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1.
J Virol ; 88(15): 8256-67, 2014 Aug.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24829352

RESUMEN

UNLABELLED: We report that the human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) high-molecular-weight tegument protein (HMWP, pUL48; 253 kDa) and the HMWP-binding protein (hmwBP, pUL47; 110 kDa) can be recovered as a complex from virions disrupted by treatment with 50 mM Tris (pH 7.5), 0.5 M NaCl, 0.5% NP-40, and 10 mM dithiothreitol [DTT]. The subunit ratio of the complex approximates 1:1, with a shape and structure consistent with an elongated heterodimer. The HMWP/hmwBP complex was corroborated by reciprocal coimmunoprecipitation experiments using antipeptide antibodies and lysates from both infected cells and disrupted virus particles. An interaction of the amino end of pUL48 (amino acids [aa] 322 to 754) with the carboxyl end of pUL47 (aa 693 to 982) was identified by fragment coimmunoprecipitation experiments, and a head-to-tail self-interaction of hmwBP was also observed. The deubiquitylating activity of pUL48 is retained in the isolated complex, which cleaves K11, K48, and K63 ubiquitin isopeptide linkages. IMPORTANCE: Human cytomegalovirus (HCMV, or human herpesvirus 5 [HHV-5]) is a large DNA-containing virus that belongs to the betaherpesvirus subfamily and is a clinically important pathogen. Defining the constituent elements of its mature form, their organization within the particle, and the assembly process by which it is produced are fundamental to understanding the mechanisms of herpesvirus infection and developing drugs and vaccines against them. In this study, we report isolating a complex of two large proteins encoded by HCMV open reading frames (ORFs) UL47 and UL48 and identifying the binding domains responsible for their interaction with each other and of pUL47 with itself. Our calculations indicate that the complex is a rod-shaped heterodimer. Additionally, we determined that the ubiquitin-specific protease activity of the ORF UL48 protein was functional in the complex, cleaving K11-, K48-, and K63-linked ubiquitin dimers. This information builds on and extends our understanding of the HCMV tegument protein network that is required to interface the HCMV envelope and capsid.


Asunto(s)
Citomegalovirus/enzimología , Multimerización de Proteína , Proteasas Ubiquitina-Específicas/metabolismo , Proteínas Virales/metabolismo , Virión/enzimología , Línea Celular , Citomegalovirus/química , Humanos , Inmunoprecipitación , Unión Proteica , Dominios y Motivos de Interacción de Proteínas , Mapeo de Interacción de Proteínas , Subunidades de Proteína/aislamiento & purificación , Subunidades de Proteína/metabolismo , Proteasas Ubiquitina-Específicas/aislamiento & purificación , Proteínas Virales/aislamiento & purificación , Virión/química
2.
J Virol ; 88(10): 5455-61, 2014 May.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24574416

RESUMEN

UNLABELLED: Nelfinavir (NFV) is an HIV-1 protease inhibitor with demonstrated antiviral activity against herpes simplex virus 1 (HSV-1) and several other herpesviruses. However, the stages of HSV-1 replication inhibited by NFV have not been explored. In this study, we investigated the effects of NFV on capsid assembly and envelopment. We confirmed the inhibitory effects of NFV on HSV-1 replication by plaque assay and found that treatment with NFV did not affect capsid assembly, activity of the HSV-1 maturational protease, or formation of DNA-containing capsids in the nucleus. Confocal and electron microscopy studies showed that these capsids were transported to the cytoplasm but failed to complete secondary envelopment and subsequent exit from the cell. Consistent with the microscopy results, a light-scattering band corresponding to enveloped virions was not evident following sucrose gradient rate-velocity separation of lysates from drug-treated cells. Evidence of a possibly related effect of NFV on viral glycoprotein maturation was also discovered. NFV also inhibited the replication of an HSV-1 thymidine kinase mutant resistant to nucleoside analogues such as acyclovir. Given that NFV is neither a nucleoside mimic nor a known inhibitor of nucleic acid synthesis, this was expected and suggests its potential as a coinhibitor or alternate antiviral therapeutic agent in cases of resistance. IMPORTANCE: Nelfinavir (NFV) is a clinically important antiviral drug that inhibits production of infectious HIV. It was reported to inhibit herpesviruses in cell culture. Herpes simplex virus 1 (HSV-1) infections are common and often associated with several diseases. The studies we describe here confirm and extend earlier findings by investigating how NFV interferes with HSV-1 replication. We show that early steps in virus formation (e.g., assembly of DNA-containing capsids in the nucleus and their movement into the cytoplasm) appear to be unaffected by NFV, whereas later steps (e.g., final envelopment in the cytoplasm and release of infectious virus from the cell) are severely restricted by the drug. Our findings provide the first insight into how NFV inhibits HSV-1 replication and suggest that this drug may have applications for studying the herpesvirus envelopment process. Additionally, NFV may have therapeutic value alone or in combination with other antivirals in treating herpesvirus infections.


