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1.
We determined the nucleotide sequence of a 3.5-kb region of the bovine herpesvirus 1 (BHV-1) genome which contained the complete BHV-1 homologs of the herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) UL26 and UL26.5 genes. In HSV-1, the UL26 and UL26.5 open reading frames encode scaffold proteins upon which viral capsids are assembled. The UL26-encoded protein is also a proteinase and specifically cleaves both itself and the UL26.5-encoded protein. The overall BHV-1-encoded amino acid sequence showed only 41% identity to the HSV-1 sequences and was most divergent in the regions defined to be involved in the scaffolding function. We substituted the proteins encoded by the BHV-1 homologs of the UL26 and UL26.5 open reading frames, expressed in baculovirus, for the corresponding HSV-1 proteins in an in vitro HSV-1 capsid assembly system. The proteins expressed from the BHV-1 UL26 and UL26.5 homologs facilitated the formation of hybrid type B capsids indistinguishable from those formed entirely with HSV-1-encoded proteins.  相似文献   

2.
3.
The UL3.5 gene is positionally conserved but highly variable in size and sequence in different members of the Alphaherpesvirinae and is absent from herpes simplex virus genomes. We have shown previously that the pseudorabies virus (PrV) UL3.5 gene encodes a nonstructural protein which is required for secondary envelopment of intracytoplasmic virus particles in the trans-Golgi region. In the absence of UL3.5 protein, naked nucleocapsids accumulate in the cytoplasm, release of infectious virions is drastically reduced, and plaque formation in cell culture is inhibited (W. Fuchs, B. G. Klupp, H. Granzow, H.-J. Rziha, and T. C. Mettenleiter, J. Virol. 70:3517-3527, 1996). To assay functional complementation by a heterologous herpesviral UL3.5 protein, the UL3.5 gene of bovine herpesvirus 1 (BHV-1) was inserted at two different sites within the genome of UL3.5-negative PrV. In cells infected with the PrV recombinants the BHV-1 UL3.5 gene product was identified as a 17-kDa protein which was identical in size to the UL3.5 protein detected in BHV-1-infected cells. Expression of BHV-1 UL3.5 compensated for the lack of PrV UL3.5, resulting in a ca. 1,000-fold increase in virus titer and restoration of plaque formation in cell culture. Also, the intracellular block in viral egress was resolved by the BHV-1 UL3.5 gene. We conclude that the UL3.5 proteins of PrV and BHV-1 are functionally related and are involved in a common step in the egress of alphaherpesviruses.  相似文献   

4.
5.
Burch AD  Weller SK 《Journal of virology》2004,78(13):7175-7185
Herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) encodes a portal protein that forms a large oligomeric structure believed to provide the conduit for DNA entry and exit from the capsid. Chaperone proteins often facilitate the folding and multimerization of such complex structures. In this report, we show that cellular chaperone proteins, components of the 26S proteasome, and ubiquitin-conjugated proteins are sequestered in discrete foci in the nucleus of the infected cell. The immediate-early viral protein ICP0 was shown to be necessary to establish these foci at early times during infection and sufficient to redistribute chaperone molecules in transfected cells. Furthermore, we found that not only is the portal protein, UL6, localized to these sites during infection, but it is also a substrate for ubiquitin modification. Our results suggest that HSV-1 has evolved an elegant mechanism for facilitating protein quality control at specialized foci within the nucleus.  相似文献   

6.
The bovine herpesvirus 1 (BHV-1) UL49 gene encodes a viral tegument protein termed VP22. UL49 homologs are conserved among alphaherpesviruses. Interestingly, the BHV-1 VP22 deletion mutant virus is asymptomatic and avirulent in infected cattle but produces only a slight reduction in titer in vitro. Attenuation of the BHV-1 VP22 deletion mutant virus in vivo suggests that VP22 plays a functional role in BHV-1 replication. In herpes simplex virus type 1, the VP22 homolog was previously shown to interact with another tegument protein,VP16, the alpha-transinducing factor in vitro. In this report, we show that (i) the nuclear targeting of VP22 is independent of other viral factors, (ii) the carboxyl terminus of VP22 is required for its nuclear localization, (iii) VP22 associates with histones and nucleosomes, (iv) an antihistone monoclonal antibody cross-reacts with VP22, and (v) acetylation of histone H4 is decreased in VP22-expressing cells as well as virus-infected cells. Our data suggest that VP22 may have a modulatory function during BHV-1 infection.  相似文献   

