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1.
The human protein C precursor undergoes extensive co- and posttranslational modification during its biosynthesis in the liver. These modifications include glycosylation, gamma-carboxylation, and beta-hydroxylation of specific amino acids and endoproteolytic processing to remove the pre- and propeptides as well as the pair of basic amino acids which connect the light and heavy chains in the precursor. Previous studies with a recombinant mammalian expression system have indicated that the endopeptidase in several mammalian cell types which recognizes and cleaves this dibasic site has a substrate specificity for sites which also include a basic amino acid in the -4 position (Foster et al., 1990). Since the human protein C precursor has His154 in the -4 position, it is poorly and incompletely cleaved in BHK and several other mammalian cell lines and also apparently secreted from the liver as a mixed population of mature two-chain and precursor one-chain molecules. In the present study, a mammalian expression system has been used to study the effect of coexpressing the protein C precursor together with the yeast Kex2 endopeptidase which is known to recognize and process dibasic pairs within peptide precursors in yeast. Coexpression of the KEX2 gene resulted in complete conversion of the protein C precursor to the mature two-chain form. Amino-terminal sequencing of the cleavage products has indicated that the cleavage occurs in the correct location and that this site is preferentially recognized by the yeast endopeptidase within the context of the mammalian cell secretory pathway.  相似文献   

2.
Many small peptide hormones are synthesized as larger precursors in which the mature hormone sequence is flanked by pairs of basic amino acids. These precursors often undergo extensive post-translational modifications; a critical step in this process is proteolytic excision of the hormone at the paired basic residues. To determine the role of paired basic amino acids as recognition signals for cleavage by processing enzymes, we investigated the heterologous expression of prosomatostatin (the pro-somatotropin release inhibiting factor (pro-SRIF). Pro-SRIF is one of the simplest peptide hormone precursors, possessing a single copy of the 14-residue SRIF peptide at its carboxyl terminus preceded by the least common pair of basic amino acids, Arg-Lys. Employing site-directed mutagenesis, we altered the paired basic cleavage site to the more common Arg-Arg and Lys-Arg residues. The native and mutated precursors were expressed in rat pituitary GH3 cells and mouse 3T3 cells using a retroviral vector. Alteration of the paired basic residues had no effect on the specificity of proteolytic cleavage as both the native and mutant precursors were processed with 70 to 80% efficiency in GH3 cells. Surprisingly, when the mutant pro-SRIFs were expressed in 3T3 cells, which do not process the native precursor, the Arg-Arg and Lys-Arg precursors were processed with 16 and 20% efficiency, respectively. The role of an acidic compartment in mediating pro-SRIF cleavage was also investigated using low concentrations of the lysosomotrophic drug Chloroquine. Twenty-five microM Chlorquine completely inhibited pro-SRIF cleavage and intracellular storage; the unprocessed precursor was secreted into the medium. We conclude that (i) exposure to an acidic compartment is required for pro-SRIF maturation, and (ii) the conformation of the processing site, rather than the composition of the basic amino acids, defines cleavage specificity by prohormone processing enzymes.  相似文献   

3.
Many peptide hormones are produced from larger precursors by endoproteolysis at pairs of basic amino acids (e.g. Lys-Arg and Arg-Arg) within the regulated secretory pathway in endocrine cells. However, many other secretory and membrane proteins appear to be produced from precursors through cleavage at multiple, rather than paired, basic residues within the constitutive secretory pathway in non-endocrine cells. By surveying various precursors processed constitutively, we noticed that most of them have the consensus sequence, Arg-X-Lys/Arg-Arg (RXK/RR), at the cleavage site. When expressed in endocrine and non-endocrine cells, a precursor with the RXKR sequence was cleaved in both types of cells, whereas that with the Lys-Arg pair was cleaved only in the endocrine cells. When the RXKR precursor was coexpressed with furin and PC3, both of which are mammalian homologues of the yeast precursor-processing endoprotease Kex2, in non-endocrine cells, enhancement of the precursor cleavage by furin but not by PC3 was observed. By contrast, when the Lys-Arg precursor was coexpressed with the two mammalian proteases in endocrine cells with no endogenous processing activity at dibasic sites, it was cleaved only by PC3. These results indicate that the basic pair and the RXK/RR sequence are the signals for precursor cleavages catalyzed by PC3 within the regulated secretory pathway and by furin within the constitutive pathway, respectively.  相似文献   