Asunto(s)
Antivirales/farmacología , Herpesvirus Humano 1/efectos de los fármacos , Nelfinavir/farmacología , Ensamble de Virus/efectos de los fármacos , Liberación del Virus/efectos de los fármacos , Animales , Línea Celular , Humanos , Microscopía Confocal , Microscopía Electrónica , Ultracentrifugación , Ensayo de Placa Viral
3.
J Virol ; 85(7): 3526-34, 2011 Apr.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21270147

RESUMEN

We compared the full-length capsid maturational protease (pPR, pUL80a) of human cytomegalovirus with its proteolytic domain (assemblin) for the ability to cleave two biological substrates, and we found that pPR is more efficient with both. Affinity-purified, refolded enzymes and substrates were combined under defined reaction conditions, and cleavage was monitored and quantified following staining of the resulting electrophoretically separated fragments. The enzymes were stabilized against self-cleavage by a single point mutation in each cleavage site (ICRMT-pPR and IC-assemblin). The substrates were pPR itself, inactivated by replacing its catalytic nucleophile (S132A-pPR), and the sequence-related assembly protein precursor (pAP, pUL80.5). Our results showed that (i) ICRMT-pPR is 5- to 10-fold more efficient than assemblin for all cleavages measured (i.e., the M site of pAP and the M, R, and I sites of S132A-pPR). (ii) Cleavage of substrate S132A-pPR proceeded M>R>I for both enzymes. (iii) Na(2)SO(4) reduced M- and R-site cleavage efficiency by ICRMT-pPR, in contrast to its enhancing effect for both enzymes on I site and small peptide cleavage. (iv) Disrupting oligomerization of either the pPR enzyme or substrate by mutating Leu382 in the amino-conserved domain reduced cleavage efficiency two- to fourfold. (v) Finally, ICRMT-pPR mutants that include the amino-conserved domain, but terminate with Pro481 or Tyr469, retain the enzymatic characteristics that distinguish pPR from assemblin. These findings show that the scaffolding portion of pPR increases its enzymatic activity on biologically relevant protein substrates and provide an additional link between the structure of this essential viral enzyme and its biological mechanism.


Asunto(s)
Citomegalovirus/enzimología , Endopeptidasas/metabolismo , Serina Endopeptidasas/metabolismo , Proteínas Virales/metabolismo , Dominio Catalítico , Cromatografía de Afinidad/métodos , Endopeptidasas/aislamiento & purificación , Humanos , Serina Endopeptidasas/aislamiento & purificación , Proteínas Virales/aislamiento & purificación
4.
J Virol ; 83(23): 12046-56, 2009 Dec.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19759126

