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1.
The major nucleocapsid protein of avian retroviruses, pp12, preferentially binds to the single-stranded regions of 60 S viral RNA with a apparent binding constant (Kapp) of 1.2 X 10(11) M-1. If the phosphate associated with serine residues of pp12 is hydrolyzed by either alkali treatment or with partially purified phosphoprotein phosphatase activities isolated from virions, the Kapp for binding to 60 S RNA decreases 100-fold. The high affinity binding of pp12 to viral RNA can be restored by phosphorylation of the protein with a protein kinase, protease-activated kinase I. The same serine residues phosphorylated in vivo are phosphorylated by protease kinase I in vitro. These residues have been identified as serine residues 40 and either 76 or 77. The protein purified from virions is phosphorylated primarily at serine residue 40 (greater than 90%). This suggests that phosphoserine residue 40 is responsible for modulating the binding of the protein to RNA. Thus, the phosphorylation state of pp12 can be reversibly altered in vitro resulting in the interconversion of the protein between a state of high and low affinity for single-stranded viral RNA.  相似文献   

2.
The major nucleocapsid protein of avian retroviruses, pp 12, binds to single-stranded viral RNA with high affinity. Phosphorylation at Ser-40 is necessary for this binding. In order to examine the role of phosphorylation of serine 40 in the biological function of pp 12, we have introduced a series of amino acid substitutions at this position in the Rous sarcoma virus (Pr-C) protein. Substitution of threonine, alanine, or three other amino acids for Ser-40 had very little or no detectable effect on viral replication, nor did the control substitution of glycine for Ser-43, a nonphosphorylated residue. In vivo and in vitro, the Ala-40 and probably the Thr-40 substituted p 12 proteins are phosphorylated at alternative sites which are phosphorylated to a minor extent in vivo in the wild type protein. A study of the RNA binding properties of Ala-40 substituted p 12 has indicated that the protein has been stabilized in a high affinity RNA binding state which is independent of phosphorylation. The viability of the Ala-40 mutant virus indicates that this high binding affinity may be required for biological activity.  相似文献   

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Fluorescence and optical detection of triplet state magnetic resonance (ODMR) spectroscopy have been employed to study the complexes formed between single-stranded polynucleotides and Escherichia coli ssb gene products (SSB) in which tryptophans 40, 54, and 88 are selectively, one residue at a time, replaced by phenylalanine using site-specific oligonucleotide mutagenesis. Fluorescence titrations and ODMR results indicate that tryptophans 40 and 54 are the only tryptophan residues in E. coli single-stranded DNA binding protein that are involved in stabilizing the protein-nucleic acid complexes via stacking interactions. Wavelength-selected ODMR measurements on E. coli SSB reveal the presence of two spectrally distinct tryptophan sites (Khamis, M. I., Casas-Finet, J. R., and Maki, A. H. (1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262, 1725-1733). Our present results indicate that tryptophan 54 belongs to the blue-shifted site, while tryptophan 40 belongs to the red-shifted site of the protein.  相似文献   

6.
The effect of specific photochemical and radiochemical modification of tryptophyl and cysteinyl residues of the gene 32 protein (gp 32) of bacteriophage T4 on its affinity towards single-stranded polynucleotides has been investigated. Oxidation of Cys residues of gp 32 by the free-radical anion I-.2 induces a partial loss of the protein affinity, probably by affecting the metal-binding domain which includes three of the four cysteine residues of gp 32. Ultraviolet irradiation of gp 32 in the presence of trichloroethanol results in the modification of three of its five Trp residues and total loss of the protein binding. Analysis of the relative affinity of ultraviolet-irradiated gp 32 for single-stranded polynucleotides suggest that modification of a Trp of enhanced reactivity occurs first and has no effect on the protein binding. Radiochemical modification of three Trp residues of gp 32 by (SCN)-.2 results in total loss of activity. Complexation of gp 32 with denatured DNA prior to gamma-irradiation protects two Trp residues and prevents the protein inactivation. These results suggest that at most two Trp residues are involved in stacking interactions with nucleic acid bases. However, time-resolved spectroscopic methods which allow us to monitor selectively the stacked tryptophan residues have not yielded evidence of more than a single residue undergoing such interactions.  相似文献   

7.
The zinc fingers of retroviral gag nucleocapsid proteins (NC) are required for the specific packaging of the dimeric RNA genome into virions. In vitro, NC proteins activate both dimerization of viral RNA and annealing of the replication primer tRNA onto viral RNA, two reactions necessary for the production of infectious virions. In this study the role of the zinc finger of Moloney murine leukemia virus (MoMuLV) NCp10 in RNA binding and annealing activities was investigated through modification or replacement of residues involved in zinc coordination. These alterations did not affect the ability of NCp10 to bind RNA and promote RNA annealing in vitro, despite a complete loss of zinc affinity. However mutation of two conserved lysine residues adjacent to the finger motif reduced both RNA binding and annealing activities of NCp10. These findings suggest that the complexed NC zinc finger is not directly involved in RNA-protein interactions but more probably in a zinc dependent conformation of NC protein modulating viral protein-protein interactions, essential to the process of viral RNA selection and virion assembly. Then the NC zinc finger may cooperate to select the viral RNA genome to be packaged into virions.  相似文献   

