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1.
The herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) UL15 gene is a spliced gene composed of two exons and is predicted to encode an 81-kDa protein of 735 amino acids (aa). Two UL15 gene products with molecular masses of 75 and 35 kDa have been observed (J. Baines, A. Poon, J. Rovnak, and B. Roizman, J. Virol. 68:8118-8124, 1994); however, it is not clear whether the smaller form represents a proteolytic cleavage product of the larger form or whether it is separately translated. In addition, an HSV-1 temperature-sensitive mutant in the UL15 gene (ts66.4) is defective in both cleavage of viral DNA concatemers into unit-length monomers and packaging of viral DNA into capsids (A. Poon and B. Roizman, J. Virol. 67:4497-4503, 1993; J. Baines et al., J. Virol. 68:8118-8124, 1994). In this study, we detected two UL15 gene products of 81 and 30 kDa in HSV-1-infected cells, using a polyclonal antibody raised against a maltose binding protein fusion construct containing UL15 exon 2. In addition, we report the isolation of two HSV-1 insertion mutants, hr81-1 and hr81-2, which contain an ICP6::lacZ insertion in UL15 exon 1 and exon 2 and thus would be predicted to encode C-terminally truncated peptides of 153 and 509 aa long, respectively. hr81-1 and hr81-2 are defective in DNA cleavage and packaging and accumulate only B capsids. However, both mutants are able to undergo wild-type levels of DNA replication and genomic inversion, suggesting that genomic inversion is a result of DNA replication rather than of DNA cleavage and packaging. We also provide evidence that the 81- and 30-kDa proteins are the products of separate in-frame translation events from the UL15 gene and that the 81-kDa full-length UL15 protein is required for DNA cleavage and packaging.  相似文献   

2.
Previous studies (F. C. Purves, D. Spector, and B. Roizman, J. Virol. 65:5757-5764, 1991) have shown that the protein kinase encoded by the U(S)3 gene mediates posttranslational modification of a viral phosphoprotein with an apparent M(r) of 30,000 encoded by the UL34 gene. Here we report the following. (i) UL34 protein is not phosphorylated in cells infected with recombinant viruses deleted in the U(S)3 gene. (ii) Several new phosphoproteins (apparent M(r)s, 25,000 to 35,000) are present in cells infected with recombinant viruses deleted in the U(S)3 gene or with viruses carrying a mutation in the UL34 gene that precluded phosphorylation of the UL34 gene product by the U(S)3 protein kinase, but not in cells infected under conditions which permit phosphorylation of the UL34 protein. These proteins are genetically unrelated to the product of the UL34 gene. (iii) Polyclonal rabbit anti-UL34 protein serum precipitated not only the UL34 protein but also the other (25,000- to 35,000-M(r)) phosphoproteins from lysates of cells infected with U(S)3- virus. (iv) The UL34 gene product is a membrane protein inasmuch as the polyclonal anti-UL34 serum reacted with surfaces of intact, unfixed, infected cells and the antigen-antibody complex formed in this reaction contained the UL34 protein. (v) Small amounts of the UL34 protein were present in virions of infected cells. We conclude that the UL34 gene product is a membrane protein exclusively phosphorylated by the U(S)3 protein kinase which can either directly or indirectly form complexes with several other phosphoproteins. Experiments done thus far suggest that these phosphoproteins are present only under conditions in which the UL34 protein is not phosphorylated.  相似文献   

3.
The U(L)15 gene of herpes simplex virus type 1 is composed of two exons. A mutation previously shown to preclude viral DNA cleavage and packaging at the nonpermissive temperature was identified as a change from a highly conserved serine to proline at codon 653. Separate viral mutants that contained stop codons inserted into exon I of U(L)15 (designated S648) or an insertion of the Escherichia coli lacZ gene into a truncated U(L)15 exon II [designated HSV-1(delta U(L)15ExII)] were constructed. Recombinant viruses derived from S648 and HSV-1(delta U(L)15ExII) and containing restored U(L)15 genes were constructed and designated S648R and HSV-1(delta U(L)15ExIIR), respectively. Unlike HSV-1(delta U(L)15ExIIR) and S648R, the viruses containing mutant U(L)15 genes failed to cleave and package viral DNA when propagated on noncomplementing cells. As revealed by electron microscopy, large numbers of enveloped capsids lacking viral DNA accumulated within the cytoplasm of cells infected with either S648 or HSV-1(delta U(L)15ExII) but not in cells infected with HSV-1(delta U(L)15ExIIR) or S648R. Thus, one function of the U(L)15 gene is to effectively prevent immature particles lacking DNA from exiting the nucleus by envelopment at the inner lamella of the nuclear membrane. Cells infected with HSV-1(delta U(L)15ExII) did not express the 75,000- or 35,000-apparent-Mr proteins previously shown to be products of the U(L)15 open reading frame, whereas the 35,000-apparent-Mr protein was readily detectable in cells infected with S648. We conclude that at least the 75,000-Mr protein is required for viral DNA cleavage and packaging and hypothesize that the 35,000-Mr protein is derived from translation of a novel mRNA located partially or completely within the second exon of U(L)15.  相似文献   

