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1.
Simian virus 40 chromatin interaction with the capsid proteins   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
It has been established that both in virions and in infected cells, the cellular core histones fold the SV40 DNA into nucleosomes to form the SV40 chromosome or chromatin. We and others have begun to examine how the capsid proteins assemble the SV40 chromatin into virions and to investigate whether these proteins interact with the encapsidated chromatin. To follow the pathway of virus assembly, we have analyzed the nucleoproteins which accumulate in cells infected with the SV40 mutants temperature-sensitive in assembly: tsC, tsBC, and tsB. (The temperature-sensitivity of these mutants result from alterations in the amino acid sequence of the major capsid protein VP1). We have found that mutants belonging to the same class accumulate similar types of nucleoproteins at the nonpermissive temperature (40 degrees C) and thus, share characteristics in common. For example, the tsC mutants accumulate only the 75 S chromatin. Both tsBC and tsB mutants produce in addition to chromatin, nucleoprotein complexes which sediment broadly from 100-160 S and contain all the three capsid proteins VP1, VP2, and VP3. These nucleoproteins can be distinguished morphologically, however. Under the electron microscope, the tsBC 100-160 S nucleoproteins appear as chromatin to which a small cluster of the capsid proteins is attached; the tsB nucleoproteins appear as partially assembled virions. In addition, we find that the 220 S virions are assembled in cells coinfected with tsB and tsC mutants at 40 degrees C, in agreement with genetic analysis. Our observations favor the hypothesis that the VP1 protein contains three discrete domains. We speculate that each domain may play a specific function in SV40 assembly. To gain more insight into VP1-VP1 interactions, we have examined the nucleoproteins which result from treatment of the mature wild-type virions with increasing concentrations of the reducing agent DTT. In the presence of as low a concentration of DTT as 0.1 mM, the virion shell can be penetrated by micrococcal nuclease, which then cleaves the viral DNA. This result indicates that some of the disulfide bonds bridging the VP1 proteins are on the virion surface.  相似文献   

2.
S C Ng  M Bina 《Journal of virology》1984,50(2):471-477
We examined the morphology, protein composition, and stability of the nucleoprotein complexes assembled in cells infected with simian virus 40 mutants belonging to the BC complementation group (tsBC11, tsBC208, tsBC214, tsB216, tsBC217, tsBC248, tsBC223, and tsBC274). We found that the 220S virions were not assembled in tsBC-infected cells under restrictive conditions. This block in assembly resulted in the accumulation of 75S chromatin in tsBC11-infected cells, as previously observed by Garber et al. (E.A. Garber, M.M. Seidman, and A.J. Levine, Virology 107:389-401, 1980). In cells infected with any other mutant listed above, the block in assembly resulted in the accumulation of 75S chromatin as well as nucleoprotein complexes sedimenting from 90 to 140S. Biochemical analysis revealed that these latter complexes contained the capsid proteins in addition to simian virus 40 DNA and the cellular core histones. Electron microscopic analysis clearly showed the association of the capsid proteins with the viral chromatin. Our results suggest that these proteins interact with simian virus 40 chromatin in the course of virion maturation and may thus play an active role in controlling simian virus 40 functions.  相似文献   

3.
The structures of DNAs present in various intracellular forms of simian virus 40 (SV40) nucleoprotein complexes were analyzed by micrococcal nuclease digestion. The results showed that the 70S SV40 chromatin was completely sensitive to nuclease digestion, whereas CsCl gradient-purified mature virion was completely resistant. Virion assembly intermediates with different degrees of virion maturation showed intermediate resistance, and three products were found: nucleosomal DNA fragments, representing the fraction of intermediates that were sensitive to nuclease; linear SV40 genome-sized DNA, representing the more mature intermediates that contained one or limited defects in the capsid shell; and supercoiled SV40, which was derived from mature virions. These digestion products, however, remained associated with capsid shells after nuclease digestion. These results were consistent with the model in which maturation of the SV40 virion is achieved through the organization of capsid proteins that accumulate around SV40 chromatin. Mild digestion of SV40 nucleoprotein complexes with micrococcal nuclease revealed the difference in nucleosome repeat length between SV40 chromatin and virion assembly intermediates. A novel DNA fragment of about 75 nucleotides was observed early in nuclease digestion.  相似文献   

