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Expression of most viral genes during productive infection by herpes simplex virus is regulated by the viral protein ICP4 (also called IE175 or Vmw175). The N-terminal portion of ICP4 contains well-defined transactivation, DNA binding, and dimerization domains that contribute to promoter regulation. The C-terminal half of ICP4 contributes to the activity of ICP4, but the functional motifs have not been well mapped. To localize functional motifs in the C-terminal half of ICP4, we have compared the relative specific activities of ICP4 variants in transient-transfection assays. Deletion of the C-terminal 56 residues reduces the specific activity more than 10-fold. Mutational analysis identified three consecutive residues (1252 to 1254) that are conserved in ICP4 orthologs and are essential for full activity, especially in the context of ICP4 variants with a deletion in the N-terminal transactivation domain. Recombinant viruses that encode variants of ICP4 with mutations in the N-terminal transactivation domain and/or the extreme C terminus were constructed. The phenotypes of these recombinant viruses support the hypothesis that efficient promoter activation by ICP4 requires motifs at both the N and C termini. The data suggest that the C terminus of ICP4 functions not as an independent transactivation domain but as an enhancer of the ICP4 N-terminal transactivation domain. The data provide further support for the hypothesis that some ICP4 motifs required for promoter activation are not required for promoter repression and suggest that ICP4 utilizes different cellular factors for activation or repression of viral promoters.  相似文献   

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Previous studies have established that G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) are composed of independent folding domains. Based on this findings we attempted to rescue the function of clinically relevant missense mutations (R137H, S167L, and R181C) within the N-terminal domain of the V2 vasopressin receptor (V2-R), by coexpressing mutated full-length (Y280C) and C-terminally truncated (E242X) receptor constructs in COS-7 cells. Coimmunoprecipitation and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay studies demonstrated a specific association of E242X with full-length V2-Rs even in the presence of missense mutations. Systematic analysis of the structural requirements for the observed receptor/fragment association showed that N-terminal fragments containing at least transmembrane regions 1-3 interact with the full-length V2-R. Despite this specific interaction, no functional reconstitution was achieved for mutant V2-Rs following coexpression with E242X and Y280C. However, functional activity of R137H and R181C upon coexpression with E242X was regained by mutational disruption of the extracellular disulfide bond, which is highly conserved among GPCRs. Our data with the V2-R are consistent with a structural model in which class I GPCRs form contact oligomers by lateral interaction rather than by a domain-swapping mechanism.  相似文献   

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Mutational hot spots in the human p53 gene are well established in tumors in the human population and are frequently negative prognosticators of the clinical outcome. We previously developed a mouse model of skin cancer with mutations in the xeroderma pigmentosum group C gene (Xpc). UVB radiation-induced skin cancer is significantly enhanced in these mice when they also carry a mutation in one copy of the Trp53 gene (Xpc-/-Trp53+/-). Skin tumors in these mice often contain inactivating mutations in the remaining Trp53 allele and we have previously reported a novel mutational hot spot at a non-dipyrimidine site (ACG) in codon 122 of the Trp53 gene in the tumors. Here we show that this mutation is not a hot spot in Xpa or Csa mutant mice. Furthermore, the mutation in codon T122 can be identified in mouse skin DNA from (Xpc-/-Trp53+/-) mice as early as 2 weeks after exposure to UVB radiation, well before histological evidence of dysplastic or neoplastic changes. Since this mutational hot spot is not at a dipyrimidine site and is apparently Xpc-specific, we suggest that some form of non-dipyrimidine base damage is normally repaired in a manner that is distinct from conventional nucleotide excision repair, but that requires XPC protein.  相似文献   

