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1.
N-myristoylated viral polypeptide mu 1 was produced in COS cells transfected with a transient expression vector containing a DNA copy of the reovirus M2 gene. The mu 1 product was specifically cleaved to polypeptide mu 1C in cells that were cotransfected with the reovirus S4 gene and that expressed polypeptide sigma 3. Studies with site-specific mutants of the M2 gene demonstrated that conversion of mu 1 to mu 1C was dependent on myristoylation and the presence of the proteolytic cleavage sequence asparagine 42-proline 43 in mu 1, as well as on the presence of polypeptide sigma 3. The mu 1C product and polypeptide sigma 3 formed complexes that were immunoprecipitated by sigma 3-directed antibody, and a myristoylation-negative M2 double mutant, G2A-N42T, yielded mu 1 that did not undergo cleavage to mu 1C or bind sigma 3. However, the N42T single mutant did form immunoprecipitable complexes with sigma 3, indicating that binding can occur in the absence of cleavage. Polypeptide sigma 3 alternatively can bind double-stranded RNA and in COS cells stimulates translation of reporter chloramphenicol acetyltransferase mRNA translation, presumably by blocking double-stranded RNA-mediated activation of the eukaryotic initiation factor 2 alpha subunit kinase which inhibits the initiation of protein synthesis. Consistent with these observations and with the formation of mu 1C-sigma 3 complexes, coexpression of M2 with S4 DNA prevented the translational stimulatory effect of polypeptide sigma 3.  相似文献   

2.
We have studied the structural relationships between the outer capsid polypeptides of eight murine, bovine, and human isolates of type 1 and 3 mammalian reoviruses. Our results show that the outer capsid polypeptides of reoviruses isolated from different mammalian species, in different years and different geographical areas, have both conserved and unique methionine-containing tryptic peptides. We found that tryptic peptides from mu 1C polypeptides of two human, one murine, and two bovine type 3 isolates and one human and two bovine type 1 reoviruses are highly conserved. Our data show that only one tryptic peptide pattern of the mu 1C polypeptide (encoded by the M2 gene) was present in reoviruses isolated from the three different mammalian species. The mu 1C polypeptide of the type 3 Dearing strain contained one tryptic peptide not found in any other reovirus isolate examined. In marked contrast to the mu 1C polypeptides, the sigma 3 polypeptides (encoded by the S4 gene) of three type 1 and three type 3 isolates were divided into two patterns based on significant differences in their tryptic peptides. In addition, at least seven tryptic peptides were conserved among the sigma 3 polypeptides of all virus strains examined. The sigma 3 polypeptide of the type 3 Dearing strain was distinguishable from the sigma 3 polypeptides of all other strains examined. The one mu 1C and two sigma 3 tryptic peptide patterns were found to occur interchangeably in isolates of type 1 or type 3. About 1/3 of the tyrosine-containing tryptic peptides of sigma 1 polypeptides of four type 3 isolates examined were conserved. Comparison of peptide differences in sigma 1 polypeptides of these isolates showed that each had one or more unique tryptic peptides, suggesting that the S1 genes coding for these polypeptides had undergone genetic drift or, alternatively, that there are at least two tryptic peptide patterns present among the sigma 1 polypeptides of these isolates. Our results suggest that genetic drift and reassortment are the most likely explanation for the extensive genetic diversity found in natural populations of mammalian reoviruses.  相似文献   