7.
Proteins encoded by the UL46 and UL47 genes of herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) constitute major components of the viral tegument. However, their functions have so far not been elucidated in detail. By use of monospecific antisera directed against bacterially expressed glutathione-S-transferase fusion proteins, the homologous UL46 and UL47 proteins of the alphaherpesvirus pseudorabies virus (PrV) were identified in virus-infected cells and in virions. The PrV UL46 gene product of 693 amino acids (aa) exhibits an apparent molecular mass of 95 kDa, whereas the UL47 product of 750 aa was identified as a 97-kDa protein. Both are present in purified virions, correlating with their role as tegument proteins. Immunofluorescence analysis by confocal laser scan microscopy showed that late in infection the UL46 product is detectable in the cytoplasm, whereas the UL47 product was observed to be diffuse in the cytoplasm and speckled in the nucleus. Virus mutants lacking either the UL46 or the UL47 gene or both were isolated on noncomplementing cells, demonstrating that these genes either singly or in combination are not required for productive viral replication. However, plaque sizes were decreased. Interestingly, in one-step growth analysis, UL47 deletion mutants exhibited an approximately 10-fold decrease in final titers, whereas the UL46 deletion mutant was not affected. This finding correlated with ultrastructural observations which showed unimpaired virion morphogenesis in the absence of the UL46 protein, whereas in the absence of the UL47 protein intracytoplasmic aggregates of partially tegumented capsids were observed. In summary, we identified the PrV UL46 and UL47 proteins and show that the UL47 protein plays an important role in virion assembly in the cytoplasm.  相似文献   

8.
The herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) alkaline nuclease, encoded by the UL12 gene, plays an important role in HSV-1 replication, as a null mutant of UL12 displays a severe growth defect. Although the precise in vivo role of UL12 has not yet been determined, several in vitro activities have been identified for the protein, including endo- and exonuclease activities, interaction with the HSV-1 single-stranded DNA binding protein ICP8, and an ability to promote strand exchange in conjunction with ICP8. In this study, we examined a naturally occurring N-terminally truncated version of UL12 called UL12.5. Previous studies showing that UL12.5 exhibits nuclease activity but is unable to complement a UL12 null virus posed a dilemma and suggested that UL12.5 may lack a critical activity possessed by the full-length protein, UL12. We constructed a recombinant baculovirus capable of expressing UL12.5 and purified soluble UL12.5 from infected insect cells. The purified UL12.5 exhibited both endo- and exonuclease activities but was less active than UL12. Like UL12, UL12.5 could mediate strand exchange with ICP8 and could also be coimmunoprecipitated with ICP8. The primary difference between the two proteins was in their intracellular localization, with UL12 localizing to the nucleus and UL12.5 remaining in the cytoplasm. We mapped a nuclear localization signal to the N terminus of UL12, the domain absent from UL12.5. In addition, when UL12.5 was overexpressed so that some of the enzyme leaked into the nucleus, it was able to partially complement the UL12 null mutant.  相似文献   

9.
The pseudorabies virus (PrV) homolog of the tegument protein encoded by the UL48 gene of herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) was identified by using a monospecific rabbit antiserum against a bacterial fusion protein. UL48-related polypeptides of 53, 55, and 57 kDa were detected in Western blots of infected cells and purified virions. Immunofluorescence studies demonstrated that the PrV UL48 protein is predominantly localized in the cytoplasm but is also found in the nuclei of infected cells. Moreover, it is a constituent of extracellular virus particles but is absent from primary enveloped perinuclear virions. In noncomplementing cells, a UL48-negative PrV mutant (PrV-DeltaUL48) exhibited delayed growth and significantly reduced plaque sizes and virus titers, deficiencies which were corrected in UL48-expressing cells. RNA analyses indicated that, like its HSV-1 homolog, the PrV UL48 protein is involved in regulation of immediate-early gene expression. However, the most salient effect of the UL48 gene deletion was a severe defect in virion morphogenesis. Late after infection, electron microscopy of cells infected with PrV-DeltaUL48 revealed retention of newly formed nucleocapsids in the cytoplasm, whereas enveloped intracytoplasmic or extracellular complete virions were only rarely observed. In contrast, capsidless particles were produced and released in great amounts. Remarkably, the intracytoplasmic capsids were labeled with antibodies against the UL36 and UL37 tegument proteins, whereas the capsidless particles were labeled with antisera directed against the UL46, UL47, and UL49 tegument proteins. These findings suggested that the UL48 protein is involved in linking capsid and future envelope-associated tegument proteins during virion formation. Thus, like its HSV-1 homolog, the UL48 protein of PrV functions in at least two different steps of the viral life cycle. The drastic inhibition of virion formation in the absence of the PrV UL48 protein indicates that it plays an important role in virion morphogenesis prior to secondary envelopment of intracytoplasmic nucleocapsids. However, the UL48 gene of PrV is not absolutely essential, and concomitant deletion of the adjacent tegument protein gene UL49 also did not abolish virus replication in cell culture.  相似文献   