4.
The UL15 gene of herpes simplex virus 1 (HSV-1) is encoded by two or more exons in all herpesvirus genomes sequenced to date. The UL15 coding region is highly conserved, and the intron invariably encodes other genes transcribed antisense to the UL15 coding region. Previously we reported that we deleted the intron domain encoding UL16 but were unable to delete UL15 (J. D. Baines and B. Roizman, J. Virol. 65:938-944, 1991). Here we report that we replaced exon I of UL15 with an unspliced cDNA copy of UL15 in HSV-1 DNA and deleted 58% of the carboxyl-terminal sequences of the natural copy of exon II, including the polyadenylation signal. The yields of infectious virus obtained upon infection with viruses containing the cDNA copy of UL15 were similar to those of an isogenic virus with a wild-type UL15 gene. We therefore conclude that the separation of the two exons of UL15 by an intron encoding two genes is not essential for the replication of HSV, at least in cell culture.  相似文献   

5.
Earlier reports (Y. Kawaguchi, R. Bruni, and B. Roizman, J. Virol. 71:1019-1024, 1997; Y. Kawaguchi, C. Van Sant, and B. Roizman, J. Virol. 72:1731-1736, 1998) showed that herpes simplex virus 1 (HSV-1) infection causes the hyperphosphorylation of translation elongation factor 1delta (EF-1delta) and that the modification of EF-1delta is the consequence of direct phosphorylation by a viral protein kinase encoded by the UL13 gene of HSV-1. The UL13 gene is conserved in members of all herpesvirus subfamilies. Here we report the following. (i) In various mammalian cells, accumulation of the hyperphosphorylated form of EF-1delta is observed after infection with alpha-, beta-, and gammaherpesviruses, including HSV-2, feline herpesvirus 1, pseudorabiesvirus, bovine herpesvirus 1, human cytomegalovirus (HCMV), and equine herpesvirus 2. (ii) In human lung fibroblast cells infected with recombinant HSV-1 lacking the UL13 gene, the hypophosphorylated form of EF-1delta is a minor species, whereas the amount of the hyperphosphorylated form of EF-1delta significantly increases in cells infected with the recombinant HSV-1 in which UL13 had been replaced by HCMV UL97, a homologue of UL13. These results indicate that the posttranslational modification of EF-1delta is conserved herpesvirus function and the UL13 homologues may be responsible for the universal modification of the translation factor.  相似文献   

6.
Homologs of the UL25 gene product of herpes simplex virus (HSV) have been identified in all three subfamilies of the Herpesviridae. However, their exact function during viral replication is not yet known. Whereas earlier studies indicated that the UL25 protein of HSV-1 is not required for cleavage of newly replicated viral DNA but is necessary for stable encapsidation (A. R. McNab, P. Desai, S. Person, L. Roof, D. R. Thompson, W. W. Newcomb, J. C. Brown, and F. L. Homa, J. Virol. 72:1060-1070, 1998), viral DNA packaging has recently been demonstrated to occur in the absence of UL25, although at significantly decreased levels compared to wild-type HSV-1 (N. Stow, J. Virol. 75:10755-10765 2001). To clarify the functional role of UL25 we analyzed the homologous protein of the alphaherpesvirus pseudorabies virus (PrV). PrV UL25 was found to be essential for viral replication, as a mutant virus lacking the UL25 protein required UL25-expressing cells for productive propagation. In the absence of the UL25 protein, newly replicated PrV DNA was cleaved and DNA-containing C-type capsids were detected in infected cell nuclei. However, although capsids were frequently found in close association with the inner nuclear membrane, nuclear egress was not observed. Consequently, no capsids were found in the cytoplasm, resulting in an inhibition of virion morphogenesis. In contrast, the formation of capsidless enveloped tegument structures (L particles) in the cytoplasm was readily observed. Thus, our data demonstrate that the PrV UL25 protein is not essential for cleavage and encapsidation of viral genomes, although both processes occur more efficiently in the presence of the protein. However, the presence of the PrV UL25 protein is a prerequisite for nuclear egress. By immunoelectron microscopy, we detected UL25-specific label on DNA-containing C capsids but not on other intranuclear immature or defective capsid forms. Thus, the PrV UL25 protein may represent the hitherto missing trigger that allows primary envelopment preferably of DNA-filled C capsids.  相似文献   

