent studies, is shown. (B) RTA expression in response to different concentrations of Dox (applied for 15 h) was analyzed by immunoblotting of SDS-PAGE fractionated cell extracts using RTA-specific antiserum. Antibody to b-actin was used for immunoblotting to confirm equivalent protein loading. (C) TIME-TRE/RTA cells were infected with HHV-8 r219 (Vieira & O'Hearn; Virology 325:225-240), which expresses GFP constitutively and RFP under the control of a lytic cycle promoter, the latter providing a marker of lytic induction. The cells were allowed to rest for 5 days to ensure establishment of latency and absence of residual lytic replication. These cells expressed GFP in ,100% of cells, and very few (,1%) expressed RFP. Parallel cultures of these latently infected TIME-TRE/RTA cells were either left untreated or were treated with Dox (1 mg/ml) for the indicated times and then visualized under UV microscopy for detection of RFP + cells. (D) An analogous experiment was undertaken using BCBL-1 culture-derived HHV-8, but here immunofluorescence staining for K8.1-encoded late lytic antigen was used to detect cells supporting productive replication. In this experiment, application of Dox was either sustained for 1 or 5 days prior to fixation and immunofluorescence staining or applied for 2 days and then removed prior to IFA analysis 5 days postinduction. For comparison, a parallel culture was treated with TPA (20 ng/ml) for five days prior to K8.1 immunostaining. (TIF) Figure S2 Confocal immunofluorescence analysis of vIRF-1 and Bid colocalization to mitochondria. HHV-8 + TIME-TRE/RTA cells were induced with doxycycline (1 mg/ml) for 48 hours, treated with mitochondrial-specific fluorescent marker [MitoTracker (Cy3, red); Invitrogen], and then fixed and immuno-stained (essentially as outlined in Materials and Methods) for vIRF-1 (Cy5, purple) and Bid (FITC, green) and counterstained with DAPI (nuclear, blue). Staining patterns for vIRF-1 and Bid colocalization varied from large structures (most likely representing fused or aggregated mitochondria) to very fine punctate staining corresponding with MitoTracker dye. Examples of triple vIRF-1, Bid and mitochondrial fluorescence are indicated by white arrows, spots of Bid and mitochondrial signals by yellow arrows, and vIRF-1 and mitochondria staining by mauve arrows. The 406 fields are derived from a single section; the 1006 fields represent two successive sections (z1, z2). (TIFF)