3.
The reovirus capsid protein sigma 3 was examined for double-stranded RNA (dsRNA)-binding activity by Northwestern (RNA-protein) blot analysis. Treatment of virion-derived sigma 3 protein with Staphylococcus aureus V8 protease led to an increase in the dsRNA-binding activity associated with the C-terminal fragment of the protein. Recombinant C-terminal fragments of the sigma 3 protein were expressed in Escherichia coli from the S4 cDNA of reovirus serotype 1. These truncated sigma 3 proteins displayed proteolytic processing and dsRNA-binding activity similar to those observed for native, virion-derived sigma 3 protein as measured by Northwestern blot analysis. Construction of a modified pET3c vector, pET3Exo, allowed the production of 3'-terminal deletions of the S4 cDNA by using exonuclease III and rapid screening of the induced truncated sigma 3 proteins. An 85-amino-acid domain within the C-terminal portion of the sigma 3 protein which was responsible for dsRNA-binding activity was identified. The 85-amino-acid domain possessed a repeated basic amino acid motif which was conserved in all three serotypes of reovirus. Deletion of one of the basic motifs, predicted to be an amphipathic alpha-helix, destroyed dsRNA-binding activity.  相似文献   

4.
Reoviruses isolated from persistently infected cultures (PI viruses) can grow in the presence of ammonium chloride, a weak base that blocks acid-dependent proteolysis of viral outer-capsid proteins during viral entry into cells. We used reassortant viruses isolated from crosses of wild-type (wt) reovirus strain, type 1 Lang, and three independent PI viruses, L/C, PI 2A1, and PI 3-1, to identify viral genes that segregate with the capacity of PI viruses to grow in cells treated with ammonium chloride. Growth of reassortant viruses in ammonium chloride-treated cells segregated with the S1 gene of L/C and the S4 gene of PI 2A1 and PI 3-1. The S1 gene encodes viral attachment protein sigma1, and the S4 gene encodes outer-capsid protein sigma3. To identify mutations in sigma3 selected during persistent reovirus infection, we determined the S4 gene nucleotide sequences of L/C, PI 2A1, PI 3-1, and four additional PI viruses. The deduced amino acid sequences of sigma3 protein of six of these PI viruses contained a tyrosine-to-histidine substitution at residue 354. To determine whether mutations selected during persistent infection alter cleavage of the viral outer capsid, the fate of viral structural proteins was assessed by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis after treatment of virions of wt and PI viruses with chymotrypsin in vitro. Proteolysis of PI virus outer-capsid proteins sigma3 and mu1C occurred with faster kinetics than proteolysis of wt virus outer-capsid proteins. These results demonstrate that mutations in either the S1 or S4 gene alter acid-dependent disassembly of the reovirus outer capsid and suggest that increased efficiency of proteolysis of viral outer-capsid proteins is important for maintenance of persistent reovirus infections of cultured cells.  相似文献   

5.
6.
Mammalian reoviruses are internalized into cells by receptor-mediated endocytosis. Within the endocytic compartment, the viral outer capsid undergoes acid-dependent proteolysis resulting in removal of the sigma3 protein and proteolytic cleavage of the mu1/mu1C protein. Ammonium chloride (AC) is a weak base that blocks disassembly of reovirus virions by inhibiting acidification of intracellular vacuoles. To identify domains in reovirus proteins that influence pH-sensitive steps in viral disassembly, we adapted strain type 3 Dearing (T3D) to growth in murine L929 cells treated with AC. In comparison to wild-type (wt) T3D, AC-adapted (ACA-D) variant viruses exhibited increased yields in AC-treated cells. AC resistance of reassortant viruses generated from a cross of wt type 1 Lang and ACA-D variant ACA-D1 segregated with the sigma3-encoding S4 gene. The deduced sigma3 amino acid sequences of six independently derived ACA-D variants contain one or two mutations each, affecting a total of six residues. Four of these mutations, I180T, A246G, I347S, and Y354H, cluster in the virion-distal lobe of sigma3. Linkage of these mutations to AC resistance was confirmed in experiments using reovirus disassembly intermediates recoated with wt or mutant sigma3 proteins. In comparison to wt virions, ACA-D viruses displayed enhanced susceptibility to proteolysis by endocytic protease cathepsin L. Image reconstructions of cryoelectron micrographs of three ACA-D viruses that each contain a single mutation in the virion-distal lobe of sigma3 demonstrated native capsid protein organization and minimal alterations in sigma3 structure. These results suggest that mutations in sigma3 that confer resistance to inhibitors of vacuolar acidification identify a specific domain that regulates proteolytic disassembly.  相似文献   