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CCAAT/enhancer-binding protein epsilon (C/EBPepsilon) plays a critical role in terminal myeloid differentiation. Differentiation is an integrated process of cell cycle arrest, morphological change, functional maturation, and apoptosis. However, the molecular networks underlying these events in C/EBPepsilon-induced differentiation remain poorly understood. To reveal these mechanisms, we performed a detailed molecular analysis of C/EBPepsilon-induced differentiation using an inducible form of C/EBPepsilon. The activation of C/EBPepsilon induced growth arrest, morphological differentiation, the expression of CD11b and secondary granule proteins, and apoptosis in myeloid cell lines. Unlike C/EBPalpha, C/EBPepsilon dramatically up-regulated p27 with a concomitant down-regulation of cdk4/6 and cyclin D2/A/E. Moreover, the anti-apoptotic proteins Bcl-2 and Bcl-x were down-regulated, whereas pro-apoptotic protein Bax remained unchanged. Using a variety of mutants, we revealed that these events were all regulated by the N-terminal activation domain of C/EBPepsilon. Interestingly, some of the differentiation processes such as the induction of secondary granule protein genes were clearly inhibited by c-Myc; however, inhibition of apoptosis by Bcl-x did not affect the entire differentiation processes. These data indicate the N terminus of C/EBPepsilon to be solely responsible for most aspects of myeloid differentiation, and these events were differentially affected by c-Myc.  相似文献   

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In the major pathway for protein disulfide-bond formation in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), oxidizing equivalents flow from the conserved ER-membrane protein Ero1p to secretory proteins via protein disulfide isomerase (PDI). Herein, a mutational analysis of the yeast ERO1 gene identifies two pairs of conserved cysteines likely to form redox-active disulfide bonds in Ero1p. Cys100, Cys105, Cys352, and Cys355 of Ero1p are important for oxidative protein folding and for cell viability, whereas Cys90, Cys208, and Cys349 are dispensable for these functions. Substitution of Cys100 with alanine impedes the capture of Ero1p-Pdi1p mixed-disulfide complexes from yeast, and also blocks oxidation of Pdi1p in vivo. Cys352 and Cys355 are required to maintain the fully oxidized redox state of Ero1p, and also play an auxiliary role in thiol-disulfide exchange with Pdi1p. These results suggest a model for the function of Ero1p wherein Cys100 and Cys105 form a redox-active disulfide bond that engages directly in thiol-disulfide exchange with ER oxidoreductases. The Cys352-Cys355 disulfide could then serve to reoxidize the Cys100-Cys105 cysteine pair, possibly through an intramolecular thiol-disulfide exchange reaction.  相似文献   

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Metabotropic glutamate receptor (mGluR), a prototypical family 3 G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR), has served as a model for studying GPCR dimerization, and growing evidence has revealed that a glutamate-induced dimeric rearrangement promotes activation of the receptor. However, structural information of the seven-transmembrane domain is severely limited, in contrast to the well studied family 1 GPCRs including rhodopsins and adrenergic receptors. Homology modeling of mGluR8 transmembrane domain with rhodopsin as a template suggested the presence of a conserved water-mediated hydrogen-bonding network between helices VI and VII, which presumably constrains the receptor in an inactive conformation. We therefore conducted a mutational analysis to assess structural similarities between mGluR and family 1 GPCRs. Mutational experiments confirmed that the disruption of the hydrogen-bonding network by T789Y6.43 mutation induced high constitutive activity. Unexpectedly, this high constitutive activity was suppressed by glutamate, the natural agonist ligand, indicating that glutamate acts as a partial inverse agonist to this mutant. Fluorescence energy transfer analysis of T789Y6.43 suggested that the glutamate-induced reduction of the activity originated not from the dimeric rearrangement but from conformational changes within each protomer. Double mutational analysis showed that the specific interaction between Tyr-7896.43 and Gly-8317.45 in T789Y6.43 mutant was important for this phenotype. Therefore, the present study is consistent with the notion that the metabotropic glutamate receptor shares a common activation mechanism with family 1 GPCRs, where rearrangement between helices VI and VII causes the active state formation.  相似文献   

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