4.
Although pairs of basic amino acids are common endoproteolytic sites in prohormones, the enzymes responsible for these cleavages have not yet been characterized. To investigate the specificity of these endoproteases, cDNAs encoding pro-neuropeptide Y (pro-NPY) containing all four pairs of basic amino acids were expressed in AtT-20 cells. Pro-NPY was selected as a model substrate because it undergoes a single cleavage at the sequence -Lys-Arg- during posttranslational processing. AtT-20 cells, a mouse anterior pituitary corticotrope line, were selected because they synthesize pro-adrenocorticotropic hormone (pro-ACTH)/endorphin and cleave a well characterized subset of the eight pairs of basic amino acids in the precursor. Altered cDNAs encoding pro-NPY with -Arg-Arg-, -Arg-Lys-, or Lys-Lys- at the cleavage site were used to generate stable cell lines. The production of NPY and the carboxyl-terminal peptide was studied using sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, gel filtration, reversed-phase high performance liquid chromatography, ion-exchange high performance liquid chromatography, tryptic peptide mapping, and microsequencing. Direct amino acid labeling confirmed the identity of the pair of basic amino acids at the cleavage site. Even when the four pairs of basic amino acids were presented in the same structural context, the rate, extent, and type of cleavage was substrate-specific. Pro-NPY(-Arg-Arg-) was cleaved at a rate similar to that observed for the wild-type pro-NPY(-Lys-Arg-). In contrast, pro-NPY(-Arg-Lys-) was cleaved at a much lower rate, and pro-NPY (-Lys-Lys-) was cleaved very poorly. Following endoproteolytic cleavage, the pair of basic amino acids present did not alter the production of mature NPY with a COOH-terminal Tyr-NH2. While two of the three mutant pro-NPY molecules were processed to wild-type carboxyl-terminal peptide, the carboxyl-terminal peptide derived from pro-NPY(-Arg-Lys-) contained an amino-terminal lysine residue, indicating that biosynthetic endoproteolysis occurred in the middle or at the amino terminus of the pair of basic amino acid residues at the cleavage site. Expression of wild-type or mutant pro-NPY inhibited cleavages within the endogenous pro-ACTH/endorphin; poorly cleaved pro-NPY mutants (Lys in the second position of the cleavage site) were the most potent inhibitors of pro-ACTH/endorphin cleavage.  相似文献   

5.
6.
Arenaviruses share a common strategy for glycoprotein synthesis and processing in which a mannose-rich precursor glycoprotein, termed GP-C in lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV), is posttranslationally processed by oligosaccharide trimming and proteolytic cleavage to yield two structural glycoproteins, GP-1 and GP-2. Mapping the orientation and proteolytic cleavage site(s) in such polyproteins has traditionally required direct protein sequencing of one or more of the cleaved products. This technique requires rigorous purification of the products for sequencing and may be complicated by amino-terminal modifications which interfere with sequence analysis. We used an alternative approach in which synthetic peptides corresponding to sequences bracketing a potential protease cleavage site were used to raise antisera which define the boundaries of the cleaved products. We found that cleavage of LCMV GP-C to yield GP-1 and GP-2 occurs within a 9-amino-acid stretch of GP-C which contains a paired basic amino acid group -Arg-Arg-, corresponding to amino acids 262 to 263 in the LCMV GP-C sequence. By comparison with the predicted amino acid sequences of a second LCMV strain, LCMV-WE, as well as with the deduced amino acid sequences of the New World arenavirus Pichinde and the Old World virus Lassa, we observed similar conservation of paired basic and flanking amino acid sequences among these viruses.  相似文献   

7.
We demonstrate that the precursor of the major light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b binding protein (LHCP of Photosystem II), encoded by a Type I gene, contains distinct determinants for processing at two sites during in vitro import into the chloroplast. Using precursors from both pea and wheat, it is shown that primary site processing, and release of a approximately 26-kD peptide, depends on an amino-proximal basic residue. Substitution of an arginine at position -4 resulted in an 80% reduction in processing, with the concomitant accumulation of a high molecular weight intermediate. Cleavage occurred normally when arginine was changed to lysine. The hypothesis that a basic residue is a general requirement for transit peptide removal was tested. We find that the precursors for the small subunit of Rubisco and Rubisco activase do not require a basic residue within seven amino acids of the cleavage site for maturation. In the wheat LHCP precursor, determinants for efficient cleavage at a secondary site were identified carboxy to the primary site, beyond what is traditionally called the transit peptide, within the sequence ala-lys-ala-lys (residues 38-41). Introduction of this sequence into the pea precursor, which has the residues thr-thr-lys-lys in the corresponding position, converted it to a substrate with an efficiently recognized secondary site. Our results indicate that two different forms of LHCP can be produced with distinct NH2-termini by selective cleavage of a single precursor polypeptide.  相似文献   