7.
The herpes simplex virus 1 UL10 gene encodes a hydrophobic membrane protein dispensable for viral replication in cell culture (J.D. Baines and B. Roizman, J. Virol. 65:938-944, 1991). We report the following. (i) A fusion protein consisting of glutathione S-transferase fused to the C-terminal 93 amino acids of the UL10 protein was used to produce a rabbit polyclonal antiserum. The antiserum reacted with infected-cell proteins which formed in denaturing polyacrylamide gels a sharp band (apparent M(r) of 50,000) and a very broad band (M(r) of 53,000 to 63,000). These bands were not formed by lysates of UL10- virus or by lysates of infected cells boiled in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate before electrophoresis. (ii) The proteins forming both bands were labeled by [3H]glucosamine, indicating that they were glycosylated. (iii) The UL10 protein in cells treated with tunicamycin formed a single band (apparent M(r) of 47,000) reactive with the anti-UL10 antibody, indicating that the 47,000-M(r) protein was a precursor of N-glycosylated, more slowly migrating forms of UL10. Treatment of the immunoprecipitate with endoglycosidase H increased the electrophoretic mobility of the 50,000-M(r) species to that of the 47,000-M(r) species, indicating that the 50,000-M(r) species contained high-mannose polysaccharide chains, whereas the proteins forming the 53,000- to 63,000-M(r) bands contained mature chains inasmuch as they were resistant to digestion by the enzyme. (iv) The UL10 protein of R7221 carrying a 20-amino-acid epitope formed only one band with an M(r) of 53,000. This band was sensitive to endoglycosidase H, suggesting that the epitope inserted in the R7221 UL10 protein may have interfered with glycosylation. (v) The UL10 protein does not contain a cleavable signal sequence inasmuch as the first UL10 methionine codon was reflected in the 50,000-M(r) protein. (vi) The UL10 protein is present in virions and plasma membranes of unfixed cells that were reacted with the polyclonal rabbit antibody. In accordance with the current nomenclature, the UL10 protein is designated glycoprotein M.  相似文献   

8.
In cells infected with herpes simplex viruses the capsids acquire an envelope at the nuclear membrane and are usually found in the cytoplasm in structures bound by membranes. Infected cells also accumulate unenveloped capsids alone or juxtaposed to cytoplasmic membranes. The juxtaposed capsids have been variously interpreted as either undergoing terminal deenvelopment resulting from fusion of the envelope with the membrane of the cytoplasmic vesicles or undergoing sequential envelopment and deenvelopment as capsids transit the cytoplasm into the extracellular space. Recent reports have shown that (i) wild-type virus attaches to but does not penetrate cells expressing glycoprotein D (G. Campadelli-Fiume, M. Arsenakis, F. Farabegoli, and B. Roizman, J. Virol. 62:159-167, 1988) and that (ii) a mutation in glycoprotein D enables the mutant virus to productively infect cells expressing the wild-type glycoprotein (G. Campadelli-Fiume, S. Qi, E. Avitabile, L. Foa-Tomasi, R. Brandimarti, and B. Roizman, J. Virol. 64:6070-6079, 1990). If the unenveloped capsids in the cytoplasm result from fusion of the cytoplasmic membranes with the envelopes of viruses transiting the cytoplasm, cells infected with virus carrying the mutation in glycoprotein D should contain many more unenveloped capsids in the cytoplasm inasmuch as there would be little or no restriction in the fusion of the envelope with cytoplasmic membranes. Comparison of thin sections of baby hamster kidney cells infected with wild-type and mutant viruses indicated that this was the case. Moreover, in contrast to the wild-type parent, the mutant virus was not released efficiently from infected cells. The conclusion that the unenveloped capsids are arrested forms of deenveloped capsids is supported by the observation that the unenveloped capsids were unstable in that they exhibited partially extruded DNA.  相似文献   

