首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 78 毫秒
1.
Andrés G  Alejo A  Salas J  Salas ML 《Journal of virology》2002,76(24):12473-12482
African swine fever virus (ASFV), a complex enveloped DNA virus, expresses two polyprotein precursors, pp220 and pp62, which after proteolytic processing give rise to several major components of the virus particle. We have analyzed the structural role of polyprotein pp62, the precursor form of mature products p35 and p15, in virus morphogenesis. Densitometric analysis of one- and two-dimensional gels of purified virions showed that proteins p35 and p15, as well as the pp220-derived products, are present in equimolecular amounts in the virus particle. Immunoelectron microscopy revealed that the pp62-derived products localize at the core shell, a matrix-like domain placed between the DNA-containing nucleoid and the inner envelope, where the pp220-derived products are also localized. Pulse-chase experiments indicated that the processing of both polyprotein precursors is concomitant with virus assembly. Furthermore, using inducible ASFV recombinants, we show that pp62 processing requires the expression of the pp220 core precursor, whereas the processing of both precursors pp220 and pp62 is dependent on expression of the major capsid protein p72. Interestingly, when p72 expression is blocked, unprocessed pp220 and pp62 polyproteins assemble into aberrant zipper-like elements consisting of an elongated membrane-bound protein structure reminiscent of the core shell. Moreover, the two polyproteins, when coexpressed in COS cells, interact with each other to form zipper-like structures. Together, these findings indicate that the mature products derived from both polyproteins, which collectively account for about 30% of the virion protein mass, are the basic components of the core shell and that polyprotein processing represents a maturational process related to ASFV morphogenesis.  相似文献   

2.
African swine fever virus (ASFV) polyprotein pp220, encoded by the CP2475L gene, is an N-myristoylated precursor polypeptide that, after proteolytic processing, gives rise to the major structural proteins p150, p37, p34, and p14. These proteins localize at the core shell, a matrix-like virus domain placed between the DNA-containing nucleoid and the inner envelope. In this study, we have examined the role of polyprotein pp220 in virus morphogenesis by means of an ASFV recombinant, v220i, containing an inducible copy of the CP2475L gene regulated by the Escherichia coli repressor-operator system. Under conditions that repress pp220 expression, the virus yield of v220i was about 2.6 log units lower than that of the parental virus or of the recombinant grown under permissive conditions. Electron microscopy revealed that pp220 repression leads to the assembly of icosahedral particles virtually devoid of the core structure. Analysis of recombinant v220i by immunoelectron microscopy, immunoblotting, and DNA hybridization showed that mutant particles essentially lack, besides the pp220-derived products, a number of major core proteins as well as the viral DNA. On the other hand, transient expression of the CP2475L gene in COS cells showed that polyprotein pp220 assembles into electron-dense membrane-bound coats, whereas a mutant nonmyristoylated version of pp220 does not associate with cellular membranes but forms large cytoplasmic aggregates. Together, these findings indicate that polyprotein pp220 is essential for the core assembly and suggest that its myristoyl moiety may function as a membrane-anchoring signal to bind the developing core shell to the inner viral envelope.  相似文献   

3.
African swine fever virus (ASFV) is a complex DNA virus that employs polyprotein processing at Gly-Gly-Xaa sites as a strategy to produce several major core components of the viral particle. The virus gene S273R encodes a 31-kDa protein that contains a "core domain" with the conserved catalytic residues characteristic of SUMO-1-specific proteases and the adenovirus protease. Using a COS cell expression system, it was found that protein pS273R is capable of cleaving the viral polyproteins pp62 and pp220 in a specific way giving rise to the same intermediates and mature products as those produced in ASFV-infected cells. Furthermore, protein pS273R, like adenovirus protease and SUMO-1-specific enzymes, is a cysteine protease, because its activity is abolished by mutation of the predicted catalytic histidine and cysteine residues and is inhibited by sulfhydryl-blocking reagents. Protein pS273R is expressed late after infection and is localized in the cytoplasmic viral factories, where it is found associated with virus precursors and mature virions. In the virions, the protein is present in the core shell, a domain where the products of the viral polyproteins are also located. The identification of the ASFV protease will allow a better understanding of the role of polyprotein processing in virus assembly and may contribute to our knowledge of the emerging family of SUMO-1-specific proteases.  相似文献   

