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1.
The mature human immunodeficiency virus type 1 proteinase (PR; 11 kDa) can cleave all interdomain junctions in the Gag and Gag-Pol polyprotein precursors. To determine the activity of the enzyme in its precursor form, we blocked release of mature PR from a truncated Gag-Pol polyprotein by introducing mutations into the N-terminal Phe-Pro cleavage site of the PR domain. The mutant precursor autoprocessed efficiently upon expression in Escherichia coli. No detectable mature PR was released; however, several PR-related products ranging in size from approximately 14 to 18 kDa accumulated. Products of the same size were generated when mutant precursors were digested with wild-type PR. Thus, PR can utilize cleavage sites in the region upstream of the PR domain, resulting in the formation of extended PR species. On the basis of active-site titration, the PR species generated from mutated precursor exhibited wild-type activity on peptide substrates. However, the proteolytic activity of these extended enzymes on polyprotein substrates provided exogenously was low when equimolar amounts of extended and wild-type PR proteins were compared. Mammalian cells expressing the mutated precursor produced predominantly precursor and considerably reduced amounts of mature products. Released particles consisted mostly of uncleaved or partially cleaved polyproteins. Our results suggest that precursor forms of PR can autoprocess but are less efficient in processing of the Gag precursor for formation of mature virus particles.  相似文献   

2.
M Kotler  G Arad    S H Hughes 《Journal of virology》1992,66(11):6781-6783
We have introduced mutations into the region of the genome of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) that encodes the cleavage sites between the viral protease (PR) and the adjacent upstream region of the polyprotein precursor. Segments containing these mutations were introduced into plasmids, and the retroviral proteins were expressed in Escherichia coli. The mutations prevented cleavage between the PR and the adjacent polypeptide; however, other PR cleavage sites in the polyprotein were cleaved normally, showing that the release of free PR is not a prerequisite for the appropriate processing of HIV-1 precursors.  相似文献   

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4.
Infectious retrovirus particles are derived from structural polyproteins which are cleaved by the viral proteinase (PR) during virion morphogenesis. Besides cleaving viral polyproteins, which is essential for infectivity, PR of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) also cleaves cellular proteins and PR expression causes a pronounced cytotoxic effect. Retroviral PRs are aspartic proteases and contain two copies of the triplet Asp-Thr-Gly in the active center with the threonine adjacent to the catalytic aspartic acid presumed to have an important structural role. We have changed this threonine in HIV type 1 PR to a serine. The purified mutant enzyme had an approximately 5- to 10-fold lower activity against HIV type 1 polyprotein and peptide substrates compared with the wild-type enzyme. It did not induce toxicity on bacterial expression and yielded significantly reduced cleavage of cytoskeletal proteins in vitro. Cleavage of vimentin in mutant-infected T-cell lines was also markedly reduced. Mutant virus did, however, elicit productive infection of several T-cell lines and of primary human lymphocytes with no significant difference in polyprotein cleavage and with similar infection kinetics and titer compared with wild-type virus. The discrepancy between reduced processing in vitro and normal virion maturation can be explained by the observation that reduced activity was due to an increase in Km which may not be relevant at the high substrate concentration in the virus particle. This mutation enables us therefore to dissociate the essential function of PR in viral maturation from its cytotoxic effect.  相似文献   