7.
8.
Association of the reovirus proteins sigma 3 and mu 1 influences viral entry, initiation of outer capsid assembly, and modulation of the effect of sigma 3 on cellular translation. In this study, we have addressed whether structural changes occur in sigma 3 as a result of its interaction with mu 1. Using differences in protease sensitivity to detect conformationally distinct forms of sigma 3, we showed that association of sigma 3 with mu 1 caused a conformational change in sigma 3 that converted it from a protease-resistant to a protease-sensitive structure and occurred posttranslationally. The effect of mu 1 on the structure of sigma 3 was stoichiometric. Our results are consistent with a model in which sigma 3's association with mu 1 shifts its function from translational control to assembly of an outer capsid in which sigma 3 is folded into the protease-sensitive conformation that is required for its cleavage during the next round of infection.  相似文献   

9.
Physical and chemical characterization of an avian reovirus.   总被引:12,自引:8,他引:4       下载免费PDF全文
  相似文献   

10.
H W Virgin  th  M A Mann  B N Fields    K L Tyler 《Journal of virology》1991,65(12):6772-6781
Thirteen newly isolated monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) were used to study relationships between reovirus outer capsid proteins sigma 3, mu 1c, and lambda 2 (core spike) and the cell attachment protein sigma 1. We focused on sigma 1-associated properties of serotype specificity and hemagglutination (HA). Competition between MAbs revealed two surface epitopes on mu 1c that were highly conserved between reovirus serotype 1 Lang (T1L) and serotype 3 Dearing (T3D). There were several differences between T1L and T3D sigma 3 epitope maps. Studies using T1L x T3D reassortants showed that primary sequence differences between T1L and T3D sigma 3 proteins accounted for differences in sigma 3 epitope maps. Four of 12 non-sigma 1 MAbs showed a serotype-associated pattern of binding to 25 reovirus field isolates. Thus, for reovirus field isolates, different sigma 1 proteins are associated with preferred epitopes on other outer capsid proteins. Further evidence for a close structural and functional interrelationship between sigma 3/mu 1c and sigma 1 included (i) inhibition by sigma 3 and mu 1c MAbs of sigma 1-mediated HA, (ii) enhancement of sigma 1-mediated HA by proteolytic cleavage of sigma 3 and mu 1c, and (iii) genetic studies demonstrating that sigma 1 controlled the capacity of sigma 3 MAbs to inhibit HA. These data suggest that (i) epitopes on sigma 3 and mu 1c lie in close proximity to sigma 1 and that MAbs to these epitopes can modulate sigma 1-mediated functions, (ii) these spatial relationships have functional significance, since removal of sigma 3 and/or cleavage of mu 1c to delta can enhance sigma 1 function, (iii) in nature, the sigma 1 protein places selective constraints on the epitope structure of the other capsid proteins, and (iv) viral susceptibility to antibody action can be determined by genes other than that encoding an antibody's epitope.  相似文献   

11.
DNA binding of a nonstructural reovirus protein   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The specific early inhibition of DNA synthesis in reovirus-infected cells suggests that the cell nucleus is a target for virus-induced damage. We have now examined the affinity of reovirus proteins for DNA, postulating that such affinity could provide a mechanism for the inhibition. Cytoplasmic and nuclear extracts of cells labeled with [35S] methionine from 6 to 8.5 h after infection at high multiplicity was subjected to chromatography on denatured DNA - cellulose columns. Fractions from both cytoplasm and nucleus eluted with 0.6 N NaCl contained a protein with the same electrophoretic mobility of polyacrylamide slab gels as the nonstructural (NS) reovirus protein of the sigma size class. The protein also exhibited affinity for native DNA - cellulose and denatured DNA - agarose. Electrophoretic analysis is tube gels of cell extracts labeled for 48 h before infection with [14C] leucine and from 6 to 8.5 h after infection with [3H] leucine showed increased 3H label in this protein indicating it is reovirus specific. Small amounts of mu proteins also had DNA affinity. Purified virus did not bind strongly to DNA, suggesting that the binding protein is not a structural protein of the sigma size class on the outer surface of the virus. Our results provide evidence that the sigma NS protein binds to DNA. This affinity could interfere with chromosome function in the infected cell.  相似文献   