RESUMEN

The human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) open reading frame UL48 encodes a 253-kDa tegument protein that is closely associated with the capsid and was recently shown to have ubiquitin-specific protease activity (J. Wang, A. N. Loveland, L. M. Kattenhorn, H. L. Ploegh, and W. Gibson, J. Virol. 80:6003-6012, 2006). Here, we examined the cleavage specificity of this deubiquitinase (DUB) and replication characteristics of an active-site mutant virus. The purified catalytic domain of the UL48 DUB (1 to 359 amino acids), corresponding to the herpes simplex virus UL36(USP) DUB (L. M. Kattenhorn, G. A. Korbel, B. M. Kessler, E. Spooner, and H. L. Ploegh, Mol. Cell 19:547-557, 2005), efficiently released ubiquitin but not ubiquitin-like modifications from a hemagglutinin peptide substrate. Mutating the active-site residues Cys24 or His162 (C24S and H162A, respectively) abolished this activity. The HCMV UL48 and HSV UL36(USP) DUBs cleaved both Lys48- and Lys63-linked ubiquitin dimers and oligomers, showing more activity toward Lys63 linkages. The DUB activity of the full-length UL48 protein immunoprecipitated from virus-infected cells also showed a better cleavage of Lys63-linked ubiquitinated substrates. An HCMV (Towne) mutant virus in which the UL48 DUB activity was destroyed [UL48(C24S)] produced 10-fold less progeny virus and reduced amounts of viral proteins compared to wild-type virus at a low multiplicity of infection. The mutant virus also produced perceptibly less overall deubiquitination than the wild-type virus. Our findings demonstrate that the HCMV UL48 DUB contains both a ubiquitin-specific carboxy-terminal hydrolase activity and an isopeptidase activity that favors ubiquitin Lys63 linkages and that these activities can influence virus replication in cultured cells.


Asunto(s)
Citomegalovirus/enzimología , Citomegalovirus/fisiología , Péptido Hidrolasas/metabolismo , Ubiquitina/metabolismo , Proteínas Virales/metabolismo , Replicación Viral , Secuencia de Aminoácidos , Sustitución de Aminoácidos , Células Cultivadas , Humanos , Datos de Secuencia Molecular , Mutagénesis Sitio-Dirigida , Proteínas Mutantes/genética , Proteínas Mutantes/metabolismo , Péptido Hidrolasas/genética , Alineación de Secuencia , Especificidad por Sustrato , Proteínas Virales/genética
5.
J Virol ; 82(11): 5381-9, 2008 Jun.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18353959

RESUMEN

Scaffolding proteins of spherical prokaryotic and eukaryotic viruses have critical roles in capsid assembly. The primary scaffolding components of cytomegalovirus, called the assembly protein precursor (pAP, pUL80.5) and the maturational protease precursor (pPR, pUL80a), contain two nuclear localization sequences (NLS1 and NLS2), at least one of which is required in coexpression experiments to translocate the major capsid protein (MCP, pUL85) into the nucleus. In the work reported here, we have mutated NLS1 and NLS2, individually or together, in human cytomegalovirus (HCMV, strain AD169) bacmid-derived viruses to test their effects on virus replication. Consistent with results from earlier transfection/coexpression experiments, both single-mutant bacmids gave rise to infectious virus but the double mutant did not. In comparisons with the wild-type virus, both mutants showed slower cell-to-cell spread; decreased yields of infectious virus (3-fold lower for NLS1(-) and 140-fold lower for NLS2(-)); reduced efficiency of pAP, pPR, and MCP nuclear translocation (sixfold lower for NLS1(-) and eightfold lower for NLS2(-)); increased amounts of a 120-kDa MCP fragment; and reduced numbers of intranuclear capsids. All effects were more severe for the NLS2(-) mutant than the NLS1(-) mutant, and a distinguishing feature of cells infected with the NLS2(-) mutant was the accumulation of large, UL80 protein-containing structures within the nucleus. We conclude that these NLS assist in the nuclear translocation of MCP during HCMV replication and that NLS2, which is unique to the betaherpesvirus UL80 homologs, may have additional involvements during replication.