4.
African swine fever virus (ASFV) encodes two polyprotein precursors named pp220 and pp62 that are sequentially processed during viral infection, giving rise to six major structural proteins. These reside at the core shell, a matrix domain located between the endoplasmic reticulum-derived inner envelope and the DNA-containing nucleoid. Proteolytic processing of the polyprotein precursors is catalyzed by the viral proteinase pS273R, a cysteine proteinase that shares sequence similarity with the SUMO1-processing peptidases. We describe here the construction and characterization of an ASFV recombinant, vS273Ri, that inducibly expresses the ASFV proteinase. Using vS273Ri, we show that repression of proteinase expression inhibits polyprotein processing and strongly impairs infective virus production. Electron microscopic examination of vS273Ri-infected cells showed that inhibition of proteolytic processing leads to the assembly of defective icosahedral particles containing a noncentered electron-dense nucleoid surrounded by an abnormal core shell of irregular thickness. The analysis of purified extracellular defective particles revealed that they contain the unprocessed pp220 and pp62 precursors, as well as the major DNA-binding nucleoid proteins p10 and pA104R. Altogether, these results indicate that the proteolytic processing of the polyproteins is not required for their incorporation into the assembling particles nor for the incorporation of the DNA-containing nucleoid. Instead, the ASFV proteinase is involved in a late maturational step that is essential for proper core assembly and infectivity.  相似文献   

5.
6.
We have identified an open reading frame (ORF), CP530R, within the EcoRI C' fragment of the African swine fever virus (ASFV) genome that encodes a polyprotein of 62 kDa (pp62). Antisera raised against different regions of ORF CP530R recognized a polypeptide of 62 kDa in ASFV-infected cells during the late phase of virus replication, after the onset of viral DNA synthesis. Pulse-chase experiments showed that polyprotein pp62 is posttranslationally processed to give rise to two proteins of 35 kDa (p35) and 15 kDa (p15). This proteolytic processing was found to take place at the consensus sequence Gly-Gly-X through an ordered cascade of proteolytic cleavages like that which also occurs with ASFV polyprotein pp220 (C. Simón-Mateo, G. Andrés, and E. Viñuela, EMBO J. 12:2977-2987, 1993). Immunofluorescence studies showed that polyprotein pp62 is localized in the viral factories. In addition, immunoprecipitation analysis of purified virus particles showed that mature products p35 and p15 are major structural proteins. According to these results, polyprotein processing represents an essential strategy for the maturation of ASFV structural proteins.  相似文献   

7.
C Simn-Mateo  G Andrs    E Viuela 《The EMBO journal》1993,12(7):2977-2987
This report shows that African swine fever virus (ASFV)--a large DNA-containing virus--synthesizes a polyprotein to produce several of its structural proteins. By immunoprecipitation analysis, we have found that ASFV polyprotein is a 220 kDa myristoylated polypeptide (pp220) which, after proteolytic processing, gives rise to four major structural proteins: p150, p37, p34 and p14. Processing of the ASFV polyprotein takes place at the consensus sequence Gly-Gly-X and occurs through an ordered cascade of proteolytic cleavages. So far, polyprotein processing as a mechanism of gene expression had been found only in positive-strand RNA viruses and retroviruses. According to the results presented here, ASFV is the first example of a DNA virus that synthesizes a polyprotein as a strategy of gene expression.  相似文献   