5.
Y Xiang  T W Ridky  N K Krishna    J Leis 《Journal of virology》1997,71(3):2083-2091
Proteolytic processing of the Rous sarcoma virus (RSV) Gag precursor was altered in vivo through the introduction of amino acid substitutions into either the polyprotein cleavage junctions or the PR coding sequence. Single amino acid substitutions (V(P2)S and P(P4)G), which are predicted from in vitro peptide substrate cleavage data to decrease the rate of release of PR from the Gag polyprotein, were placed in the NC portion of the NC-PR junction. These substitutions do not affect the efficiency of release of virus-like particles from COS cells even though recovered particles contain significant amounts of uncleaved Pr76gag in addition to mature viral proteins. Single amino acid substitutions (A(P3)F and S(P1)Y), which increase the rate of PR release from Gag, also do not affect budding of virus-like particles from cells. Substitution of the inefficiently cleaved MA-p2 junction sequence in Gag by eight amino acids from the rapidly cleaved NC-PR sequence resulted in a significant increase in cleavage at the new MA-p2 junction, but again without an effect on budding. However, decreased budding was observed when the A(P3)F or S(P1)Y substitution was included in the NC-PR junction sequence between the MA and p2 proteins. A budding defect was also caused by substitution into Gag of a PR subunit containing three amino acid substitutions (R105P, G106V, and S107N) in the substrate binding pocket that increase the catalytic activity of PR. The defect appears to be the result of premature proteolytic processing that could be rescued by inactivating PR through substitution of a serine for the catalytic aspartic acid residue. This budding defect was also rescued by single amino acid substitutions in the NC-PR cleavage site which decrease the rate of release of PR from Gag. A similar budding defect was caused by replacing the Gag PR with two PR subunits covalently linked by four glycine residues. In contrast to the defect caused by the triply substituted PR, the budding defect observed with the linked PR dimer could not be rescued by NC-PR cleavage site mutations, suggesting that PR dimerization is a limiting step in the maturation process. Overall, these results are consistent with a model in which viral protein maturation occurs after PR subunits are released from the Gag polyprotein.  相似文献   

6.
Murine intracisternal A-type particles (IAPs) are endogenous retroviruses showing sequence homologies to B/D- and avian C-type retroviruses and a gene expression strategy similar to that of D-type retroviruses. These viruses form immature particles in the endoplasmic reticulum and do not release extracellular virions, but are competent for retrotransposition within the virus-producing cell. It had been assumed that lack of polyprotein processing and maturation is due to a defect in the viral proteinase (PR), but recent experiments have shown that polyprotein processing occurs when assembly of the mouse IAP MIA14 is artificially directed to the plasma membrane. We have expressed and purified recombinant MIA14 PR and show that it undergoes N- and C-terminal autoprocessing at defined sites. Using peptide cleavage and inhibition assays and in vitro cleavage of recombinant HIV-1 and MIA14 Gag polyproteins, we show that MIA14 PR is a catalytically competent enzyme comparable in its efficiency to PRs from type D exogenous retroviruses. MIA14 PR is related to the PR of Mason-Pfizer monkey virus both functionally and with respect to its expression strategy, and is distinct from HIV-1 PR with respect to substrate specificity and catalytic efficiency. These findings reveal a functional and possibly evolutionary relationship between MIA14 and D-type retroviruses and imply that a functional PR may be relevant for intracellular retrotransposition even in the case of an endogenous retrovirus that does not produce extracellular virus.  相似文献   

7.
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9.
Ordered and accurate processing of the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) GagPol polyprotein precursor by a virally encoded protease is an indispensable step in the appropriate assembly of infectious viral particles. The HIV-1 protease (PR) is a 99-amino-acid enzyme that is translated as part of the GagPol precursor. Previously, we have demonstrated that the initial events in precursor processing are accomplished by the PR domain within GagPol in cis, before it is released from the polyprotein. Despite the critical role that ordered processing of the precursor plays in viral replication, the forces that define the order of cleavage remain poorly understood. Using an in vitro assay in which the full-length HIV-1 GagPol is processed by the embedded PR, we examined the effect of PR context (embedded within GagPol versus the mature 99-amino-acid enzyme) on precursor processing. Our data demonstrate that the PR domain within GagPol is constrained in its ability to cleave some of the processing sites in the precursor. Further, we find that this constraint is dependent upon the presence of a proline as the initial amino acid in the embedded PR; substitution of an alanine at this position produces enhanced cleavage at additional sites when the precursor is processed by the embedded, but not the mature, PR. Overall, our data support a model in which the selection of processing sites and the order of precursor processing are defined, at least in part, by the structure of GagPol itself.  相似文献   

10.
The capsid protein (CA) of the mature human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) contains an N-terminal beta-hairpin that is essential for formation of the capsid core particle. CA is generated by proteolytic cleavage of the Gag precursor polyprotein during viral maturation. We have determined the NMR structure of a 283-residue N-terminal fragment of immature HIV-1 Gag (Gag(283)), which includes the intact matrix (MA) and N-terminal capsid (CA(N)) domains. The beta-hairpin is unfolded in Gag(283), consistent with the proposal that hairpin formation occurs subsequent to proteolytic cleavage of Gag, triggering capsid assembly. Comparison of the immature and mature CA(N) structures reveals that beta-hairpin formation induces a approximately 2 A displacement of helix 6 and a concomitant displacement of the cyclophylin-A (CypA)-binding loop, suggesting a possible allosteric mechanism for CypA-mediated destabilization of the capsid particle during infectivity.  相似文献   