Asunto(s)
Proteínas de la Cápside/metabolismo , Citomegalovirus/fisiología , Endopeptidasas/metabolismo , Proteínas Virales/metabolismo , Replicación Viral , Transporte Activo de Núcleo Celular , Proteínas de la Cápside/genética , Proteínas de la Cápside/ultraestructura , Células Cultivadas , Citomegalovirus/ultraestructura , Citosol/metabolismo , Endopeptidasas/genética , Genes Reporteros/genética , Humanos , Microscopía Electrónica de Transmisión , Mutación/genética , Señales de Localización Nuclear , Precursores de Proteínas/genética , Precursores de Proteínas/metabolismo , Proteínas Virales/genética
6.
Virus Res ; 123(1): 57-71, 2007 Jan.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16963142

RESUMEN

Human cytomegalovirus (HCMV), a member of the beta-herpesvirus family, encodes four homologues of cellular G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs). One of these, the protein product of HCMV open reading frame (ORF) UL33, has been identified in HCMV-infected cells and virus particles and shown to be heat-aggregatable and N-glycosylated. Another, the product of ORF US28, has been functionally characterized as a beta-chemokine receptor. Here we report the use of RT-PCR, coupled in vitro transcription-translation, immunoprecipitation, and Western immunoassays to (i) show that RNA from the open reading frame US27 appears predominantly during the late phase of replication; (ii) identify the protein encoded by HCMV US27 in infected cells and enveloped virus particles; (iii) demonstrate that the US27-encoded protein is heterogeneously N-glycosylated and resolves as two species following treatment with peptide N-glycosidase F; and (iv) show that both the recombinant and deglycoylated infected cell US27 protein aggregate when heated in the presence of SDS prior to electrophoresis in polyacrylamide gels, a property which is abrogated with the addition of urea to sample buffer.


Asunto(s)
Infecciones por Citomegalovirus/virología , Citomegalovirus/fisiología , Receptores de Quimiocina/metabolismo , Proteínas Virales/metabolismo , Células Cultivadas , Citomegalovirus/patogenicidad , Fibroblastos/metabolismo , Fibroblastos/virología , Glicosilación , Humanos , Virulencia , Replicación Viral
7.
J Virol ; 81(8): 4091-103, 2007 Apr.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17287260

RESUMEN

Herpesviruses encode an essential, maturational serine protease whose catalytic domain, assemblin (28 kDa), is released by self-cleavage from a 74-kDa precursor (pPR, pUL80a). Although there is considerable information about the structure and enzymatic characteristics of assemblin, a potential pharmacologic target, comparatively little is known about these features of the precursor. To begin studying pPR, we introduced five point mutations that stabilize it against self-cleavage at its internal (I), cryptic (C), release (R), and maturational (M) sites and at a newly discovered "tail" (T) site. The resulting mutants, called ICRM-pPR and ICRMT-pPR, were expressed in bacteria, denatured in urea, purified by immobilized metal affinity chromatography, and renatured by a two-step dialysis procedure and by a new method of sedimentation into glycerol gradients. The enzymatic activities of the pPR mutants were indistinguishable from that of IC-assemblin prepared in parallel for comparison, as determined by using a fluorogenic peptide cleavage assay, and approximated rates previously reported for purified assemblin. The percentage of active enzyme in the preparations was also comparable, as determined by using a covalent-binding suicide substrate. An unexpected finding was that, in the absence of the kosmotrope Na2SO4, optimal activity of pPR requires interaction through its scaffolding domain. We conclude that although the enzymatic activities of assemblin and its precursor are comparable, there may be differences in how their catalytic sites become fully activated.