8.
Modification of the herpes simplex virus type 1 major DNA-binding protein (ICP8) with reagents and conditions specific for arginine, lysine, and tyrosine residues indicates that surface lysine and tyrosine residues are required for the interaction of this protein with single-stranded DNA. Modification of either of these two amino acids resulted in a loss and/or modification of binding activity as judged by nitrocellulose filter assays and gel shift. Modification specific for arginine residues did not affect binding within the limits of the assays used. Finally, quenching of the intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence of ICP8 in the presence of single-stranded DNA either suggests involvement of this amino acid in the binding reaction or reflects a conformational change in the protein upon binding.  相似文献   

9.
The Pol region of the Gag-Pol fusion protein of the L-A double-stranded (ds) RNA virus of Saccharomyces cerevisiae has (i) a domain essential for packaging viral positive strands, (ii) consensus amino acid sequence patterns typical of RNA-dependent RNA polymerases, and (iii) two single-stranded RNA binding domains. We describe here a third single-stranded RNA binding domain (Pol residues 374 to 432), which is unique in being cryptic. Its activity is revealed only after deletion of an inhibitory region C terminal to the binding domain itself. This cryptic RNA binding domain is necessary for propagation of M1 satellite dsRNA, but it is not necessary for viral particle assembly or for packaging of viral positive-strand single-stranded RNA. The cryptic RNA binding domain includes a sequence pattern common among positive-strand single-stranded RNA and dsRNA viral RNA-dependent RNA polymerases, suggesting that it has a role in RNA polymerase activity.  相似文献   

10.
Lin JC  Chen QX  Shi Y  Li SW  Zhao H 《IUBMB life》2003,55(9):547-552
The chemical modification of beta-N-acetyl-D-glucosaminidase (EC3.2.1.30) from Turbo cornutus Solander has been first studied. The results demonstrate that the sulfhydryl group of cysteine residues and the hydroxyl group of serine residues are not essential to the enzyme's function. The modification of indole group of tryptophan of the enzyme by N-bromosuccinimide (NBS) can lead to the complete inactivation, accompanying the absorption decreasing at 278 nm and the fluorescence intensity quenching at 335 nm, indicating that tryptophan is essential residue to the enzyme. The modification of amino group of lysine residue by formaldehyde and trinitrobenzenesulfonic acid also inactivates the enzyme completely. The results show that lysine and tryptophan are probably situated in the active site of the enzyme. The modification of the imidazole residue and carboxyl group leads to inactivate incompletely, indicating they are not the composing groups of the enzyme active center, and they are essential for maintaining the enzyme's conformation which is necessary for the catalytic activity of the enzyme.  相似文献   

11.
Specific chemical modifications of amino acid residues were performed on purified, native link protein from bovine articular cartilage. The effects of these on link protein's interactions with hyaluronate and bovine articular cartilage proteoglycan were assayed by gel chromatography. Interaction with hyaluronate was significantly perturbed by modification of lysine, arginine, tyrosine and aspartic/glutamic acid residues, but not histidine and tryptophan residues. No free, accessible sulphydryl group was found on native link protein. The requirement for unmodified lysine and arginine residues resembles that of the hyaluronate-binding site of pig laryngeal cartilage proteoglycan (Hardingham, T.E., Ewins, R.J.F. and Muir, H. (1976) Biochem. J. 157, 127-143). In contrast, proteoglycan binding was only significantly perturbed by the loss of arginine residues. This resistance may reflect hydrophobicity of the binding site or masking of the site from chemical modification by link protein self-association. Amidation of carboxyl groups, which destroyed hyaluronate binding but left proteoglycan binding intact, provides a means of generating a monofunctional link protein molecule of potential use in proteoglycan aggregation studies.  相似文献   