11.
The protease (PR) from human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) is essential for viral replication: this aspartyl protease, active only as a dimer, is responsible for cleavage of the viral polyprotein precursors (Gag and Gag-Pol), to release the functional mature proteins. In this work, we have studied the structure-function relationships of the HIV PR by combining a genetic test to detect proteolytic activity in Escherichia coli and a bacterial two-hybrid assay to analyze PR dimerization. We showed that a drug-resistant PR variant isolated from a patient receiving highly active antiretroviral therapy is impaired in its dimerization capability and, as a consequence, is proteolytically inactive. We further showed that the polypeptide regions adjacent to the PR coding sequence in the Gag-Pol polyprotein precursor, and in particular, the transframe polypeptide (TF), located at the N terminus of PR, can facilitate the dimerization of this variant PR and restore its enzymatic activity. We propose that the TF protein could help to compensate for folding and/or dimerization defects in PR arising from certain mutations within the PR coding sequence and might therefore function to buffer genetic variations in PR.  相似文献   

12.
Morphogenesis of retroviruses involves ordered assembly of the structural Gag- and Gag-Pol polyproteins, with subsequent budding from the plasma membrane and proteolytic cleavage by the viral proteinase (PR). Two cleavage sites exist between the capsid (CA) and nucleocapsid (NC) domains of the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) type 1 Gag polyprotein which are separated by a 14-amino-acid spacer peptide of unknown function. To analyze the role of the two cleavage sites and the spacer peptide, both sites were individually mutated and a deletion mutation that precisely removes the spacer peptide was constructed. Following transfection of proviral DNA carrying the point mutations, mutant polyproteins were synthesized and assembled like wild-type polyprotein, and release of particles was not significantly altered. Both mutations abolished cleavage at the respective site and reduced or abolished viral infectivity. Deletion of the spacer peptide severely affected ordered assembly and reduced particle release. The extracellular particles that were released exhibited normal density but were heterogeneous in size. Electron micrographs revealed large electron-dense plaques underneath the plasma membrane of transfected cells which appeared like confluent ribonucleoprotein complexes arrested early in the budding process. Extracellular particles exhibited very aberrant and heterogeneous morphology and were incapable of inducing viral spread. These particles may correspond to membrane vesicles sequestered by the rigid structures underneath the cell membrane and not released by a regular budding process.  相似文献   

13.
Antiviral inhibition of the HIV-1 capsid protein   总被引:9,自引:0,他引:9  
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14.
Proteolytic cleavage of virus-specific proteins is a universal phenomenon, which is widely expanded among different viruses including bacterial, plant, animal, and human viruses. Proteolytic processing of viral proteins involves the cleavage in strictly specific sites (proteolytic sites) of polyprotein molecules. Specificity of this processing is a doubly dependent event controlled by the amino acids of proteolytic sites and the presence of adequate proteinases. Host-originated and/or virus-coded proteinases are known to perform the cleavage of viral polypeptides. Conformational and functional behaviour of many virus proteins is regulated by proteolytic modification; as a result, the reproduction of mature virions and the infection pathways are directly controlled. Molecular mechanisms of site-specific proteolytic processing of viral proteins are proposed as a target to be attacked for chemotherapeutic virus inhibition and to be modified for vaccine design. The approaches are analysed to realise this antiviral strategy, and prospects for its development are discussed.  相似文献   