8.
The assembly of African swine fever virus (ASFV) at the cytoplasmic virus factories commences with the formation of precursor membranous structures, which are thought to be collapsed cisternal domains recruited from the surrounding endoplasmic reticulum (ER). This report analyzes the role in virus morphogenesis of the structural protein p54, a 25-kDa polypeptide encoded by the E183L gene that contains a putative transmembrane domain and localizes at the ER-derived envelope precursors. We show that protein p54 behaves in vitro and in infected cells as a type I membrane-anchored protein that forms disulfide-linked homodimers through its unique luminal cysteine. Moreover, p54 is targeted to the ER membranes when it is transiently expressed in transfected cells. Using a lethal conditional recombinant, vE183Li, we also demonstrate that the repression of p54 synthesis arrests virus morphogenesis at a very early stage, even prior to the formation of the precursor membranes. Under restrictive conditions, the virus factories appeared as discrete electron-lucent areas essentially free of viral structures. In contrast, outside the assembly sites, large amounts of aberrant zipper-like structures formed by the unprocessed core polyproteins pp220 and pp62 were produced in close association to ER cisternae. Altogether, these results indicate that the transmembrane structural protein p54 is critical for the recruitment and transformation of the ER membranes into the precursors of the viral envelope.  相似文献   

9.
The African swine fever (ASF) virus polyprotein pp220 is processed at Gly-Gly-X sites by a virally encoded SUMO-like protease to produce matrix proteins p150, p37, p34, and p14. Four Gly-Gly-X sites are used to produce the matrix proteins, but the polyprotein contains an additional 15 sites potentially recognized by the protease. This study shows that cleavage occurs at many, if not all, Gly-Gly-X sites, and at steady state, p150 and p34 are minor products of processing. Significantly, only the final structural proteins, p150 and p34, were found in mature virions, suggesting that there is a mechanism for excluding incorrectly processed forms. ASF virus is assembled on the cytoplasmic face of the endoplasmic reticulum, and the distribution of pp220 products between membranes and cytosol was studied. Incorrectly processed forms of p34 were recovered from both the cytosol and membrane fractions. Interestingly, p34 was only detected in the membrane fraction, and of the many processed forms bound to membranes, only p34 was protected from trypsin, suggesting envelopment. The majority of the incorrectly processed forms of p150 were recovered from the cytosol. Again, the correct product of processing, p150, was selectively recruited to membranes. Sucrose density centrifugation showed that membrane-associated forms of p34 and p150 assembled into large structures suggestive of a viral matrix, while cytosolic and/or incorrectly processed forms of pp220 did not. Taken together, these results suggest that association with cellular membranes is important for regulating the correct processing of pp220 and the packaging of matrix proteins into virions.  相似文献   

10.
African swine fever virus (ASFV) protein pB602L has been described as a molecular chaperone for the correct folding of the major capsid protein p72. We have studied the function of protein pB602L during the viral assembly process by using a recombinant ASFV, vB602Li, which inducibly expresses the gene coding for this protein. We show that protein pB602L is a late nonstructural protein, which, in contrast with protein p72, is excluded from the viral factory. Repression of protein pB602L synthesis inhibits the proteolytic processing of the two viral polyproteins pp220 and pp62 and leads to a decrease in the levels of protein p72 and a delocalization of the capsid protein pE120R. As shown by electron microscopy analysis of cells infected with the recombinant virus vB602Li, the viral assembly process is severely altered in the absence of protein pB602L, with the generation of aberrant "zipper-like" structures instead of icosahedral virus particles. These "zipper-like" structures are similar to those found in cells infected under restrictive conditions with the recombinant virus vA72 inducibly expressing protein p72. Immunoelectron microscopy studies show that the abnormal forms generated in the absence of protein pB602L contain the inner envelope protein p17 and the two polyproteins but lack the capsid proteins p72 and pE120R. These findings indicate that protein pB602L is essential for the assembly of the icosahedral capsid of the virus particle.  相似文献   