12.
H Hohjoh  M F Singer 《The EMBO journal》1997,16(19):6034-6043
Previous experiments using human teratocarcinoma cells indicated that p40, the protein encoded by the first open reading frame (ORF) of the human LINE-1 (L1Hs) retrotransposon, occurs in a large cytoplasmic ribonucleoprotein complex in direct association with L1Hs RNA(s), the p40 RNP complex. We have now investigated the interaction between partially purified p40 and L1Hs RNA in vitro using an RNA binding assay dependent on co-immunoprecipitation of p40 and bound RNA. These experiments identified two p40 binding sites on the full-length sense strand L1Hs RNA. Both sites are in the second ORF of the 6000 nt RNA: site A between residues 1999 and 2039 and site B between residues 4839 and 4875. The two RNA segments share homologous regions. Experiments involving UV cross-linking followed by immunoprecipitation indicate that p40 in the in vitro complex is directly associated with L1Hs RNA, as it is in the p40 RNP complex found in teratocarcinoma cells. Binding and competition experiments demonstrate that p40 binds to single-stranded RNA containing a p40 binding site, but not to single-stranded or double-stranded DNA, double-stranded RNA or a DNA-RNA hybrid containing a binding site sequence. Thus, p40 appears to be a sequence-specific, single-strand RNA binding protein.  相似文献   

13.
Glutamine synthetase (Escherichia coli) was incubated with three different reagents that react with lysine residues, viz. pyridoxal phosphate, 5'-p-fluorosulfonylbenzoyladenosine, and thiourea dioxide. The latter reagent reacts with the epsilon-nitrogen of lysine to produce homoarginine as shown by amino acid analysis, nmr, and mass spectral analysis of the products. A variety of differential labeling experiments were conducted with the above three reagents to label specific lysine residues. Thus pyridoxal phosphate was found to modify 2 lysine residues leading to an alteration of catalytic activity. At least 1 lysine residue has been reported previously to be modified by pyridoxal phosphate at the active site of glutamine synthetase (Whitley, E. J., and Ginsburg, A. (1978) J. Biol. Chem. 253, 7017-7025). By varying the pH and buffer, one or both residues could be modified. One of these lysine residues was associated with approximately 81% loss in activity after modification while modification of the second lysine residue led to complete inactivation of the enzyme. This second lysine was found to be the residue which reacted specifically with the ATP affinity label 5'-p-fluorosulfonylbenzoyladenosine. Lys-47 has been previously identified as the residue that reacts with this reagent (Pinkofsky, H. B., Ginsburg, A., Reardon, I., Heinrikson, R. L. (1984) J. Biol. Chem. 259, 9616-9622; Foster, W. B., Griffith, M. J., and Kingdon, H. S. (1981) J. Biol. Chem. 256, 882-886). Thiourea dioxide inactivated glutamine synthetase with total loss of activity and concomitant modification of a single lysine residue. The modified amino acid was identified as homoarginine by amino acid analysis. The lysine residue modified by thiourea dioxide was established by differential labeling experiments to be the same residue associated with the 81% partial loss of activity upon pyridoxal phosphate inactivation. Inactivation with either thiourea dioxide or pyridoxal phosphate did not affect ATP binding but glutamate binding was weakened. The glutamate site was implicated as the site of thiourea dioxide modification based on protection against inactivation by saturating levels of glutamate. Glutamate also protected against pyridoxal phosphate labeling of the lysine consistent with this residue being the common site of reaction with thiourea dioxide and pyridoxal phosphate.  相似文献   

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16.
beta-d-Glucosylhydroxymethyluracil, also called base J, is an unusual modified DNA base conserved among Kinetoplastida. Base J is found predominantly in repetitive DNA and correlates with epigenetic silencing of telomeric variant surface glycoprotein genes. We have previously found a J-binding protein (JBP) in Trypanosoma, Leishmania, and Crithidia. We have now characterized the binding properties of recombinant JBP from Crithidia using synthetic J-DNA substrates that contain the glycosylated base in various DNA sequences. We find that JBP recognizes base J only when presented in double-stranded DNA but not in single-stranded DNA or in an RNA:DNA duplex. It also fails to interact with free glucose or free base J. JBP is unable to recognize nonmodified DNA or intermediates of J synthesis, suggesting that JBP is not directly involved in J biosynthesis. JBP binds J-DNA with high affinity (K(d) = 40-140 nm) but requires at least 5 bp flanking the glycosylated base for optimal binding. The nature of the flanking sequence affects binding because J in a telomeric sequence binds JBP with higher affinity than J in another sequence known to contain J in trypanosome DNA. We conclude that JBP is a structure-specific DNA-binding protein. The significance of these results in relation to the biological role and mechanism of action of J modification in kinetoplastids is discussed.  相似文献   