8.
E O Freed  D J Myers    R Risser 《Journal of virology》1989,63(11):4670-4675
The envelope glycoproteins of the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) type 1 are synthesized as a precursor molecule, gp160, which is cleaved to generate the two mature envelope glycoproteins, gp120 and gp41. The cleavage reaction, which is mediated by a host protease, occurs at a sequence highly conserved in retroviral envelope glycoprotein precursors. We have investigated the sequence requirements for this cleavage reaction by introducing four single-amino-acid changes into the glutamic acid-lysine-arginine sequence immediately amino terminal to the site of cleavage. We have also examined the effects of these mutations on the syncytium formation induced by HIV envelope glycoproteins. Our results indicate that a glutamic acid to glycine change at gp120 amino acid 516, a lysine to isoleucine change at amino acid 517, and an arginine to lysine change at amino acid 518 affect neither gp160 cleavage nor syncytium formation. The results obtained with the arginine to lysine change at amino acid 518 differ significantly from the results obtained with the same mutation at the envelope precursor cleavage site of a murine leukemia virus (E. O. Freed, and R. Risser, J. Virol. 61:2852-2856, 1987). An arginine to threonine mutation at gp120 amino acid 518, the terminal residue of gp120, abolishes both gp160 cleavage and syncytium formation. These findings demonstrate that despite its highly conserved nature, the basic pair of amino acids at the site of gp160 cleavage is not absolutely required for proper envelope glycoprotein processing. This report also supports the idea that cleavage of gp160 is required for activation of the HIV envelope fusion function.  相似文献   

9.
10.
Most peptide hormones and neurotransmitters are synthesized as larger precursor proteins, which are post-translationally processed to mature bioactive products. An early event in prohormone maturation is endoproteolytic cleavage, occurring usually at pairs of basic amino acids (e.g. Lys-Arg). Since many of the characteristics of a prohormone endoprotease are unknown, distinguishing these enzymes from other cellular proteases in vitro has been difficult. In this report, the substrate specificity of a model prohormone processing system, the insulinoma cell line Rin m5F, was characterized in vivo to establish a set of criteria by which putative proinsulin endoproteases may be assessed. To determine the role of composition of the paired basic amino acid site in directing cleavage, a series of mutant prohormones containing altered cleavage sites was constructed and expressed in Rin m5F cells. Proopiomelanocortin (POMC) was used as a substrate since this prohormone was previously shown to be processed by these cells. To control for positional effects, all four permutations of lysine and arginine (Lys-Arg, Arg-Arg, Arg-Lys, and Lys-Lys) were introduced at both the efficiently processed cleavage site separating the ACTH and beta-lipotropin (beta-LPH) domains of POMC and at the inefficiently processed site in the beta-endorphin sequence near the COOH-terminus of the precursor. His-Arg and Met-Arg sites were also introduced at the ACTH/beta-LPH junction to assess the requirement for paired lysines and arginines. Identification of POMC-derived peptides demonstrated efficient processing of Lys-Arg and inefficient processing of Lys-Lys and Arg-Lys sites at both positions in the prohormone. The Arg-Arg sequence, however, was processed in a position-dependent manner, being efficiently cleaved between ACTH and beta-LPH but only about 50% processed within beta-endorphin. His-Arg was not cleaved in Rin m5F cells, although surprisingly Met-Arg was partially processed. These results indicate a strict preference of the insulinoma prohormone endoprotease(s) for paired basic amino acids ending in arginine, but that processing efficiency of some sequences may be modulated by location within the precursor molecule.  相似文献   