4.
The simian virus 40 (SV40) T antigen host range mutants dl1066 and dl1140 display a postreplicative block to plaque formation which suggests a novel role for T antigen late in the viral life cycle. The host range mutants dl1066 and dl1140 are able to grow in and plaque on BSC but not on CV1 monkey kidney cells, a normally permissive host. Previous work showed that in CV1 cells infected with dl1066 and dl1140, levels of viral DNA replication and of late capsid protein accumulation were only slightly reduced and the failure to accumulate agnoprotein was not likely to be the major factor responsible for the mutants' growth defect. Here we show that the host range mutants are defective in the assembly of viral particles. SV40 assembly proceeds as the progressive conversion of 75S viral chromatin complexes to 200S-240S assembled virions. When virus-infected cell extracts are separated on 5 to 40% sucrose gradients, wild-type extracts show the greatest accumulation of viral late protein in the 200S-240S fractions corresponding to the assembled virus peak and lesser amounts in the 75S-150S fractions corresponding to immature assembly intermediates. The host range mutants dl1066 and dl1140 grown in nonpermissive CV1 cells, however, failed to assemble any appreciable amounts of mature 200S-240S virions and accumulate 75S intermediates, whereas in permissive BSC cells, levels of assembly were more slightly reduced than those of the wild type. Analysis of the protein composition of gradient fractions suggests that SV40 assembly proceeds by a mechanism similar to that proposed for polyomavirus and suggests that the host range blockage may result from a failure of such mutants to add VP1 to 75S assembly intermediates.  相似文献   

5.
Simian virus 40 maturation in cells harboring mutants deleted in the agnogene   总被引:13,自引:0,他引:13  
The predominant leader region of the late 16 S mRNAs of simian virus 40 encodes a histone-like, 61-amino acid, DNA-binding protein called the agnoprotein or LP1. To test the hypothesis that this protein facilitates assembly of viral minichromosomes into virions, we have studied the synthesis of virions in cells infected with mutants deleted in this region of the SV40 genome. We found that 220 S mature virions, indistinguishable from those of wild type, were produced in cells infected with these mutants. As in wild-type-infected cells, no assembly intermediates other than 75 S chromatin were observed. However, data obtained from both steady-state and pulse-chase labeling experiments indicated that cells infected with agnogene deletion mutants produced virions more slowly than cells infected with wild-type virus. Taken together with data showing that similar levels of virion proteins were present in the wild-type- and mutant-infected cells, these findings strongly suggest that LP1 plays a role in expediting virion assembly.  相似文献   

6.
Nucleoprotein complexes (core particles) released from simian virus 40 (SV40) virions were compared with similar complexes (SV40 chromatin) extracted from nuclei of infected cells. Core particles were sensitive to cleavage by DNase I at about the same enzyme concentration required to cleave SV40 chromatin. DNase I preferentially cleaved SV40 chromatin adjacent to the viral origin of replication; however, cleavage of core particles occurred with much less selectivity. The difference between these nucleoproteins was not due to a structural alteration induced by the virion disruption procedure, since SV40 chromatin retained its pattern of DNase I-sensitive sites when subjected top this treatment. On the other hand, core particles did not acquire the nuclease-sensitive feature typical of SV40 chromatin when they were exposed to infected cell nuclei and the Triton X-100-EDTA extraction procedure. Hence, the nuclease-sensitive feature was lost or altered during the normal process of virion assembly and maturation.  相似文献   