10.
Herpes simplex virus 1 (HSV-1) replicates in the nucleus of host cells and radically alters nuclear architecture as part of its replication process. Replication compartments (RCs) form, and host chromatin is marginalized. Chromatin is later dispersed, and RCs spread past it to reach the nuclear edge. Using a lamin A-green fluorescent protein fusion, we provide direct evidence that the nuclear lamina is disrupted during HSV-1 infection and that the UL31 and UL34 proteins are required for this. We show nuclear expansion from 8 h to 24 h postinfection and place chromatin rearrangement and disruption of the lamina in the context of this global change in nuclear architecture. We show HSV-1-induced disruption of the localization of Cdc14B, a cellular protein and component of a putative nucleoskeleton. We also show that UL31 and UL34 are required for nuclear expansion. Studies with inhibitors of globular actin (G-actin) indicate that G-actin plays an essential role in nuclear expansion and chromatin dispersal but not in lamina alterations induced by HSV-1 infection. From analyses of HSV infections under various conditions, we conclude that nuclear expansion and chromatin dispersal are dispensable for optimal replication, while lamina rearrangement is associated with efficient replication.  相似文献   

11.
To investigate the role of varicella-zoster virus (VZV) open reading frame 47 (ORF47) protein kinase during infection, a VZV mutant was generated in which two contiguous stop codons were introduced into ORF47, thus eliminating expression of the ORF47 kinase. ORF47 kinase was not essential for the growth of VZV in cultured cells, and the growth rate of the VZV mutant lacking ORF47 protein was indistinguishable from that of parental VZV. Nuclear extracts from cells infected with parental VZV contained several phosphorylated proteins which were not detected in extracts from cells infected with the ORF47 mutant. The herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) UL13 protein (the homolog of VZV ORF47 protein) is responsible for the posttranslational processing associated with phosphorylation of HSV-1 ICP22 (the homolog of VZV ORF63 protein). Immunoprecipitation of 32P-labeled proteins from cells infected with parental virus and those infected with ORF47 mutant virus yielded similar amounts of the VZV phosphoproteins encoded by ORF4, ORF62, ORF63, and ORF68 (VZV gE), and the electrophoretic migration of these proteins was not affected by the lack of ORF47 kinase. Therefore, while the VZV ORF47 protein is capable of phosphorylating several cellular or viral proteins, it is not required for phosphorylation of the ORF63 protein in virus-infected cells.  相似文献   

12.
The herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) UL37 open reading frame encodes a 120-kDa late (gamma 1), nonstructural protein in infected cells. Recent studies in our laboratory have demonstrated that the UL37 protein interacts in the cytoplasm of infected cells with ICP8, the major HSV-1 DNA-binding protein. As a result of this interaction, the UL37 protein is transported to the nucleus and can be coeluted with ICP8 from single-stranded DNA columns. Pulse-labeling and pulse-chase studies of HSV-1-infected cells with [35S]methionine and 32Pi demonstrated that UL37 was a phosphoprotein which did not have a detectable rate of turnover. The protein was phosphorylated soon after translation and remained phosphorylated throughout the viral replicative cycle. UL37 protein expressed from a vaccinia virus recombinant was also phosphorylated during infection, suggesting that the UL37 protein was phosphorylated by a cellular kinase and that interaction with the ICP8 protein was not a prerequisite for UL37 phosphorylation.  相似文献   

13.
X Liang  B Chow  C Raggo    L A Babiuk 《Journal of virology》1996,70(3):1448-1454
We previously reported that the genome of bovine herpesvirus 1 (BHV-1) contains an open reading frame (ORF) homologous to the herpes simplex virus UL49.5 ORF, and as with the herpes simplex virus UL49.5 ORF, the deduced amino acid sequence of the BHV-1 UL49.5 homolog (UL49.5h) contains features characteristic of an integral membrane protein, implying that it may constitute a functional gene encoding a novel viral envelope protein. This communication reports on the identification of the BHV-1 UL49.5h gene product. By employing an antibody against a synthetic BHV-1 UL49.5h peptide and an UL49.5h gene deletion mutant, the primary product of BHV-UL49.5h gene was identified as a polypeptide with a size of approximately 9 kDa; in both infected cells and isolated virions, the UL49.5h products were found to exist in three forms; monomer, disulfide-linked homodimer, and disulfide-linked heterodimer containing a second viral protein with a size of about 39 kDa. O-Glycosidase digestion and [3H]glucosamine labelling experiments showed that the UL49.5h protein is not glycosylated. Although the deduced amino acid sequence contains putative sites for myristylation and phosphorylation, we were unable to detect either modification. Surface labelling and trypsin digestion protection experiments showed that the BHV-1 UL49.5h protein was present on the surface of infected cells and on the surface of mature virions. Nonionic detergent partition of isolated virions revealed that the UL49.5h protein is more tightly associated with the virion tegument-nucleocapsid structure than envelope protein gD. The results from this study demonstrate that the BHV-1 UL49.5h gene encodes a nonglycosylated virion envelope protein which may associate with virion internal structures by forming a complex with the 39-kDa virion structural protein.  相似文献   