Asunto(s)
Citomegalovirus/enzimología , Precursores Enzimáticos/metabolismo , Serina Endopeptidasas/metabolismo , Centrifugación por Gradiente de Densidad , Cromatografía de Afinidad , Diálisis , Fluorometría , Humanos , Cinética , Mutagénesis Sitio-Dirigida , Péptidos/metabolismo , Desnaturalización Proteica , Renaturación de Proteína , Proteínas Recombinantes/aislamiento & purificación , Proteínas Recombinantes/metabolismo
8.
J Virol ; 81(2): 620-8, 2007 Jan.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17079329

RESUMEN

Assembly of many spherical virus capsids is guided by an internal scaffolding protein or group of proteins that are often cleaved and eliminated in connection with maturation and incorporation of the genome. In cytomegalovirus there are at least two proteins that contribute to this scaffolding function; one is the maturational protease precursor (pUL80a), and the other is the assembly protein precursor (pUL80.5) encoded by a shorter genetic element within UL80a. Yeast GAL4 two-hybrid assays established that both proteins contain a carboxyl-conserved domain that is required for their interaction with the major capsid protein (pUL86) and an amino-conserved domain (ACD) that is required for their self-interaction and for their interaction with each other. In the work reported here, we demonstrate that when the ACD is deleted (deltaACD) or disrupted by a point mutation (L47A), the bacterially expressed mutant protein sediments as a monomer during rate-velocity centrifugation, whereas the wild-type protein sediments mainly as oligomers. We also show that the L47A mutation reduces the production of infectious virus by at least 90%, results in the formation of irregular nuclear capsids, gives rise to tube-like structures in the nucleus that resemble the capsid core in cross-section and contain UL80 proteins, slows nuclear translocation of the major capsid protein, and may slow cleavage by the maturational protease. We provide physical corroboration that mutating the ACD disrupts self-interaction of the UL80 proteins and biological support for the proposal that the ACD has a critical role in capsid assembly and production of infectious virus.


Asunto(s)
Cápside/metabolismo , Citomegalovirus/metabolismo , Endopeptidasas/química , Regulación Viral de la Expresión Génica , Proteínas Virales/química , Ensamble de Virus , Células Cultivadas , Citomegalovirus/genética , Citomegalovirus/patogenicidad , Endopeptidasas/genética , Endopeptidasas/metabolismo , Fibroblastos/virología , Humanos , Microscopía Fluorescente , Mutación Puntual , Técnicas del Sistema de Dos Híbridos , Proteínas Virales/genética , Proteínas Virales/metabolismo
9.
J Virol ; 80(12): 6003-12, 2006 Jun.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16731939

RESUMEN

We show here that the high-molecular-weight protein (HMWP or pUL48; 253 kDa) of human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) is a functionally competent deubiquitinating protease (DUB). By using a suicide substrate probe specific for ubiquitin-binding cysteine proteases (DUB probe) to screen lysates of HCMV-infected cells, we found just one infected-cell-specific DUB. Characteristics of this protein, including its large size, expression at late times of infection, presence in extracellular virus particles, and reactivity with an antiserum to the HMWP, identified it as the HMWP. This was confirmed by constructing mutant viruses with substitutions in two of the putative active-site residues, Cys24Ile and His162Ala. HMWP with these mutations either failed to bind the DUB probe (C24I) or had significantly reduced reactivity with it (H162A). More compellingly, the deubiquitinating activity detected in wild-type virus particles was completely abolished in both the C24I and H162A mutants, thereby directly linking HMWP with deubiquitinating enzyme activity. Mutations in these active-site residues were not lethal to virus replication but slowed production of infectious virus relative to wild type and mutations of other conserved residues. Initial studies, by electron microscopy, of cells infected with the mutants revealed no obvious differences at late times of replication in the general appearance of the cells or in the distribution, relative numbers, or appearance of virus particles in the cytoplasm or nucleus.