7.
SV40 assembles in the nucleus by addition of capsid proteins to the minichromosome. The VP15VP2/3 capsomer is composed of a pentamer of the major protein VP1 complexed with a monomer of a minor protein, VP2 or VP3. In the capsid, the capsomers are bound together via their flexible carboxy-terminal arms. Our previous studies suggested that the capsomers are recruited to the packaging signal ses via avid interaction with Sp1. During assembly Sp1 is displaced, allowing chromatin compaction. Here we investigated the interactions in vitro of VP1(5)VP2/3 capsomers with the entire SV40 genome, using mutant VP1 deleted in the carboxy-arm that cannot assemble, but retains DNA-binding capacity. EM revealed that VP1(5)VP2/3 complexes bind non-specifically at random locations around the DNA. Sp1 was absent from mature virions. The findings suggest that multiple capsomers attach simultaneously to the viral genome, increasing their local concentration, facilitating rapid, concerted assembly reaction and removal of Sp1.  相似文献   

8.
We have used immunofluorescence in parallel with transmission and scanning electron microscopy to characterize the unusual cytoplasmic and nucleolar accumulation of Simian virus 40 (SV40) virion protein (C antigen) at restrictive temperatures (39 to 41 C) in monkey cells infected with a temperature-sensitive mutant of SV40 defective in virion assembly, tsB11. Cytoplasmic and nucleolar accumulation of C antigen did not occur in wild-type-infected cells at any temperature. Wild-type- and tsBll-infected cells were not distinguishable at 33 C by immunofluorescence or electron microscopy. Temperature-shift experiments using metabolic inhibitors of DNA (cytosine arabinonucleoside, 20 mug/ml), RNA (actinomycin D, 5 mug/ml), and protein synthesis (cycloheximide, 2 x 10(-4) to 10 x 10(-4) M) were used to investigate the requirements for ongoing DNA, RNA, and protein synthesis in the distribution of virion protein between the nucleus, nucleolus, and cytoplasm. The transport of C antigen from the nucleolus and cytoplasm into the nucleus was complete after a temperature shift-down (41 and 39 to 33 C). Limited virus particle formation occurred after the shift-down in the presence of actinomycin D and cycloheximide, indicating some of the 39 to 41 C synthesized virion protein could be used for capsid assembly at 33 C in the absence of further virion protein synthesis. Nucleolar and cytoplasmic accumulations of C antigen occurred in the absence of drugs after a shift-up (33 to 39 C and 41 C) indicating a continuous requirement for the tsB11 mutant function. Furthermore, the virion protein synthesized at 33 C remained confined to the nucleus when the cells were shifted to 39 and 41 C in the presence of actinomycin D or cycloheximide. In the presence of cytosine arabinonucleoside, however, the virion protein accumulated in large aggregates in the nucleus and nucleolus after the shift-up, but did not migrate into the cytoplasm as it did in drug-free tsB11-infected control cells. Colchicine (10(-3) M) had no effect on the abnormal accumulation of C antigen during shift-up or shift-down experiments suggesting that microtubular transport plays little if any role in the abnormal transport of tsB11 virion protein from cytoplasm to nucleus. Although virus particles were never observed by electron microscopy and V antigen was not detected by immunofluorescence at 39 or 41 C in tsB11-infected cells, dense amorphous accumulations were formed in the nucleoli and cytoplasm. We suggest that the tsB11 function is continuously required for the normal transport of SV40 virion protein between the cytoplasm, nucleolus, and nucleus and for the assembly of capsids and virions. Several possible mechanisms for the altered tsB11 function or protein are discussed. One of the virion proteins may also be involved in some presently undetermined nucleolar function during SV40 productive infection.  相似文献   