14.
Herpesvirus DNA is packaged into capsids in the nuclei of infected cells in a process requiring at least six viral proteins. Of the proteins required for encapsidation of viral DNA, UL15 and UL28 are the most conserved among herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV), varicella-zoster virus, and equine herpesvirus 1. The subcellular distribution of the pseudorabies virus (PRV) UL28 protein was examined by in situ immunofluorescence. UL28 was present in the nuclei of infected cells; however, UL28 was limited to the cytoplasm in the absence of other viral proteins. When cells expressing variant forms of UL28 were infected with a PRV UL28-null mutant, UL28 entered the nucleus, provided the carboxyl-terminal 155 amino acids were present. Additionally, PRV UL28 entered the nucleus in cells infected with HSV. Two HSV packaging proteins were tested for the ability to affect the subcellular distribution of UL28. Coexpression of HSV UL15 enabled PRV UL28 to enter the nucleus in a manner that required the carboxyl-terminal 155 amino acids of UL28. Coexpression of HSV UL25 did not affect the distribution of UL28. We propose that an interaction between UL15 and UL28 facilitates the transport of a UL15-UL28 complex to the infected-cell nucleus.  相似文献   

15.
The herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) UL51 gene products are virion-associated phosphoproteins with apparent molecular masses of 27, 29, and 30 kDa in HSV-1-infected cells. In this study, we have investigated the intracellular localization and distribution of UL51 protein both in infected cells and in transfected cells expressing only UL51. We found that this protein colocalized closely with Golgi marker proteins such as the Golgi-58K protein and GM130 in transfected cells expressing only UL51. However, in infected cells, the UL51 protein localized to the juxtanuclear region but only partially colocalized with the Golgi maker proteins. Mutant protein analysis revealed that the N-terminal 15 amino acid residues of the UL51 protein sufficed for this Golgi localization property. The UL51 protein redistributed on addition of brefeldin A. This was prevented by pretreatment with 2-deoxyglucose and sodium azide, which results in ATP depletion, but not by pretreatment with NaF and AlCl(3), which activates heterotrimeric G proteins. Moreover, we found that palmitoylation of the UL51 protein through the N-terminal cysteine at position 9 was necessary for its Golgi localization. Protease digestion analysis suggested that the UL51 protein localized on the cytoplasmic face of the membrane in UL51-transfected cells, while in infected cells it localized mainly to the inside of cytoplasmic vesicles and/or the viral envelope. Transmission immunoelectron microscopy revealed an association of UL51 protein-specific labeling with cytoplasmic virions and also with some membranous structure. We infer from these observations that internalization of UL51 protein into the cytoplasmic vesicle and/or virion may occur in association with viral envelopment in HSV-infected cells.  相似文献   

16.
The UL7 gene of bovine herpesvirus 1 (BHV-1) strain Schönböken was found at a position and in a context predicted from the gene order in the prototype alphaherpesvirus herpes simplex virus type 1. The gene and flanking regions were sequenced, the UL7 RNA and protein were characterized, and 98.3% of the UL7 open reading frame was deleted from the viral genome without destroying productive virus replication. Concomitant deletion of nine 3' codons from the BHV-1 UL6 ORF and 77 amino acids from the carboxy terminus of the predicted BHV-1 UL8 protein demonstrated that these domains are also not essential for function of the respective proteins. The UL7 open reading frame encodes a protein of 300 amino acids with a calculated molecular mass of 32 kDa. Comparison with UL7 homologs of other alphaherpesviruses revealed a high degree of homology, the most prominent being to the predicted UL7 polypeptide of varicella-zoster virus, with 43.3% identical amino acids. A monospecific anti-UL7 serum identified the 33-kDa (apparent-molecular-mass) UL7 polypeptide which is translated from an early-expressed 1.7-kb RNA. The UL7 protein was localized in the cytoplasm of infected cells and could not be detected in purified virions. In summary, we describe the first identification of an alphaherpesviral UL7-encoded polypeptide and demonstrate that the UL7 protein is not essential for replication of BHV-1 in cell culture.  相似文献   