11.
Site-specific mutagenesis of cDNA clones expressing a poliovirus proteinase   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8  
The cleavage of poliovirus precursor polypeptides occurs at specific amino acid pairs that are recognized by viral proteinases. Most of the polio-specific cleavages occur at glutamine-glycine (Q-G) pairs that are recognized by the viral-encoded proteinase 3C (formerly called P3-7c). In order to carry out a defined molecular genetic study of the enzymatic activity of protein 3C, we have made cDNA clones of the poliovirus genome. The cDNA region corresponding to protein 3C was inserted into an inducible bacterial expression vector. This recombinant plasmid (called pIN-III-C3-7c) utilizes the bacterial lipoprotein promoter to direct the synthesis of a precursor polypeptide that contains the amino acid sequence of protein 3C as well as the amino- and carboxy-terminal Q-G cleavage signals. These signals have been previously shown to allow autocatalytic production of protein 3C in bacteria transformed with plasmid pIN-III-C3-7c. We have taken advantage of the autocatalytic cleavage of 3C in a bacterial expression system to study the effects of site-specific mutagenesis on its proteolytic activity. One mutation that we have introduced into the cDNA region encoding 3C is a single amino acid insertion near the carboxy-terminal Q-G cleavage site. The mutant recombinant plasmid (designated pIN-III-C3-mu 10) directs the synthesis of a bacterial-polio precursor polypeptide that is like the wild-type construct (pIN-III-C3-7c). However, unlike the wild-type precursor, the mutant precursor cannot undergo autocatalytic cleavage to generate the mature proteinase 3C. Rather, the precursor is able to carry out cleavage at the amino-terminal Q-G site but not at the carboxy-terminal site. Thus, we have generated an altered poliovirus proteinase that is still able to carry out at least part of its cleavage activities but is unable to be a suitable substrate for self-cleavage at its carboxy-terminal Q-G pair.  相似文献   

12.
Mitochondrial uptake of the cytoplasmically synthesized precursor of the mammalian enzyme ornithine transcarbamylase is mediated by an N-terminal leader sequence of 32 amino acids. In the mitochondrial matrix, the precursor form is processed to the mature subunit by proteolytic removal of this pre-sequence and in the enzyme from rat liver it has been suggested that this occurs in a two-step process which involves an intermediate cleavage at residue 24. We show that deletion of residues 20-26 spanning this intermediate cleavage site prevents correct processing to the mature subunit but it does not prevent mitochondrial targeting and internalization or assembly of the incorrectly processed product into a catalytically active enzyme. The incorrectly processed enzyme, which is larger than the normal mature enzyme, is nevertheless more susceptible to proteolytic degradation in permanently transfected human cells than the correctly processed enzyme.  相似文献   

13.
The assembly of infectious poliovirus virions requires a proteolytic cleavage between an asparagine-serine amino acid pair (the maturation cleavage site) in VP0 after encapsidation of the genomic RNA. In this study, we have investigated the effects that mutations in the maturation cleavage site have on P1 polyprotein processing, assembly of subviral intermediates, and encapsidation of the viral genomic RNA. We have made mutations in the maturation cleavage site which change the asparagine-serine amino acid pair to either glutamine-glycine or threonine-serine. The mutations were created by site-directed mutagenesis of P1 cDNAs which were recombined into wild-type vaccinia virus to generate recombinant vaccinia viruses. The P1 polyproteins expressed from the recombinant vaccinia viruses were analyzed for proteolytic processing and assembly defects in cells coinfected with a recombinant vaccinia virus (VV-P3) that expresses the poliovirus 3CD protease. A trans complementation system using a defective poliovirus genome was utilized to assess the capacity of the mutant P1 proteins to encapsidate genomic RNA (D. C. Ansardi, D. C. Porter, and C. D. Morrow, J. Virol. 67:3684-3690, 1993). The mutant P1 proteins containing the glutamine-glycine amino acid pair (VP4-QG) and the threonine-serine pair (VP4-TS) were processed by 3CD provided in trans from VV-P3. The processed capsid proteins VP0, VP3, and VP1 derived from the mutant precursor VP4-QG were unstable and failed to assemble into subviral structures in cells coinfected with VV-P3. However, the capsid proteins derived from VP4-QG did assemble into empty-capsid-like structures in the presence of the defective poliovirus genome. In contrast, the capsid proteins derived from processing of the VP4-TS mutant assembled into subviral intermediates both in the presence and in the absence of the defective genome RNA. By a sedimentation analysis, we determined that the capsid proteins derived from the VP4-TS precursor encapsidated the defective genome RNA. However, the cleavage of VP0 to VP4 and VP2 was delayed, resulting in the accumulation of provirions. The maturation cleavage of the VP0 protein containing the VP4-TS mutation was accelerated by incubation of the provirions at 37 degrees C. The results of these studies demonstrate that mutations in the maturation cleavage site have profound effects on the subsequent capability of the capsid proteins to assemble and provide evidence for the existence of the provirion as an assembly intermediate.  相似文献   