15.
J C Carrington  D D Freed    C S Oh 《The EMBO journal》1990,9(5):1347-1353
All proteins encoded by the plant potyvirus, tobacco etch virus (TEV), arise by proteolytic processing of a single polyprotein. Two virus-encoded proteinases (NIa and HC-Pro) that catalyze most of the proteolytic events have been characterized previously. The two proteins that are derived from the N-terminal 87 kd region of the viral polyprotein are a 35 kd protein and HC-Pro (52 kd). It is demonstrated in this study that a third proteolytic activity is required to process the junction between these proteins. Proteolysis at the HC-Pro N terminus to separate these proteins occurred poorly, if at all, after in vitro synthesis of a 97 kd polyprotein, whereas cleavage of the HC-Pro C terminus occurred efficiently by an autoprocessing mechanism. Synthesis of the same polyprotein in transgenic tobacco plants, however, resulted in complete and accurate proteolysis at both termini of HC-Pro. A point mutation affecting an amino acid residue essential for the proteolytic activity of HC-Pro had no effect on N-terminal processing. Expression in transgenic plants of a construct with a large deletion in the 35 kd protein coding region resulted in partial inhibition of HC-Pro N-terminal cleavage, suggesting that the 35 kd protein may affect the proteolytic event but not in a catalytic role. We speculate that this cleavage event is catalyzed by either a cryptic potyviral proteinase that requires a host factor or subcellular environment for activation, or possibly a host proteinase.  相似文献   

16.
H Burstein  D Bizub    A M Skalka 《Journal of virology》1991,65(11):6165-6172
Assembly and maturation of retroviral particles requires the aggregation and controlled proteolytic cleavage of polyprotein core precursors by a precursor-encoded protease (PR). Active, mature retroviral PR is a dimer, and the accumulation of precursors at sites of assembly may facilitate subunit interaction and subsequent activation of this enzyme. In addition, it has been suggested that cellular cytoplasmic components act as inhibitors of PR activity, so that processing is delayed until the nascent virions leave this compartment and separate from the surface of host cells. To investigate the mechanisms that control PR activity during virus assembly, we studied the in vivo processing of retroviral gag precursors that contain tandemly linked PR subunits in which dimerization is concentration independent. Sequences encoding four different linked protease dimers were independently joined to the end of the Rous sarcoma virus (RSV) gag gene in a simian virus 40-based plasmid vector which expresses a myristoylated gag precursor upon transfection of COS-1 cells. Three of these plasmids produced gag precursors that were incorporated into viruslike particles and proteolytically cleaved by the dimers to mature core proteins that were indistinguishable from the processed products of wild-type gag. The amount of viral gag protein that was assembled and packaged in these transfections was inversely related to the relative proteolytic activities of the linked PR dimers. The fourth gag precursor, which contained the most active linked PR dimer, underwent rapid intracellular processing and did not form viruslike particles. In the absence of the plasma membrane targeting signal, processing of all four linked PR dimer-containing gag precursors was completed entirely within the cell. From these results, we conclude that the delay in polyprotein core precursor processing that occurs during normal virion assembly does not depend on a cytoplasmic inhibitor of PR activity. We suggest that dimer formation is not only necessary but may be sufficient for the initiation of PR-directed maturation of gag and gag-pol precursors.  相似文献   

17.
Retroviruses are produced as immature particles containing structural polyproteins, which are subsequently cleaved by the viral proteinase (PR). Extracellular maturation leads to condensation of the spherical core to a capsid shell formed by the capsid (CA) protein, which encases the genomic RNA complexed with nucleocapsid (NC) proteins. CA and NC are separated by a short spacer peptide (spacer peptide 1 [SP1]) on the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) Gag polyprotein and released by sequential PR-mediated cleavages. To assess the role of individual cleavages in maturation, we constructed point mutations abolishing cleavage at these sites, either alone or in combination. When all three sites between CA and NC were mutated, immature particles containing stable CA-NC were observed, with no apparent effect on other cleavages. Delayed maturation with irregular morphology of the ribonucleoprotein core was observed when cleavage of SP1 from NC was prevented. Blocking the release of SP1 from CA, on the other hand, yielded normal condensation of the ribonucleoprotein core but prevented capsid condensation. A thin, electron-dense layer near the viral membrane was observed in this case, and mutant capsids were significantly less stable against detergent treatment than wild-type HIV-1. We suggest that HIV maturation is a sequential process controlled by the rate of cleavage at individual sites. Initial rapid cleavage at the C terminus of SP1 releases the RNA-binding NC protein and leads to condensation of the ribonucleoprotein core. Subsequently, CA is separated from the membrane by cleavage between the matrix protein and CA, and late release of SP1 from CA is required for capsid condensation.  相似文献   