12.
Reovirus replication occurs in the cytoplasm of infected cells and culminates in the formation of crystalline arrays of progeny virions within viral inclusions. Two viral nonstructural proteins, sigma NS and micro NS, and structural protein sigma 3 form protein-RNA complexes early in reovirus infection. To better understand the minimal requirements of viral inclusion formation, we expressed sigma NS, mu NS, and sigma 3 alone and in combination in the absence of viral infection. In contrast to its concentration in inclusion structures during reovirus replication, sigma NS expressed in cells in the absence of infection is distributed diffusely throughout the cytoplasm and does not form structures that resemble viral inclusions. Expressed sigma NS is functional as it complements the defect in temperature-sensitive, sigma NS-mutant virus tsE320. In both transfected and infected cells, mu NS is found in punctate cytoplasmic structures and sigma 3 is distributed diffusely in the cytoplasm and the nucleus. The subcellular localization of mu NS and sigma 3 is not altered when the proteins are expressed together or with sigma NS. However, when expressed with micro NS, sigma NS colocalizes with mu NS to punctate structures similar in morphology to inclusion structures observed early in viral replication. During reovirus infection, both sigma NS and mu NS are detectable 4 h after adsorption and colocalize to punctate structures throughout the viral life cycle. In concordance with these results, sigma NS interacts with mu NS in a yeast two-hybrid assay and by coimmunoprecipitation analysis. These data suggest that sigma NS and mu NS are the minimal viral components required to form inclusions, which then recruit other reovirus proteins and RNA to initiate viral genome replication.  相似文献   

13.
Reovirus outer-capsid proteins mu1, sigma3, and sigma1 are thought to be assembled onto nascent core-like particles within infected cells, leading to the production of progeny virions. Consistent with this model, we report the in vitro assembly of baculovirus-expressed mu1 and sigma3 onto purified cores that lack mu1, sigma3, and sigma1. The resulting particles (recoated cores, or r-cores) closely resembled native virions in protein composition (except for lacking cell attachment protein sigma1), buoyant density, and particle morphology by scanning cryoelectron microscopy. Transmission cryoelectron microscopy and image reconstruction of r-cores confirmed that they closely resembled virions in the structure of the outer capsid and revealed that assembly of mu1 and sigma3 onto cores had induced rearrangement of the pentameric lambda2 turrets into a conformation approximating that in virions. r-cores, like virions, underwent proteolytic conversion to particles resembling native ISVPs (infectious subvirion particles) in protein composition, particle morphology, and capacity to permeabilize membranes in vitro. r-cores were 250- to 500-fold more infectious than cores in murine L cells and, like virions but not ISVPs or cores, were inhibited from productively infecting these cells by the presence of either NH4Cl or E-64. The latter results suggest that r-cores and virions used similar routes of entry into L cells, including processing by lysosomal cysteine proteinases, even though the former particles lacked the sigma1 protein. To examine the utility of r-cores for genetic dissections of mu1 functions in reovirus entry, we generated r-cores containing a mutant form of mu1 that had been engineered to resist cleavage at the delta:phi junction during conversion to ISVP-like particles by chymotrypsin in vitro. Despite their deficit in delta:phi cleavage, these ISVP-like particles were fully competent to permeabilize membranes in vitro and to infect L cells in the presence of NH4Cl, providing new evidence that this cleavage is dispensable for productive infection.  相似文献   