11.
The African swine fever virus (ASFV) protein pE248R, encoded by the gene E248R, is a late structural component of the virus particle. The protein contains intramolecular disulfide bonds and has been previously identified as a substrate of the ASFV-encoded redox system. Its amino acid sequence contains a putative myristoylation site and a hydrophobic transmembrane region near its carboxy terminus. We show here that the protein pE248R is myristoylated during infection and associates with the membrane fraction in infected cells, behaving as an integral membrane protein. Furthermore, the protein localizes at the inner envelope of the virus particles in the cytoplasmic factories. The function of the protein pE248R in ASFV replication was investigated by using a recombinant virus that inducibly expresses the gene E248R. Under repressive conditions, the ASFV polyproteins pp220 and pp62 are normally processed and virus particles with morphology indistinguishable from that of those produced in a wild-type infection or under permissive conditions are generated. Moreover, the mutant virus particles can exit the cell as does the parental virus. However, the infectivity of the pE248R-deficient virions was reduced at least 100-fold. An investigation of the defect of the mutant virus indicated that neither virus binding nor internalization was affected by the absence of the protein pE248R, but a cytopathic effect was not induced and early and late gene expression was impaired, indicating that the protein is required for some early postentry event.African swine fever virus (ASFV) is a large enveloped deoxyvirus that causes a severe hemorrhagic disease in domestic pigs (38). The ASFV genome is a double-stranded DNA molecule of 170 to 190 kbp that encodes more than 150 polypeptides (47). The icosahedral virus particle contains more than 50 polypeptides and is composed of several concentric domains, including an internal DNA-containing nucleoid surrounded by a protein layer designated the core shell, an inner envelope, and an outer icosahedral capsid (8, 10, 20). An additional membrane acquired by budding through the plasma membrane envelops the extracellular virion (14).The complex process of virus assembly occurs at specialized cytoplasmic sites, designated viral factories, and is initiated by the recruitment and modification of endoplasmic reticulum (ER) cisternae, which collapse to form the virus inner envelope, where the viral membrane proteins p54 and p17 are localized (8, 16, 21, 32, 37). This model, however, has been recently questioned, and based on data obtained using samples prepared by high-pressure freezing, it has been suggested that the inner envelope of ASFV consists of a single lipid bilayer (28). The icosahedral capsid layer, formed by protein p72, is then progressively assembled on one side of this envelope, while on the other side, the core shell domain, mainly constituted by the processing products of the polyproteins pp220 and pp62, is simultaneously constructed (6, 7, 20, 26). Finally, the viral DNA and nucleoproteins are packaged and condensed to form the nucleoid (15).The functions of several virus proteins in the formation of the different domains of the virus particle have been investigated in recent years. Thus, the structural proteins p72 and pB438L and the nonstructural pB602L protein, described as a chaperone of p72 (22), have been shown to be required for the construction of the icosahedral capsid (24, 25, 26), while the polyprotein pp220 is essential for the formation of the inner core, constituted by the nucleoid and core shell domains (7). It has also been demonstrated that the processing of the polyproteins pp220 and pp62 by the virus-encoded protease is necessary for the assembly of a proper core (5). In addition, it is known that the transmembrane protein p54 is critical for the recruitment of envelope precursors to assembly sites (35), although the mechanisms underlying the conversion of ER cisternae into functional viral envelopes are mostly unknown. Studies of other transmembrane proteins detected as structural components of the virus particle could shed light on this matter. Some of the virion membrane proteins could also play a role in virus entry, as has been described for the proteins p12, identified as a viral attachment protein (11, 19), and p54, also involved in binding of virus to target cells (27).The ASFV protein pE248R is a late structural component of the virus particle (33) that belongs to a class of myristoylated membrane proteins related to vaccinia virus L1 (30), one of the substrates of the pathway for the formation of disulfide bonds encoded by this virus (41). The protein pE248R also contains intramolecular disulfide bridges and has been recently identified as a possible final substrate of the ASFV-encoded redox system (33). In the present study, we investigated the membrane association, the localization in the virion, and the role of the protein pE248R in ASFV replication. Our results indicate that pE248R is a myristoylated integral membrane protein localized at the inner envelope of the virus particle. By using a conditional lethal ASFV mutant, vE248Ri, with an inducible copy of the gene E248R, we showed that the protein pE248R is required for virus infectivity and an early postentry event but not virus assembly.  相似文献   