9.
Summary SV40 viruses bearing mutations at the carboxy-terminus of large T antigen exhibit a host-range phenotype: such viruses are able to grow in BSC monkey kidney cells at 37° C, but give at least 10 000-fold lower yields than wild type virus in BSC cells at 32° C or in CV1 monkey kidney cells at either temperature. The block to infection in the nonpermissive cell type occurs after the onset of viral DNA replication. Infectious progeny virions are produced at very low efficiency. Although capsid proteins are synthesized at decreased levels, this does not account for the magnitude of the defect. Presumably some step of virion assembly or maturation is affected in these mutants. We have previously reported that the viral agnogene product, a protein throught to be involved in viral assembly or release, fails to accumulate in CV1 cells infected with host-range mutants. In polyoma virus the middle T antigen plays a role in virion maturation by influencing the phosphorylation of capsid proteins. In this communication we show that host-range mutants fail to undergo productive infection of CV1 cells expressing middle T antigen. These mutants do form plaques on an agnoprotein-expressing cell line. However, the agnoprotein does not seem to act by correcting the mutational block but rather increases the efficiency of plaque formation. This work was supported by grants CA40586 and BRSG 2S07RR07084-23 to J. M. P. and grant CA33079 to L. T., from the National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD.  相似文献   

10.
JC virus (JCV) belongs to the polyomavirus family of double-stranded DNA viruses and causes progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy in humans. JCV encodes early proteins (large T antigen, small T antigen, and T' antigen) and four late proteins (agnoprotein, and three viral capsid proteins, VP1, VP2, and VP3). In the current study, a novel function for JCV agnoprotein in the morphogenesis of JC virion particles was identified. It was found that mature virions of agnoprotein-negative JCV are irregularly shaped. Sucrose gradient sedimentation and cesium chloride gradient ultracentrifugation analyses revealed that the particles of virus lacking agnoprotein assemble into irregularly sized virions, and that agnoprotein alters the efficiency of formation of VP1 virus-like particles. An in vitro binding assay and immunocytochemistry revealed that agnoprotein binds to glutathione S-transferase fusion proteins of VP1 and that some fractions of agnoprotein colocalize with VP1 in the nucleus. In addition, gel filtration analysis of formation of VP1-pentamers revealed that agnoprotein enhances formation of these pentamers by interacting with VP1. The present findings suggest that JCV agnoprotein plays a role, similar to that of SV40 agnoprotein, in facilitating virion assembly.  相似文献   

11.
The modification patterns of histones present in various forms of intracellular simian virus 40 nucleoprotein complexes were analyzed by acetic acid-urea-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The results showed that different viral nucleoprotein complexes contain different histone patterns. Simian virus 40 chromatin, which contains the activities for the synthesis of viral RNA and DNA, exhibits a histone modification pattern similar to that of the host chromatin. However, virion assembly intermediates and mature virions contain highly modified histones. Pulse-chase experiments with [3H]lysine showed that the newly incorporated histones in the virion assembly intermediates were already highly modified. The majority of in vivo acetylation activity of histones occurred on the 70S simian virus 40 chromatin as analyzed by pulse-labeling with [3H]acetate. These results and our previous analysis of the virion assembly pathway suggest that three stages are involved in the packaging of simian virus 40 chromatin into the mature virion: (i) modification of histones, (ii) accumulation of capsid protein around the chromatin with highly modified histones, and (iii) organization of capsid proteins into salt-resistant shells. The role of histone modification in virion assembly is discussed.  相似文献   

12.
The simian virus 40 virion assembly process was studied with pulse-labeling kinetics of virion proteins, CsCl gradient analysis, electron microscopy, and low-salt gel electrophoresis. The results obtained are consistent with the model of gradual addition and organization of capsid proteins around simian virus 40 chromatin. Empty virions, as observed in the CsCl gradient by previous workers, were found to be the dissociation product of immature virus. Histone H1 was found in simian virus 40 chromatin and virion assembly intermediates but not in the mature virion banding at 1.34 g/ml in the CsCl gradient.  相似文献   