14.
Extracellular Phr pentapeptides produced by gram-positive, spore-forming bacteria regulate processes during the transition from exponential- to stationary-phase growth. Phr pentapeptides are produced by cleavage of their precursor proteins. We determined the residues that direct this cleavage for the Bacillus subtilis Phr peptide, CSF, which is derived from the C terminus of PhrC. Strains expressing PhrC with substitutions in residues -1 to -5 relative to the cleavage site had a defect in CSF production. The mutant PhrC proteins retained a functional signal sequence for secretion, as assessed by secretion of PhrC-PhoA fusions. To determine whether the substitutions directly affected cleavage of PhrC to CSF, we tested cleavage of synthetic pro-CSF peptides that corresponded to the C terminus of PhrC and had an amino acid substitution at the -2, -3, or -4 position. The mutant pro-CSF peptides were cleaved less efficiently to CSF than the wild-type pro-CSF peptide whether they were incubated with whole cells, cell wall material, or the processing protease subtilisin or Vpr. To further define the range of amino acids that support CSF production, the amino acid at the -4 position of PhrC was replaced by the 19 canonical amino acids. Only four substitutions resulted in a >2-fold defect in CSF production, indicating that this position is relatively immune to mutational perturbations. These data revealed residues that direct cleavage of CSF and laid the groundwork for testing whether other Phr peptides are processed in a similar manner.  相似文献   

15.
The processing of poliovirus precursor polypeptides provides a valuable system in which to study the recognition and interaction of a proteolytic enzyme with its substrates. Processing of the poliovirus polyprotein includes cleavage between 9 of 13 available glutamineglycine (Q-G) pairs by the activity of a virally encoded proteinase, 3C. In this study, we assess the importance of primary, secondary, and tertiary structural determinants in the cleavage at two Q-G pairs in the capsid protein precursor, P1. Employing site-directed mutagenesis of cDNA copies of poliovirus RNA, we have made specific alterations in regions of the P1 capsid precursor and have assayed the effect of these alterations on proteinase cleavage at the two Q-G pairs. We have also introduced additional Q-G pairs into P1 and demonstrated that the proteinase can recognize some of the inserted Q-G pairs as cleavage sites. By correlating the predicted three-dimensional structures and the processing phenotypes of several altered P1 precursors, we are able to rank the importance of determinants required for P1 processing. While a Q-G pair appears to be the primary determinant in proteinase recognition, the tertiary location of a Q-G pair in the precursor either allows or prevents processing at that pair. Our results also suggest that the proper folding of at least two of the three P1 beta-barrel structures is required for efficient proteinase cleavage at Q-G pairs.  相似文献   

16.
The parathyroid hormone-related protein (PTHrP) precursor requires proteolytic processing to generate PTHrP-related peptide products that possess regulatory functions in the control of PTH-like (parathyroid-like) actions and cell growth, calcium transport, and osteoclast activity. Biologically active peptide domains within the PTHrP precursor are typically flanked at their NH2- and COOH-termini by basic residue cleavage sites consisting of multibasic, dibasic, and monobasic residues. These basic residues are predicted to serve as proteolytic cleavage sites for converting the PTHrP precursor into active peptide products. The coexpression of the prohormone processing enzyme PTP ("prohormone thiol protease") in PTHrP-containing lung cancer cells, and the lack of PTP in cell lines that contain little PTHrP, implicate PTP as a candidate processing enzyme for proPTHrP. Therefore, in this study, PTP cleavage of recombinant proPTHrP(1-141) precursor was evaluated by MALDI mass spectrometry to identify peptide products and cleavage sites. PTP cleaved the PTHrP precursor at the predicted basic residue cleavage sites to generate biologically active PTHrP-related peptides that correspond to the NH2-terminal domain (residues 1-37) that possesses PTH-like and growth regulatory activities, the mid-region domain (residues 38-93) that regulates calcium transport, and the COOH-terminal domain (residues 102-141) that modulates osteoclast activity. Lack of cleavage at other types of amino acids demonstrated the specificity of PTP processing at basic residue cleavage sites. Overall, these results demonstrate the ability of PTP to cleave the PTHrP precursor at multibasic, dibasic, and monobasic residue cleavage sites to generate active PTHrP-related peptides. The presence of PTP immunoreactivity in PTHrP-containing lung cancer cells suggests PTP as a candidate processing enzyme for the PTHrP precursor.  相似文献   