12.
X Yu  X Yuan  Z Matsuda  T H Lee    M Essex 《Journal of virology》1992,66(8):4966-4971
Accumulating evidence suggests that the matrix (MA) protein of retroviruses plays a key role in virus assembly by directing the intracellular transport and membrane association of the Gag polyprotein. In this report, we show that the MA protein of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 is also critical for the incorporation of viral Env proteins into mature virions. Several deletions introduced in the MA domain (p17) of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 Gag polyprotein did not greatly affect the synthesis and processing of the Gag polyprotein or the formation of virions. Analysis of the viral proteins revealed normal levels of Gag and Pol proteins in these mutant virions, but the Env proteins, gp120 and gp41, were hardly detectable in the mutant virions. Our data suggest that an interaction between the viral Env protein and the MA domain of the Gag polyprotein is required for the selective incorporation of Env proteins during virus assembly. Such an interaction appears to be very sensitive to conformational changes in the MA domain, as five small deletions in two separate regions of p17 equally inhibited viral Env protein incorporation. Mutant viruses were not infectious in T cells. When mutant and wild-type DNAs were cotransfected into T cells, the replication of wild-type virus was also hindered. These results suggest that the incorporation of viral Env protein is a critical step for replication of retroviruses and can be a target for the design of antiviral strategies.  相似文献   

13.
During the cytoplasmic maturation of African swine fever virus (ASFV) within the viral factories, the DNA-containing core becomes wrapped by two shells, an inner lipid envelope and an outer icosahedral capsid. We have previously shown that the inner envelope is derived from precursor membrane-like structures on which the capsid layer is progressively assembled. In the present work, we analyzed the origin of these viral membranes and the mechanism of envelopment of ASFV. Electron microscopy studies on permeabilized infected cells revealed the presence of two tightly apposed membranes within the precursor membranous structures as well as polyhedral assembling particles. Both membranes could be detached after digestion of intracellular virions with proteinase K. Importantly, membrane loop structures were observed at the ends of open intermediates, which suggests that the inner envelope is derived from a membrane cisterna. Ultraestructural and immunocytochemical analyses showed a close association and even direct continuities between the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and assembling virus particles at the bordering areas of the viral factories. Such interactions become evident with an ASFV recombinant that inducibly expresses the major capsid protein p72. In the absence of the inducer, viral morphogenesis was arrested at a stage at which partially and fully collapsed ER cisternae enwrapped the core material. Together, these results indicate that ASFV, like the poxviruses, becomes engulfed by a two-membraned collapsed cisterna derived from the ER.  相似文献   

14.
The mechanisms involved in the construction of the icosahedral capsid of the African swine fever virus (ASFV) particle are not well understood at present. Capsid formation requires protein p72, the major capsid component, but other viral proteins are likely to play also a role in this process. We have examined the function of the ASFV structural protein pB438L, encoded by gene B438L, in virus morphogenesis. We show that protein pB438L associates with membranes during the infection, behaving as an integral membrane protein. Using a recombinant ASFV that inducibly expresses protein pB438L, we have determined that this structural protein is essential for the formation of infectious virus particles. In the absence of the protein, the virus assembly sites contain, instead of icosahedral particles, large aberrant tubular structures of viral origin as well as bilobulate forms that present morphological similarities with the tubules. The filamentous particles, which possess an aberrant core shell domain and an inner envelope, are covered by a capsid-like layer that, although containing the major capsid protein p72, does not acquire icosahedral morphology. This capsid, however, is to some extent functional, as the filamentous particles can move from the virus assembly sites to the plasma membrane and exit the cell by budding. The finding that, in the absence of protein pB438L, the viral particles formed have a tubular structure in which the icosahedral symmetry is lost supports a role for this protein in the construction or stabilization of the icosahedral vertices of the virus particle.  相似文献   