13.
The surface of polyomavirus virions is composed of pentameric knobs of the major capsid protein, VP1. In previously studied polyomavirus species, such as SV40, two interior capsid proteins, VP2 and VP3, emerge from the virion to play important roles during the infectious entry process. Translation of the VP3 protein initiates at a highly conserved Met-Ala-Leu motif within the VP2 open reading frame. Phylogenetic analyses indicate that Merkel cell polyomavirus (MCV or MCPyV) is a member of a divergent clade of polyomaviruses that lack the conserved VP3 N-terminal motif. Consistent with this observation, we show that VP3 is not detectable in MCV-infected cells, VP3 is not found in native MCV virions, and mutation of possible alternative VP3-initiating methionine codons did not significantly affect MCV infectivity in culture. In contrast, VP2 knockout resulted in a >100-fold decrease in native MCV infectivity, despite normal virion assembly, viral DNA packaging, and cell attachment. Although pseudovirus-based experiments confirmed that VP2 plays an essential role for infection of some cell lines, other cell lines were readily transduced by pseudovirions lacking VP2. In cell lines where VP2 was needed for efficient infectious entry, the presence of a conserved myristoyl modification on the N-terminus of VP2 was important for its function. The results show that a single minor capsid protein, VP2, facilitates a post-attachment stage of MCV infectious entry into some, but not all, cell types.  相似文献   

14.
Passage of the simian virus 40 (SV40) temperature-sensitive (ts) mutant tsD202 at the permissive temperature in each of three permissive lines of SV40-transformed monkey CV1 cells resulted in the emergence of temperature-insensitive virus, which plated like wild-type SV40 at the restrictive temperature on normal CV1 cells. In independent experiments, the amount of temperature-insensitive virus that appeared after passage on transformed cells was from 10(3)- to 10(6)-fold greater than the amount of ts-revertant virus that appeared after an equal number of passages in nontransformed CV1 cells. The virus rescued by passage on transformed cells bred true upon sequential plaque purification, plated on normal CV1 cells with single-hit kinetics at the restrictive temperature, and displayed no selective growth advantage on transformed cells compared to non-transformed cells. Hence, the reversion of the ts phenotype is neither due to complementation effects nor to the selection of preexisting revertants, which grow better on transformed cells. In the accompanying article (T. Vogel et al., J. Virol. 24:541-550, 1977), we present biochemical evidence that the rescue of tsD202 mediated by passage on transformed cells is due to recombination with the resident SV40 genome. Parallel experiments in which tsA, tsB, and tsC SV40 mutants were passaged in each of the three permissive lines of SV40-transformed monkey cells resulted in either only borderline levels of rescue (tsA mutants) or no detectable rescue (tsB and tsC mutants). Evidence is presented that the resident SV40 genome of the transformed monkey lines is itself a late ts mutant, and we suggest that this accounts for the lack of detectable rescue of the tsB and tsC mutants. We furthermore suggest that the borderline level of rescue observed with two tsA mutants is related to a previous finding (Y. Gluzman et al., J. Virol. 22:256-266, 1977) which indicated that the resident SV40 genome of the permissive transformed monkey cells is defective in the function required for initiation of viral DNA synthesis.  相似文献   

15.
16.
17.
The number and molecular weight of the structural polypeptides of highly purified simian virus 40 (SV40) were determined by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Six different polypeptides were found, two of which (VP1 and VP2) comprise the bulk of the viral capsid proteins. The pattern of protein synthesis in productively infected CV-1 cells was studied by sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Identification of virus-induced proteins in the infected CV-1 cells was achieved in double-labeling experiments by electrophoresis with purified labeled SV40 capsid proteins. Four of these proteins (VP1 and VP4) could be classified as components of the virion because their synthesis occurred after the onset of viral deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) replication and because they were inhibited by arabinofuranosylcytosine (ara-C). Appearance of two other virus-induced proteins was not prevented by ara-C; one of them did not comigrate in the electrophoresis with purified virion polypeptides, and both could be detected before the onset of viral DNA synthesis. These latter two proteins were classified on the basis of these criteria as nonvirion capsid proteins (NCVP1 and NCVP2).  相似文献   