Asunto(s)
Cisteína Endopeptidasas/genética , Cisteína Endopeptidasas/fisiología , Citomegalovirus/enzimología , Proteínas Virales/fisiología , Sitios de Unión/genética , Células Cultivadas , Cisteína , Fibroblastos/virología , Histidina , Humanos , Mutación Missense , Proteínas Virales/genética , Virión , Replicación Viral/genética
10.
J Virol ; 79(20): 12961-8, 2005 Oct.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16188998

RESUMEN

The cytomegalovirus (CMV) maturational protease, assemblin, contains an "internal" (I) cleavage site absent from its homologs in other herpesviruses. Blocking this site for cleavage did not prevent replication of the resulting I(-) mutant virus. However, cells infected with the I(-) virus showed increased amounts of a fragment produced by cleavage at the nearby "cryptic" (C) site, suggesting that its replication may bypass the I-site block by using the C site as an alternate cleavage pathway. To test this and further examine the biological importance of these cleavages, we constructed two additional virus mutants-one blocked for C-site cleavage and another blocked for both I- and C-site cleavage. Infectivity comparisons with the parental wild-type virus showed that the I(-) mutant was the least affected for virus production, whereas infectivity of the C(-) mutant was reduced by approximately 40% and when both sites were blocked virus infectivity was reduced by nearly 90%, providing the first evidence that these cleavages have biological significance. We also present and discuss evidence suggesting that I-site cleavage destabilizes assemblin and its fragments, whereas C-site cleavage does not.


Asunto(s)
Citomegalovirus/fisiología , Serina Endopeptidasas/fisiología , Línea Celular , Citomegalovirus/enzimología , Humanos , Serina Endopeptidasas/metabolismo , Replicación Viral
11.
J Biol Chem ; 280(39): 33206-12, 2005 Sep 30.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16036911

RESUMEN

Chemical rescue is an established approach that offers a directed strategy for designing mutant enzymes in which activity can be restored by supplying an appropriate exogenous compound. This method has been used successfully to study a broad range of enzymes in vitro, but its application to living systems has received less attention. We have investigated the feasibility of using chemical rescue to make a conditional-lethal mutant of the cytomegalovirus (CMV) maturational protease. The 28-kDa CMV serine protease, assemblin, has a Ser-His-His catalytic triad and an internal (I) cleavage site near its midpoint. We found that imidazole can restore I-site cleavage to mutants inactivated by replacing the critical active site His with Ala or with Gly, which rescued better. Comparable rescue was observed for counterpart mutants of the human and simian CMV assemblin homologs and occurred in both living cells and in vitro. Cleavage was established to be at the correct site by amino acid sequencing and proceeded at approximately 11%/h in bacteria and approximately 30%/h in vitro. The same mutations were unresponsive to chemical rescue in the context of the assemblin precursor, pUL80a. This catalytic difference distinguishes the two forms of the CMV protease.


Asunto(s)
Citomegalovirus/enzimología , Precursores Enzimáticos/metabolismo , Serina Endopeptidasas/metabolismo , Alanina/metabolismo , Sustitución de Aminoácidos , Línea Celular , Línea Celular Transformada , Transformación Celular Viral , Clonación Molecular , Inhibidores Enzimáticos/farmacología , Precursores Enzimáticos/genética , Estudios de Factibilidad , Glicina/metabolismo , Humanos , Imidazoles/farmacología , Cinética , Mutagénesis Sitio-Dirigida , Plásmidos , Análisis de Secuencia de Proteína , Serina Endopeptidasas/química , Serina Endopeptidasas/genética
12.
J Virol ; 76(17): 8667-74, 2002 Sep.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12163586