15.
The large cytoplasmic DNA viruses such as poxviruses, iridoviruses, and African swine fever virus (ASFV) assemble in discrete perinuclear foci called viral factories. Factories exclude host proteins, suggesting that they are novel subcellular structures induced by viruses. Novel perinuclear structures, called aggresomes are also formed by cells in response to misfolded protein (Johnston, J.A., C.L. Ward, and R.R. Kopito. 1998. J. Cell Biol. 143:1883--1898; García-Mata, R., Z. Beb?k, E.J. Sorscher, and E.S. Sztul. 1999. J. Cell Biol. 146:1239--1254). In this study, we have investigated whether aggresomes and viral factories are related structures. Aggresomes were compared with viral factories produced by ASFV. Aggresomes and viral factories were located close to the microtubule organizing center and required an intact microtubular network for assembly. Both structures caused rearrangement of intermediate filaments and the collapse of vimentin into characteristic cages, and both recruited mitochondria and cellular chaperones. Given that ASFV factories resemble aggresomes, it is possible that a cellular response originally designed to reduce the toxicity of misfolded proteins is exploited by cytoplasmic DNA viruses to concentrate structural proteins at virus assembly sites.  相似文献   

16.
This report examines the role of African swine fever virus (ASFV) structural protein pE120R in virus replication. Immunoelectron microscopy revealed that protein pE120R localizes at the surface of the intracellular virions. Consistent with this, coimmunoprecipitation assays showed that protein pE120R binds to the major capsid protein p72. Moreover, it was found that, in cells infected with an ASFV recombinant that inducibly expresses protein p72, the incorporation of pE120R into the virus particle is dependent on p72 expression. Protein pE120R was also studied using an ASFV recombinant in which E120R gene expression is regulated by the Escherichia coli lac repressor-operator system. In the absence of inducer, pE120R expression was reduced about 100-fold compared to that obtained with the parental virus or the recombinant virus grown under permissive conditions. One-step virus growth curves showed that, under conditions that repress pE120R expression, the titer of intracellular progeny was similar to the total virus yield obtained under permissive conditions, whereas the extracellular virus yield was about 100-fold lower than in control infections. Immunofluorescence and electron microscopy demonstrated that, under restrictive conditions, intracellular mature virions are properly assembled but remain confined to the replication areas. Altogether, these results indicate that pE120R is necessary for virus dissemination but not for virus infectivity. The data also suggest that protein pE120R might be involved in the microtubule-mediated transport of ASFV particles from the viral factories to the plasma membrane.  相似文献   

17.
African swine fever virus (ASFV) is a large DNA virus that assembles in perinuclear viral factories located close to the microtubule organizing center. In this study, we have investigated the mechanism by which ASFV reaches the cell surface from the site of assembly. Immunofluorescence microscopy revealed that at 16 h postinfection, mature virions were aligned along microtubules. Furthermore, virus movement to the cell periphery was inhibited when microtubules were depolymerized by nocodazole. In addition, ASFV infection resulted in the increased acetylation of microtubules as well as their protection against depolymerization by nocodazole. Immunofluorescence microscopy showed that conventional kinesin was recruited to virus factories and to a large fraction of virus particles in the cytoplasm. Consistent with a role for conventional kinesin during ASFV egress to the cell periphery, overexpression of the cargo-binding domain of the kinesin light chain severely inhibited the movement of particles to the plasma membrane. Based on our observations, we propose that ASFV is recognized as cargo by conventional kinesin and uses this plus-end microtubule motor to move from perinuclear assembly sites to the plasma membrane.  相似文献   