17.
A viral deletion mutant (delta UL21) that lacked the sequences encoding 484 of the predicted first 535 amino acids of the UL21 open reading frame was genetically engineered and studied with respect to its phenotype in cells in culture. We report the following. (i) The replication of delta UL21 was identical to that of the parent herpes simplex virus 1 (HSV-1) strain F in Vero cells, but the yields were three- to fivefold lower than those of the parent virus in human embryonic lung cells. (ii) To characterize the UL21 protein, we immunized rabbits against a purified bacterial fusion protein consisting of glutathione S-transferase fused to the majority of the coding domain of the UL21 gene. Rabbit antiserum directed against the fusion protein recognized a broad band with an apparent M(r) of 62,000 to 64,000 in lysates of cells infected with HSV-1 strain F and in virions purified from the infected cell cytoplasm. This band was absent from lysates of mock-infected cells or cells infected with the delta UL21 virus. The band was significantly reduced in intensity in lysates of cells infected in the presence of phosphonoacetic acid, indicating that it is expressed as a late (gamma 1) gene. (iii) Immunofluorescence studies localized the UL21 antigen primarily in brightly staining granules in the cytoplasms of infected cells. Taken together, the data indicate that the UL21 protein is a virion component dispensable for all aspects of replication of HSV-1 in the cells tested. The electrophoretic mobility of the UL21 protein suggests that it is extensively modified posttranslationally.  相似文献   

18.
The UL37 and ICP8 proteins present in herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1)-infected-cell extracts produced at 24 h postinfection coeluted from single-stranded-DNA-cellulose columns. Experiments carried out with the UL37 protein expressed by a vaccinia virus recombinant (V37) revealed that the UL37 protein did not exhibit DNA-binding activity in the absence of other HSV proteins. Analysis of extracts derived from cells coinfected with V37 and an ICP8-expressing vaccinia virus recombinant (V8) and analysis of extracts prepared from cells infected with the HSV-1 ICP8 deletion mutants d21 and n10 revealed that the retention of the UL37 protein on single-stranded DNA columns required a DNA-binding-competent ICP8 protein.  相似文献   

19.
Herpes simplex virus 1 (HSV-1) rapidly eliminates mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) from infected cells, an effect that is mediated by UL12.5, a mitochondrial isoform of the viral alkaline nuclease UL12. Our initial hypothesis was that UL12.5 directly degrades mtDNA via its nuclease activity. However, we show here that the nuclease activities of UL12.5 are not required for mtDNA loss. This observation led us to examine whether cellular nucleases mediate the mtDNA loss provoked by UL12.5. We provide evidence that the mitochondrial nucleases endonuclease G (ENDOG) and endonuclease G-like 1 (EXOG) play key redundant roles in UL12.5-mediated mtDNA depletion. Overall, our data indicate that UL12.5 deploys cellular proteins, including ENDOG and EXOG, to destroy mtDNA and contribute to a growing body of literature highlighting roles for ENDOG and EXOG in mtDNA maintenance.  相似文献   

20.
Cells infected with wild-type herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) show disruption of the organization of the nuclear lamina that underlies the nuclear envelope. This disruption is reflected in changes in the localization and phosphorylation of lamin proteins. Here, we show that HSV-1 infection causes relocalization of the LEM domain protein emerin. In cells infected with wild-type virus, emerin becomes more mobile in the nuclear membrane, and in cells infected with viruses that fail to express UL34 protein (pUL34) and US3 protein (pUS3), emerin no longer colocalizes with lamins, suggesting that infection causes a loss of connection between emerin and the lamina. Infection causes hyperphosphorylation of emerin in a manner dependent upon both pUL34 and pUS3. Some emerin hyperphosphorylation can be inhibited by the protein kinase Cdelta (PKCdelta) inhibitor rottlerin. Emerin and pUL34 interact physically, as shown by pull-down and coimmunoprecipitation assays. Emerin expression is not, however, necessary for infection, since virus growth is not impaired in cells derived from emerin-null transgenic mice. The results suggest a model in which pUS3 and PKCdelta that has been recruited by pUL34 hyperphosphorylate emerin, leading to disruption of its connections with lamin proteins and contributing to the disruption of the nuclear lamina. Changes in emerin localization, nuclear shape, and lamin organization characteristic of cells infected with wild-type HSV-1 also occur in cells infected with recombinant virus that does not make viral capsids, suggesting that these changes occur independently of capsid envelopment.  相似文献   

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