RESUMEN

The human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) maturational proteinase is synthesized as an enzymatically active 74-kDa precursor that cleaves itself at four sites. Two of these, called the maturational (M) and release (R) sites, are conserved in the homologs of all herpesviruses. The other two, called the internal (I) and cryptic (C) sites, have recognized consensus sequences only among cytomegalovirus (CMV) homologs and are located in the 28-kDa proteolytic portion of the precursor, called assemblin. I-site cleavage cuts assemblin in half without detected effect on its enzymatic behavior in vitro. To investigate the requirement for this cleavage during virus infection, we used the CMV-bacterial artificial chromosome system (E. M. Borst, G. Hahn, U. H. Koszinowski, and M. Messerle, J. Virol. 73:8320-8329, 1999) to construct a virus encoding a mutant I site (Ala143 to Val) intended to be blocked for cleavage. Characterizations of the resulting mutant (i) confirmed the presence of the mutation in the viral genome and the inability of the mutant virus to effect I-site cleavage in infected cells; (ii) determined that the mutation has no gross effect on the rate of virus production or on the amounts of extracellular virions, noninfectious enveloped particles (NIEPs), and dense bodies; (iii) established that assemblin and its cleavage products are present in NIEPs but are absent from CMV virions, an apparent difference from what is found for virions of herpes simplex virus; and (iv) showed that the 23-kDa protein product of C-site cleavage is more abundant in mutant virus-than in wild-type virus-infected cells and NIEPs. We conclude that the production of infectious CMV requires neither I-site cleavage of assemblin nor the presence of assemblin in the mature virion.


Asunto(s)
Citomegalovirus/enzimología , Citomegalovirus/crecimiento & desarrollo , Serina Endopeptidasas/genética , Serina Endopeptidasas/metabolismo , Virión/enzimología , Línea Celular , Cromosomas Artificiales Bacterianos , Citomegalovirus/patogenicidad , Efecto Citopatogénico Viral , Endopeptidasas/genética , Endopeptidasas/metabolismo , Humanos , Mutación , Transfección , Virión/metabolismo , Ensamble de Virus
13.
J Virol ; 78(24): 13501-11, 2004 Dec.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15564461

RESUMEN

Capsid assembly among the herpes-group viruses is coordinated by two related scaffolding proteins. In cytomegalovirus (CMV), the main scaffolding constituent is called the assembly protein precursor (pAP). Like its homologs in other herpesviruses, pAP is modified by proteolytic cleavage and phosphorylation. Cleavage is essential for capsid maturation and production of infectious virus, but the role of phosphorylation is undetermined. As a first step in evaluating the significance of this modification, we have identified the specific sites of phosphorylation in the simian CMV pAP. Two were established previously to be adjacent serines (Ser156 and Ser157) in a casein kinase II consensus sequence. The remaining two, identified here as Thr231 and Ser235, are within consensus sequences for glycogen synthase kinase 3 (GSK-3) and mitogen-activated protein kinase, respectively. Consistent with Thr231 being a GSK-3 substrate, its phosphorylation required a downstream "priming" phosphate (i.e., Ser235) and was reduced by a GSK-3-specific inhibitor. Phosphorylation of Ser235 converts pAP to an electrophoretically slower-mobility isoform, pAP*; subsequent phosphorylation of pAP* at Thr231 converts pAP* to a still-slower isoform, pAP**. The mobility shift to pAP* was mimicked by substituting an acidic amino acid for either Thr231 or Ser235, but the shift to pAP** required that both positions be phosphorylated. Glu did not substitute for pSer235 in promoting phosphorylation of Thr231. We suggest that phosphorylation of Thr231 and Ser235 causes charge-driven conformational changes in pAP, and we demonstrate that preventing these modifications alters interactions of pAP with itself and with major capsid protein, suggesting a functional significance.


Asunto(s)
Proteínas de la Cápside/metabolismo , Citomegalovirus/metabolismo , Glucógeno Sintasa Quinasa 3/química , Precursores de Proteínas/metabolismo , Proteínas Virales/metabolismo , Secuencia de Aminoácidos , Animales , Línea Celular , Glucógeno Sintasa Quinasa 3/metabolismo , Humanos , Espectrometría de Masas , Datos de Secuencia Molecular , Mutagénesis Sitio-Dirigida , Mapeo Peptídico , Fosforilación , Precursores de Proteínas/química , Precursores de Proteínas/genética , Proteínas Virales/química , Proteínas Virales/genética
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