17.
18.
Amino acid analogs, which can be incorporated into nascent peptide chains were used in cultures of endocrine cells from canine pancreas to study the effect on processing of the metabolically labeled precursor for pancreatic polypeptide. Analogs for basic amino acids, canavanine, and aminoethylcysteine prevented the di-basic processing of the prohormone. The polar leucine analog, beta-hydroxyleucine, only partially perturbed the function and cleavage of the signal peptide but efficiently and unexpectedly blocked the dibasic cleavage of the prohormone. Other nonbasic amino acid analogs, beta-hydroxynorvaline and azetidine-2-carboxylic acid, which only could be incorporated into the prohormone at a distance from the processing site, also prevented dibasic cleavage of the prohormone. Although there are no phenylalanine residues in the prohormone, analogs for this amino acid, fluoro-phenylalanine and particularly phenylserine, could also block the processing of the prohormone at the dibasic site. This effect was prevented by addition of a small quantity of phenylalanine. It is concluded that amino acid analogs can interfere with precursor processing through altering both the primary and the secondary structure of the precursor but also through incorporation into cosynthesized protein(s) which are necessary for the precursor processing.  相似文献   

19.
Biologically active peptide hormones are synthesized from larger precursor proteins by a variety of post-translational processing reactions. To characterize these processing reactions further we have expressed preprogastrin in two endocrine cell lines and examined the molecular determinants involved in endoproteolysis at dibasic cleavage sites. The Gly93-Arg94-Arg95 carboxyl-terminal processing site of progastrin must be processed sequentially by an endoprotease, a carboxypeptidase, and an amidating enzyme to produce bioactive gastrin. For these studies the dibasic Arg94-Arg95 residues that serve as signals for the initiation of this processing cascade were mutated to Lys94-Arg95, Arg94-Lys95, and Lys94-Lys95. In the GH3 cells the Lys94-Arg95 mutation slightly diminished synthesis of carboxyl-terminally amidated gastrin, whereas in the MTC 6-23 cells this mutation had no effect on amidated gastrin synthesis. In contrast, both Arg94-Lys95 and Lys94-Lys95 mutations resulted in significantly diminished production of amidated gastrin in both cell lines. A specific hierarchy of preferred cleavage signals at this progastrin processing site was demonstrated in both cell lines, indicating that cellular dibasic endoproteases have stringent substrate specificities. Progastrins with the Lys94-Arg95 mutation in GH3 cells also demonstrated diminished processing at the Lys74-Lys75 dibasic site, thus single amino acid changes at one processing site may alter cleavage at distant sites. These studies provide insight into the post-translational processing and biological activation of not only gastrin but other peptide hormones as well.  相似文献   

20.
Membrane fusion caused by measles virus (MV) is a function of the fusion (F) protein. This process is essential for penetration into the host cell and subsequent initiation of the virus replicative cycle. The biological activity of the MV F protein is generated by endoproteolytic cleavage of a precursor protein (F0) into a large F1 subunit and a smaller F2 subunit held together by disulfide bonds. The cleavage site consists of a cluster of five basic amino acids (amino acids 108 to 112) within the predicted primary structure of the F protein. To investigate the role of the arginine residue at the carboxy terminus of the F2 subunit (arginine 112), site-directed mutagenesis was used to construct a cleavage mutant of the MV F protein in which this arginine residue was changed to a leucine residue. The mutated F gene, encoding four out of the five basic amino acids at the cleavage site, was inserted into the genome of vaccinia virus. The resulting recombinant virus was used to study expression of the mutant F protein in infected cells. Analysis of the Leu-112 mutant protein made in infected cells demonstrated that this single-amino-acid substitution resulted in a reduced rate of transport of the mutant protein to the cell surface, despite its efficient cleavage to yield F1 and F2 subunits. However, the electrophoretic mobilities of the Leu-112 polypeptides suggested that the protein was cleaved incorrectly. This aberrant cleavage appears to have abolished the ability of the F protein to cause syncytium formation. The data indicate that the arginine 112 residue is critical for the correct proteolytic cleavage that is required for the membrane fusion activity of the MV F protein.  相似文献   

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