17.
We have purified and characterized a single-stranded DNA binding protein (N4 SSB) induced after coliphage N4 infection. It has a monomeric molecular weight of 31,000 and contains 10 tyrosine and 1-2 tryptophan amino acid residues. Its fluorescence spectrum is dominated by the tyrosine residues, and their fluorescence is quenched when the protein binds single-stranded DNA. Fluorescence quenching was used as an assay to quantitate binding of the protein to single-stranded nucleotides. The N4 single-stranded DNA binding protein binds cooperatively to single-stranded nucleic acids and binds single-stranded DNA more tightly than RNA. The binding involves displacement of cations from the DNA and anions from the protein. The apparent binding affinity is very salt-dependent, decreasing as much as 1,000-fold for a 10-fold increase in NaCl concentration. The degree of cooperativity (omega) is relatively independent of salt concentration. At 37 degrees C in 0.22 M NaCl, the protein has an intrinsic binding constant for M13 viral DNA of 3.8 x 10(4) M-1, a cooperativity factor omega of 300, and binding site size of 11 nucleotides per monomer. The protein lowers the melting point of poly(dA.dT).poly(dA-dT) by greater than 60 degrees C but cannot lower the melting transition or assist in the renaturation of natural DNA. N4 single-stranded DNA binding protein enhances the rate of DNA synthesis catalyzed by the N4 DNA polymerase by increasing the processivity of the N4 DNA polymerase and melting out hairpin structures that block polymerization.  相似文献   

18.
The nucleocapsid (N) protein of hantavirus encapsidates viral genomic and antigenomic RNAs. Previously, deletion mapping identified a central, conserved region (amino acids 175 to 217) within the Hantaan virus (HTNV) N protein that interacts with a high affinity with these viral RNAs (vRNAs). To further define the boundaries of the RNA binding domain (RBD), several peptides were synthesized and examined for the ability to bind full-length S-segment vRNA. Peptide 195-217 retained 94% of the vRNA bound by the HTNV N protein, while peptides 175-186 and 205-217 bound only 1% of the vRNA. To further explore which residues were essential for binding vRNA, we performed a comprehensive mutational analysis of the amino acids in the RBD. Single and double Ala substitutions were constructed for 18 amino acids from amino acids 175 to 217 in the full-length N protein. In addition, Ala substitutions were made for the three R residues in peptide 185-217. An analysis of protein-RNA interactions by electrophoretic mobility shift assays implicated E192, Y206, and S217 as important for binding. Chemical modification experiments showed that lysine residues, but not arginine or cysteine residues, contribute to RNA binding, which agreed with bioinformatic predictions. Overall, these data implicate lysine residues dispersed from amino acids 175 to 429 of the protein and three amino acids located in the RBD as essential for RNA binding.  相似文献   

19.
The hepatitis C virus (HCV) is a flavivirus replicating in the cytoplasm of infected cells. The HCV genome is a single-stranded RNA encoding a polyprotein that is cleaved by cellular and viral proteases into 10 different products. While the structural proteins core protein, envelope protein 1 (E1) and E2 build up the virus particle, most nonstructural (NS) proteins are required for RNA replication. One of the least studied proteins is NS2, which is composed of a C-terminal cytosolic protease domain and a highly hydrophobic N-terminal domain. It is assumed that the latter is composed of three trans-membrane segments (TMS) that tightly attach NS2 to intracellular membranes. Taking advantage of a system to study HCV assembly in a hepatoma cell line, in this study we performed a detailed characterization of NS2 with respect to its role for virus particle assembly. In agreement with an earlier report ( Jones, C. T., Murray, C. L., Eastman, D. K., Tassello, J., and Rice, C. M. (2007) J. Virol. 81, 8374-8383 ), we demonstrate that the protease domain, but not its enzymatic activity, is required for infectious virus production. We also show that serine residue 168 in NS2, implicated in the phosphorylation and stability of this protein, is dispensable for virion formation. In addition, we determined the NMR structure of the first TMS of NS2 and show that the N-terminal segment (amino acids 3-11) forms a putative flexible helical element connected to a stable alpha-helix (amino acids 12-21) that includes an absolutely conserved helix side in genotype 1b. By using this structure as well as the amino acid conservation as a guide for a functional study, we determined the contribution of individual amino acid residues in TMS1 for HCV assembly. We identified several residues that are critical for virion formation, most notably a central glycine residue at position 10 of TMS1. Finally, we demonstrate that mutations in NS2 blocking HCV assembly can be rescued by trans-complementation.  相似文献   

20.
The Rubella virus capsid protein is phosphorylated prior to virus assembly. Our previous data are consistent with a model in which dynamic phosphorylation of the capsid regulates its RNA binding activity and, in turn, nucleocapsid assembly. In the present study, the process of capsid phosphorylation was examined in further detail. We show that phosphorylation of serine 46 in the RNA binding region of the capsid is required to trigger phosphorylation of additional amino acid residues that include threonine 47. This residue likely plays a direct role in regulating the binding of genomic RNA to the capsid. We also provide evidence which suggests that the capsid is dephosphorylated prior to or during virus budding. Finally, whereas the phosphorylation state of the capsid does not directly influence the rate of synthesis of viral RNA and proteins or the assembly and secretion of virions, the presence of phosphate on the capsid is critical for early events in virus replication, most likely the uncoating of virions and/or disassembly of nucleocapsids.  相似文献   

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