18.
The structural proteins of polyoma virions and capsids were analyzed by isoelectric focusing and sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Polyoma virion VP1 was found to be composed of six distinct species which had pI's between pH 6.75 and 5.75. Polyoma capsid VP1 was found to contain four species with pI's between pH 6.60 and 5.75. The different forms of virion and capsid VP1 appeared to be generated by modifications (phosphorylation and acetylation) of the initial translation product. The most basic of the virion VP1 species (pI, pH 6.75) was absent in capsids and was found to be exclusively associated with the viral nucleoprotein complex. Three of the virion VP1 species and three of the capsid VP1 species were found in capsomere preparations enriched for hexon subunits. Two VP1 species were specifically immune precipitated from virions with hemagglutination-inhibiting antibodies. These two VP1 species were common to both virions and capsids. Polyoma virions, but not capsids, possessed a single VP1 species which was immune precipitated with neutralizing antibodies. Both virion and capsid VP2 were found to have pI's of approximately pH 5.50. Virion VP3 had a pI of approximately pH 7.00, whereas capsid VP3 had a pI of approximately pH 6.50.  相似文献   

19.
The SV40 capsid is composed primarily of 72 pentamers of the VP1 major capsid protein. Although the capsid also contains the minor capsid protein VP2 and its amino-terminally truncated form VP3, their roles in capsid assembly remain unknown. An in vitro assembly system was used to investigate the role of VP2 in the assembly of recombinant VP1 pentamers. Under physiological salt and pH conditions, VP1 alone remained dissociated, and at pH 5.0, it assembled into tubular structures. A stoichiometric amount of VP2 allowed the assembly of VP1 pentamers into spherical particles in a pH range of 7.0 to 4.0. Electron microscopy observation, sucrose gradient sedimentation analysis, and antibody accessibility tests showed that VP2 is incorporated into VP1 particles. The functional domains of VP2 important for VP1 binding and for enhancing VP1 assembly were further explored with a series of VP2 deletion mutants. VP3 also enhanced VP1 assembly, and a region common to VP2 and VP3 (amino acids 119-272) was required to promote VP1 pentamer assembly. These results are relevant for controlling recombinant capsid formation in vitro, which is potentially useful for the in vitro development of SV40 virus vectors.  相似文献   

20.
S A Sedman  P J Good    J E Mertz 《Journal of virology》1989,63(9):3884-3893
Numerous viral and cellular RNAs are polycistronic, including several of the late mRNA species encoded by simian virus 40 (SV40). The functionally bicistronic major late 16S and functionally tricistronic major late 19S mRNA species of SV40 contain the leader-encoded open reading frames (ORFs) LP1, located upstream of the sequence encoding the virion protein VP1, and LP1*, located upstream of the sequence encoding the virion proteins VP2 and VP3. To determine how these leader ORFs affect synthesis of the virion proteins, monkey cells were transfected with viral mutants in which either the leader-encoded translation initiation signal was mutated or the length and overlap of the leader ORF relative to the ORFs encoding the virion proteins were altered. The levels of initiation at and leaky scanning past each initiation signal were determined directly by quantitative analysis of the viral proteins synthesized in cells transfected with these mutants. Novel findings from these experiments included the following. (i) At least one-third of ribosomes bypass the leader-encoded translation initiation signal, GCCAUGG, on the SV40 major late 16S mRNA. (ii) At least 20% of ribosomes bypass even the consensus translation initiation signal, ACCAUGG, when it is situated 10 bases from the 5' end on the major late 16S mRNA. (iii)O The presence of the leader ORF on the bicistronic 16S mRNA species reduces VP1 synthesis threefold relative to synthesis from a similar RNA that lacks it. (iv) At least half and possibly all VP1 synthesized from the bicistronic 16S mRNA species is made by a leaky scanning mechanism. (v) LP1 and VP1 are synthesized from the bicistronic 16S mRNA species at approximately equal molar ratios. (vi) Approximately half of the VP1 synthesized in SV40-infected cells is synthesized from the minor, monocistronic 16S mRNA even though it accounts for only 20% of the 16S mRNA present. (vii) The presence and site of termination of translation of the leader ORF on the late 19S mRNAs affect the relative as well as absolute rates of synthesis of VP2 and VP3.  相似文献   

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