14.
We studied the structural relationships among the outer capsid polypeptides of prototype strains of mammalian reovirus serotypes 1, 2, and 3 by tryptic peptide mapping. The micron1C polypeptide showed an extraordinary degree of conservation of its methionine-containing tryptic peptides. In contrast, the most abundant viral polypeptide, sigma 3, contained both conserved and unique methionine-containing tryptic peptides. The viral type-specific antigen, the sigma 1 polypeptide, contained both conserved and unique methionine- and tyrosine-containing tryptic peptides. These results suggested that the mammalian reovirus genome segments encoding each of the viral outer capsid polypeptides were derived from common ancestral segments which have diverged to different degrees.  相似文献   

15.
Reovirus major capsid protein expressed in Escherichia coli   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
M Giantini  A J Shatkin 《Gene》1987,56(1):153-160
A DNA copy of the open reading frame of the S4 gene of reovirus type 3 was cloned into a temperature-regulated bacterial expression vector. Induction at 42 degrees C resulted in the synthesis of a polypeptide that comigrated with virion capsid protein sigma 3 by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and reacted with sigma 3-specific antisera. The protein was expressed in bacteria as insoluble aggregates that accumulated in polar inclusion bodies. Aggregated product also resulted when the expression system was manipulated to induce bacterial sigma 3 (b sigma 3) synthesis at temperatures below 42 degrees C. Various methods used to solubilize b sigma 3 did not yield the monomeric protein. The results indicate that sigma 3, the major surface component of reovirions, is expressed in transfected Escherichia coli as an aggregated, disulfide cross-linked protein.  相似文献   

16.
The reovirus sigma 3 protein is a major outer capsid protein that may function to regulate translation within infected cells. To facilitate the understanding of sigma 3 structure and functions and the evolution of mammalian reoviruses, we sequenced cDNA copies of the S4 genes from 10 serotype 3 and 3 serotype 1 reovirus field isolates and compared these sequences with sequences of prototypic strains of the three reovirus serotypes. We found that the sigma 3 proteins are highly conserved: the two longest conserved regions contain motifs proposed to function in binding zinc and double-stranded RNA. We used the 16 viral isolates to investigate the hypothesis that structural interactions between sigma 3 and the cell attachment protein, sigma 1, constrain their evolution and to identify a determinant within sigma 3 that is in close proximity to the sigma 1 hemagglutination site.  相似文献   

17.
Tagging of viral capsid proteins is a powerful tool to study viral assembly; it also raises the possibility of using viral particles to present exogenous epitopes in vaccination or gene therapy strategies. The ability of reoviruses to induce strong mucosal immune response and their large host range and low pathogenicity in humans are some of the advantages of using reoviruses in such applications. In the present study, the feasibility of introducing foreign epitopes, "tags", to the sigma3 protein, a major component of the reovirus outer capsid, was investigated. Among eight different positions, the amino-terminal end of the protein appeared as the best location to insert exogenous sequences. Additional amino acids at this position do not preclude interaction with the micro1 protein, the other major constituent of the viral outer capsid, but strongly interfere with micro1 to micro1C cleavage. Nevertheless, the tagged sigma3 protein was still incorporated to virions upon recoating of infectious subviral particles to which authentic sigma3 protein was removed by proteolysis, indicating that micro1 cleavage is not a prerequisite for outer capsid assembly. The recently published structure of the sigma3- micro1 complex suggests that the amino-terminally inserted epitope could be exposed at the outer surface of viral particles.  相似文献   

