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1.
Structural proteins of simian virus 40 (SV40), Vp2 and Vp3 (Vp2/3) and Vp1, carry individual nuclear targeting signals, Vp3(198-206) (Vp2(316-324) and Vp1(1-8), respectively, which are encoded in different reading frames of an overlapping region of the genome. How signals coordinate nuclear targeting during virion morphogenesis was examined by using SV40 variants in which there is only one structural gene for Vp1 or Vp2/3, nuclear targeting-defective mutants thereof, Vp2/3(202T) and Vp1 delta N5, or nonoverlapping SV40 variants in which the genes for Vp1 and Vp2/3 are separated, and mutant derivatives of the gene carrying either one or both mutations. Nuclear targeting was assessed immunocytochemically following nuclear microinjection of the variant DNAs. When Vp2/3 and Vp1 mutants with defects in the nuclear targeting signals were expressed individually, the mutant proteins localized mostly to the cytoplasm. However, when mutant Vp2/3(202T) was coexpressed in the same cell along with wild-type Vp1, the mutant protein was effectively targeted to the nucleus. Likewise, the Vp1 delta N5 mutant protein was transported into the nucleus when wild-type Vp2/3 was expressed in the same cells. These results suggest that while Vp1 and Vp2/3 have independent nuclear targeting signals, additional signals, such as those defining protein-protein interactions, play a concerted role in nuclear localization along with the nuclear targeting signals of the individual proteins.  相似文献   

2.
We investigated the roles of simian virus 40 capsid proteins in the viral life cycle by analyzing point mutants in Vp1 and Vp2/3, as well as a deletion mutant lacking the Vp2/3 coding sequence. The Vp1 mutants (V243E and L245E) and the Vp2/3 mutants (F157E-I158E and P164R-G165E-G166R) were previously shown to be defective in Vp1-Vp2/3 interaction and to be noninfectious or poorly infectious, respectively. Here, we show that all these point mutants form stable particles following DNA transfection into cells. The Vp2/3-mutant particles contained very low levels of Vp2/3, whereas the Vp1 mutant particles contained no detectable Vp2/3. As expected, the deletion mutant also formed particles that were noninfectious. We further characterized the two Vp1 point mutants and the deletion mutant. All three mutant particles comprised Vp1 and histone-associated viral DNA, and all were able to enter cells. However, the mutant complexes failed to associate with host importins (owing to the loss of the Vp2/3 nuclear localization signal), and the mutant viral DNAs prematurely dissociated from the Vp1s, suggesting that the nucleocapsids did not enter the nucleus. Consistently, all three mutant particles failed to express large T antigen. Together, our results demonstrate unequivocally that Vp2/3 is dispensable for the formation of nucleocapsids. Further, the nucleocapsids' ability to enter cells implies that Vp1 contains the major determinants for cell attachment and entry. We propose that the major role of Vp2/3 in infectivity is to mediate the nuclear entry of viral DNA.  相似文献   

3.
Expression of the hepatitis B virus core antigen (HBcAg) in mouse NIH 3T3 fibroblasts has been shown previously (A. McLachlan et al., J. Virol. 61:683-692, 1987) to result in the nuclear localization of this polypeptide. Since the carboxyl terminus of HBcAg contains four clusters of arginine residues which resemble nuclear localization sequences identified in other nuclear proteins, a series of carboxyl-terminus-truncated HBcAg polypeptides were expressed in mouse fibroblasts to examine the role of these sequences in the cellular localization of HBcAg. By immunofluorescence and cell fractionation analysis, it was demonstrated that regions of the HBcAg polypeptide including the most carboxyl-terminal (cluster 1) and amino-terminal (cluster 4) clusters of arginine residues represent distinct and independent nuclear localization sequences for this polypeptide. Substitution of a threonine residue for the second arginine residue in cluster 4 inactivates the nuclear localization signal in this region of the HBcAg polypeptide, demonstrating the importance of this residue to this signal sequence. However, HBcAg fails to accumulate in the nucleus only when both nuclear localization signal sequences are simultaneously deleted or disrupted by mutation. The possible significance of the nuclear localization sequences identified in the HBcAg polypeptide is discussed in the context of the role of the nucleocapsid in the hepatitis B virus life cycle.  相似文献   