18.
A number of viral proteases are able to cleave translation initiation factors leading to the inhibition of cellular translation. This is the case of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 protease (HIV-1 PR), which hydrolyzes eIF4GI and poly(A)-binding protein (PABP). Here, the effect of HIV-1 PR on cellular and viral protein synthesis has been examined using cell-free systems. HIV-1 PR strongly hampers translation of pre-existing capped luc mRNAs, particularly when these mRNAs contain a poly(A) tail. In fact, HIV-1 PR efficiently blocks cap- and poly(A)-dependent translation initiation in HeLa extracts. Addition of exogenous PABP to HIV-1 PR treated extracts partially restores the translation of polyadenylated luc mRNAs, suggesting that PABP cleavage is directly involved in the inhibition of poly(A)-dependent translation. In contrast to these data, PABP cleavage induced by HIV-1 PR has little impact on the translation of polyadenylated encephalomyocarditis virus internal ribosome entry site (IRES)-containing mRNAs. In this case, the loss of poly(A)-dependent translation is compensated by the IRES transactivation provided by eIF4G cleavage. Finally, translation of capped and polyadenylated HIV-1 genomic mRNA takes place in HeLa extracts when eIF4GI and PABP have been cleaved by HIV-1 PR. Together these results suggest that proteolytic cleavage of eIF4GI and PABP by HIV-1 PR blocks cap- and poly(A)-dependent initiation of translation, leading to the inhibition of cellular protein synthesis. However, HIV-1 genomic mRNA can be translated under these conditions, giving rise to the production of Gag polyprotein.  相似文献   

19.
The active form of the retroviral proteinase (PR) is a homodimer of monomeric subunits expressed as integral parts of the viral gag-pol precursor polyproteins, and dimerization of polyproteins is presumed to be important for regulation of PR activity. Expression of a single-chain dimer of the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) type 1 PR as a component of the viral polyprotein has been shown to prevent particle assembly and viral infectivity (H.-G. Kr?usslich, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 88:3213-3217, 1991). Ro31-8959, a specific inhibitor of HIV PR, blocked proteolysis of polyproteins containing either wild-type or single-chain dimer PR at the same inhibitor concentration. Different inhibitor concentrations gave three phenotypic effects for the linked PR: at a concentration of 10 nM, cytotoxicity was prevented yet viral polyproteins were almost completely processed and no particles were released. The majority of HIV capsid proteins was found in the soluble cytoplasmic fraction, whereas at a concentration of 1 microM inhibitor most HIV gag proteins were associated with an insoluble fraction. Release of particles consisting of partially processed polyproteins was observed at 100 nM Ro31-8959, and polyprotein processing was blocked at 10 microM. Particles derived from the dimer-containing provirus were noninfectious independently of the inhibitor concentration. Production of infectious HIV after transfection of wild-type provirus was abolished at 100 nM and markedly reduced at 10 nM Ro31-8959.  相似文献   

20.
The genome of tobacco etch virus contains a single open reading frame with the potential to encode a 346-kilodalton (kDa) polyprotein. The large polyprotein is cleaved at several positions by a tobacco etch virus genome-encoded, 49-kDa proteinase. The locations of the 49-kDa proteinase-mediated cleavage sites flanking the 71-kDa cytoplasmic pinwheel inclusion protein, 6-kDa protein, 49-kDa proteinase, and 58-kDa putative polymerase have been determined by using cell-free expression, proteolytic processing, and site-directed mutagenesis systems. Each of these sites is characterized by the conserved sequence motif Glu-Xaa-Xaa-Tyr-Xaa-Gln-Ser or Gly (in which cleavage occurs after the Gln residue). The amino acid residue (Gln) predicted to occupy the -1 position relative to the scissile bond has been substituted, by mutagenesis of cloned cDNA, at each of four cleavage sites. The altered sites were not cleaved by the 49-kDa proteinase. A series of synthetic polyproteins that contained the 49-kDa proteinase linked to adjoining proteins via defective cleavage sites were expressed, and their proteolytic activities were analyzed. As part of a polyprotein, the proteinase was found to exhibit cis (intramolecular) and trans (intermolecular) activity.  相似文献   

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