18.
Meng X  Embry A  Rose L  Yan B  Xu C  Xiang Y 《Journal of virology》2012,86(10):5603-5613
Poxvirus acquires its primary envelope through a process that is distinct from those of other enveloped viruses. The molecular mechanism of this process is poorly understood, but several poxvirus proteins essential for the process have been identified in studies of vaccinia virus (VACV), the prototypical poxvirus. Previously, we identified VACV A6 as an essential factor for virion morphogenesis by studying a temperature-sensitive mutant with a lesion in A6. Here, we further studied A6 by constructing and characterizing an inducible virus (iA6) that could more stringently repress A6 expression. When A6 expression was induced by the inducer isopropyl-β-D-thiogalactoside (IPTG), iA6 replicated normally, and membrane proteins of mature virions (MVs) predominantly localized in viral factories where virions were assembled. However, when A6 expression was repressed, electron microscopy of infected cells showed the accumulation of large viroplasm inclusions containing virion core proteins but no viral membranes. Immunofluorescence and cell fractionation studies showed that the major MV membrane proteins A13, A14, D8, and H3 did not localize to viral factories but instead accumulated in the secretory compartments, including the endoplasmic reticulum. Overall, our results show that A6 is an additional VACV protein that participates in an early step of virion membrane biogenesis. Furthermore, A6 is required for MV membrane protein localization to sites of virion assembly, suggesting that MV membrane proteins or precursors of MV membranes are trafficked to sites of virion assembly through an active, virus-mediated process that requires A6.  相似文献   

19.
Cauliflower mosaic virus (CaMV) forms two types of inclusion bodies within infected plant cells: numerous virus factories, which are the sites for viral replication and virion assembly, and a single transmission body (TB), which is specialized for virus transmission by aphid vectors. The TB reacts within seconds to aphid feeding on the host plant by total disruption and redistribution of its principal component, the viral transmission helper protein P2, onto microtubules throughout the cell. At the same time, virions also associate with microtubules. This redistribution of P2 and virions facilitates transmission and is reversible; the TB reforms within minutes after vector departure. Although some virions are present in the TB before disruption, their subsequent massive accumulation on the microtubule network suggests that they also are released from virus factories. Using drug treatments, mutant viruses, and exogenous supply of viral components to infected protoplasts, we show that virions can rapidly exit virus factories and, once in the cytoplasm, accumulate together with the helper protein P2 on the microtubule network. Moreover, we show that during reversion of this phenomenon, virions from the microtubule network can either be incorporated into the reverted TB or return to the virus factories. Our results suggest that CaMV factories are dynamic structures that participate in vector transmission by controlled release and uptake of virions during TB reaction.  相似文献   

20.
African swine fever virus (ASFV) is a large enveloped DNA virus that shares the striking icosahedral symmetry of iridoviruses. To understand the mechanism of assembly of ASFV, we have been studying the biosynthesis and subcellular distribution of p73, the major structural protein of ASFV. Sucrose density sedimentation of lysates prepared from infected cells showed that newly synthesized p73 was incorporated into a complex with a size of 150 to 250 kDa. p73 synthesized by in vitro translation migrated at 70 kDa, suggesting that cellular and/or viral proteins are required for the formation of the 150- to 250-kDa complex. During a 2-h chase, approximately 50% of the newly synthesized pool of p73 bound to the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). During this period, the membrane-bound pool of p73, but not the cytosolic pool, formed large complexes of approximately 50,000 kDa. The complexes were formed via assembly intermediates, and the entire membrane-associated pool of p73 was incorporated into the 50,000-kDa complex within 2 h. The 50,000-kDa complexes containing p73 were also detected in virions secreted from cells. Immunoprecipitation of sucrose gradients with sera taken from hyperimmune pigs suggested that p73 was the major component of the 50,000-kDa complex. It is possible, therefore, that the complex contains between 600 and 700 copies of p73. The kinetics of complex formation and envelopment of p73 were similar, and complex formation and envelopment were both reversibly inhibited by cycloheximide, suggesting a functional link between complex assembly and ASFV envelopment. A protease protection assay detected 50,000-kDa complexes on the inside and outside of the membranes forming the viral envelope. The identification of a complex containing p73 beneath the envelope of ASFV suggests that p73 may be a component of the inner core shell or matrix of ASFV. The outer pool may represent p73 within the outer capsid layer of the virus. In summary, the data suggest that the assembly of the inner core matrix and outer capsid of ASFV takes place on the ER membrane during envelopment and that these structures are not preassembled in the cytosol.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号