4.
A DNA-binding domain (DBD) was identified on simian virus 40 (SV40) major capsid protein Vp1, and the domain's function in the SV40 life cycle was examined. The DBD was mapped by assaying various recombinant Vp1 proteins for DNA binding in vitro. The carboxy-terminal 58-residue truncated Vp1DeltaC58 pentamer bound DNA with a K(d) of 1.8 x 10(-9) M in terms of the protein pentamer, while full-length Vp1 and carboxy-terminal-17-truncated Vp1DeltaC17 had comparable apparent K(d)s of 5.3 x 10(-9) to 7.3 x 10(-9) M in terms of the protein monomers. Previously identified on Vp1 was a nuclear localization signal (NLS) consisting of two N-terminal basic clusters, NLS1 (4-KRK-6) and NLS2 (15-KKPK-18). Vp1DeltaC58 pentamers harboring multiple-point mutations in NLS1 (NLSm1), NLS2 (NLSm2), or both basic clusters (NLSm1. 2) had progressively decreased DNA-binding activity, down to 0.7% of the Vp1DeltaC58 level for NLSm1. 2 Vp1. These data, along with those of N-terminally truncated proteins, placed the DBD in overlap with the bipartite NLS. The role of the Vp1 DBD during infection was investigated by taking advantage of NLS phenotypic complementation (N. Ishii, A. Nakanishi, M. Yamada, M. H. Macalalad, and H. Kasamatsu, J. Virol. 68:8209-8216, 1994), in which an NLS-defective Vp1 could localize to the nucleus in the presence of wild-type minor capsid proteins Vp2 and Vp3. This approach made it possible to dissect the role of the bifunctional Vp1 NLS-DBD in virion assembly in the nucleus. Mutants of the viable nonoverlapping SV40 (NO-SV40) DNA NLSm1, NLSm2, and NLSm1. 2 replicated normally following transfection into host cells and produced capsid proteins at normal levels. All mutant Vp1s were able to interact with Vp3 in vitro. The mutants NLSm1 and NLSm1. 2 were nonviable, and the mutant Vp1s unexpectedly failed to localize to the nucleus though Vp2 and Vp3 did, suggesting that the mutated NLS1 acted as a dominant signal for the cytoplasmic localization of Vp1. Mutant NLSm2, for which the mutant Vp1's nuclear localization defect was complemented by Vp2 and Vp3, displayed a 5,000-fold reduced viability. Analysis of NLSm2 DNA-transfected cell lysate revealed a 10-fold reduction in the level of DNase I-protected viral DNA, and yet virion-like particles were found among the DNase I-resistant material. Collective results support a role for Vp1 NLS2-DBD2 in the assembly of virion particles. The results also suggest that this determinant can function in the infection of new cells.  相似文献   

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For nuclear entry of large nucleoprotein complexes, it is thought that one key nuclear localization signal (NLS) of a protein component becomes exposed to mediate importin recognition. We show that the nuclear entry of simian virus 40 involves a dynamic interplay between two distinct interiorly situated capsid NLSs, the Vp1 NLS and the Vp3 NLS, and the selective exposure and importin recognition of the Vp3 NLS. The Vp3 NLS-null mutants assembled normally into virion-like particles (VLP) in mutant DNA-transfected cells. When used to infect a new host, the null VLP entered the cell normally but was impaired in viral DNA nuclear entry due to a lack of recognition by the importin alpha 2/beta heterodimer, leading to reduced viability. Both Vp3 and Vp1 NLSs directed importin interaction in vitro, but the Vp1 NLS, which overlaps the Vp1 DNA binding domain, did not bind importins in the presence of DNA. The results suggest that certain canonical NLSs within a nucleoprotein complex, such as the Vp1 NLS, can be masked from functioning by binding to the nucleic acid component and that the availability of an NLS that is not masked and can become exposed for importin binding, such as the Vp3 NLS, is a general feature of the nuclear entry of the nucleoprotein complexes, including those of other animal viruses.  相似文献   

8.
Transient disulfide bonding occurs during the intracellular folding and pentamerization of simian virus 40 (SV40) major capsid protein Vp1 (P. P. Li, A. Nakanishi, S. W. Clark, and H. Kasamatsu, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 99:1353-1358, 2002). We investigated the requirement for Vp1 cysteine pairs during SV40 infection. Our analysis identified three Vp1 double-cysteine mutant combinations that abolished viability as assayed by plaque formation. Mutating the Cys49-Cys87 pair or the Cys87-Cys254 pair led to ineffective nuclear localization and diminished accumulation of the mutant Vp1s, and the defect extended in a dominant-negative manner to the wild-type minor capsid proteins Vp2/3 and an affinity-tagged recombinant Vp1 expressed in the same cells. Mutating the Cys87-Cys207 pair preserved the nuclear localization and normal accumulation of the capsid proteins but diminished the production of virus-like particles. Our results are consistent with a role for Cys49, Cys87, and Cys254 in the folding and cytoplasmic-nuclear trafficking of Vp1 and with a role for Cys87 and Cys207 in the assembly of infectious particles. These findings suggest that transient disulfide bond formation between certain Vp1 cysteine residues functions at two stages of SV40 infection: during Vp1 folding and oligomerization in the cytoplasm and during virion assembly in the nucleus.  相似文献   

9.
A steady-state level of about 240 nmol/mg (dry wt) occurs during lysine transport in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. No subsequent efflux of the accumulated amino acid was detected. Two transport systems mediate lysine transport, a high-affinity, lysine-specific system and an arginine-lysine system for which lysine exhibits a lower affinity. Preloading with lysine, arginine, glutamic acid, or aspartic acid inhibited lysine transport activity; preloading with glutamine, glycine, methionine, phenylalanine, or valine had little effect; however, preloading with histidine stimulated lysine transport activity. These preloading effects correlated with fluctuations in the intracellular lysine and/or arginine pool: lysine transport activity was inhibited when increases in the lysine and/or arginine pool occurred and was stimulated when decreases in the lysine and/or arginine pool occurred. After addition of lysine to a growing culture, lysine transport activity was inhibited more than threefold in one-third of the doubling time of the culture. These results indicate that the lysine-specific and arginine-lysine transport systems are regulated by feedback inhibition that may be mediated by intracellular lysine and arginine.  相似文献   

10.
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