18.
Mammalian reoviruses contain a myristoylated structural protein.   总被引:27,自引:19,他引:8       下载免费PDF全文
The structural protein mu 1 of mammalian reoviruses was noted to have a potential N-myristoylation sequence at the amino terminus of its deduced amino acid sequence. Virions labeled with [3H]myristic acid were used to demonstrate that mu 1 is modified by an amide-linked myristoyl group. A myristoylated peptide having a relative molecular weight (Mr) of approximately 4,000 was also shown to be a structural component of virions and was concluded to represent the 4.2-kDa amino-terminal fragment of mu 1 which is generated by the same proteolytic cleavage that yields the carboxy-terminal fragment and major outer capsid protein mu 1C. The myristoylated 4,000-Mr peptide was found to be present in reovirus intermediate subviral particles but to be absent from cores, indicating that it is a component of the outer capsid. A distinct large myristoylated fragment of the intact mu 1 protein was also identified in intermediate subviral particles, but no myristoylated mu-region proteins were identified in cores, consistent with the location of mu 1 in the outer capsid. Similarities between amino-terminal regions of the reovirus mu 1 protein and the poliovirus capsid polyprotein were noted. By analogy with other viruses that contain N-myristoylated structural proteins (particularly picornaviruses), we suggest that the myristoyl group attached to mu 1 and its amino-terminal fragments has an essential role in the assembly and structure of the reovirus outer capsid and in the process of reovirus entry into cells.  相似文献   

19.
C Wychowski  S van der Werf  M Girard 《Gene》1985,37(1-3):63-71
The poliovirus cDNA fragment coding for capsid polypeptide VP1 was inserted between the EcoRI and BamHI sites of SV40 DNA, generating a chimaeric gene in which the sequence of the 302 amino acids (aa) of poliovirus capsid polypeptide VP1 was placed downstream from that of the 94 N-terminal aa of SV40 capsid polypeptide VP1. The resulting defective, hybrid virus, SV40-delta 1 polio, was propagated in CV1 cells using an early SV40 mutant, am404, as a helper. Cells doubly infected by SV40-delta 1 polio and am404 expressed a 50-kDal fusion protein which was specifically immunoprecipitated by polyclonal and/or monoclonal antibodies raised against poliovirus capsids or against poliovirus polypeptide VP1. Examination of the infected cells by immunofluorescence after staining with anti-poliovirus VP1 immune sera revealed that the fusion protein was mostly located in the intra- and perinuclear space of the cells, in contrast to the exclusively intracytoplasmic location of genuine poliovirus VP1 polypeptide that was observed in poliovirus-infected cells. This suggests that the N-terminal part of the SV40-VP1 polypeptide could contain an important sequence element acting as a migration signal for the transport of proteins from the cytoplasm to the nucleus.  相似文献   

20.
In murine fibroblasts, efficient proteolysis of reovirus outer capsid protein sigma3 during cell entry by virions requires the acid-dependent lysosomal cysteine protease cathepsin L. The importance of cathepsin L for infection of other cell types is unknown. Here we report that the acid-independent lysosomal cysteine protease cathepsin S mediates outer capsid processing in macrophage-like P388D cells. P388D cells supported infection by virions of strain Lang, but not strain c43. Genetic studies revealed that this difference is determined by S4, the viral gene segment that encodes sigma3. c43-derived subvirion particles that lack sigma3 replicated normally in P388D cells, suggesting that the difference in infectivity of Lang and c43 virions is at the level of sigma3 processing. Infection of P388D cells with Lang virions was inhibited by the broad spectrum cysteine protease inhibitor trans-epoxysuccinyl-l-leucylamido-(4-guanidino)butane but not by NH(4)Cl, which raises the endocytic pH and thereby inhibits acid-dependent proteases such as cathepsins L and B. Outer capsid processing and infection of P388D cells with Lang virions were also inhibited by a cathepsin S-specific inhibitor. Furthermore, in the presence of NH(4)Cl, cell lines engineered to express cathepsin S supported infection by Lang, but not c43, virions. Our results thus indicate that differences in susceptibility to cathepsin S-mediated sigma3 processing are responsible for strain differences in reovirus infection of macrophage-like P388D cells and other cathepsin S-expressing cells. Additionally, our data suggest that the acid dependence of reovirus infections of most other cell types may reflect the low pH requirement for the activities of most other lysosomal proteases rather, than some other acid-dependent aspect of cell entry.  相似文献   

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