9.
The herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) UL20 protein is an important determinant for virion morphogenesis and virus-induced cell fusion. A precise deletion of the UL20 gene in the HSV-1 KOS strain was constructed without affecting the adjacent UL20.5 gene. The resultant KOS/UL20-null virus produced small plaques of 8 to 15 cells in Vero cells while it produced wild-type plaques on the complementing cell line G5. Electron microscopic examination of infected cells revealed that the KOS/UL20-null virions predominantly accumulated capsids in the cytoplasm while a small percentage of virions were found as enveloped virions within cytoplasmic vacuoles. Recently, it was shown that UL20 expression was necessary and sufficient for cell surface expression of gK (T. P. Foster, X. Alvarez, and K. G. Kousoulas, J. Virol. 77:499-510, 2003). Therefore, we investigated the effect of UL20 on virus-induced cell fusion caused by syncytial mutations in gB and gK by constructing recombinant viruses containing the gBsyn3 or gKsyn1 mutations in a UL20-null genetic background. Both recombinant viruses failed to cause virus-induced cell fusion in Vero cells while they readily caused fusion of UL20-null complementing G5 cells. Ultrastructural examination of UL20-null viruses carrying the gBsyn3 or gKsyn1 mutation revealed a similar distribution of virions as the KOS/UL20-null virus. However, cytoplasmic vacuoles contained aberrant virions having multiple capsids within a single envelope. These multicapsid virions may have been formed either by fusion of viral envelopes or by the concurrent reenvelopment of multiple capsids. These results suggest that the UL20 protein regulates membrane fusion phenomena involved in virion morphogenesis and virus-induced cell fusion.  相似文献   

10.
The UL20 gene product of pseudorabies virus functions in virus egress.   总被引:11,自引:10,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
The UL20 open reading frame is positionally conserved in different alphaherpesvirus genomes and is predicted to encode an integral membrane protein. A previously described UL20- mutant of herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) exhibited a defect in egress correlating with retention of virions in the perinuclear space (J. D. Baines, P. L. Ward, G. Campadelli-Fiume, and B. Roizman, J. Virol. 65:6414-6424, 1991). To analyze UL20 function in a related but different herpesvirus, we constructed a UL20- pseudorabies virus (PrV) mutant by insertional mutagenesis. Similar to HSV-1, UL20- PrV was found to be severely impaired in both cell-to-cell spread and release from cultured cells. The severity of this defect appeared to be cell type dependent, being more prominent in Vero than in human 143TK- cells. Surprisingly, electron microscopy revealed the retention of enveloped virus particles in cytoplasmic vesicles of Vero cells infected with UL20- PrV. This contrasts with the situation in the UL20- HSV-1 mutant, which accumulated virions in the perinuclear cisterna of Vero cells. Therefore, the UL20 gene products of PrV and HSV-1 appear to be involved in distinct steps of viral egress, acting in different intracellular compartments. This might be caused either by different functions of the UL20 proteins themselves or by generally different egress pathways of PrV and HSV-1 mediated by other viral gene products.  相似文献   

11.
The U(L)15 gene of herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1), like U(L)6, U(L)17, U(L)28, U(L)32, and U(L)33, is required for cleavage of concatameric DNA into genomic lengths and for packaging of cleaved genomes into preformed capsids. A previous study indicated that the U(L)15 gene encodes minor capsid proteins. In the present study, we have shown that the amino-terminal 509 amino acids of the U(L)15-encoded protein are sufficient to confer capsid association inasmuch as a carboxyl-terminally truncated form of the U(L)15-encoded protein with an M(r) of approximately 55,000 readily associated with capsids. This and previous studies have shown that, whereas three U(L)15-encoded proteins with apparent M(r)s of 83,000, 80,000, and 79,000 associated with wild-type B capsids, only the full-length 83,000-M(r) protein associated with B capsids purified from cells infected with viruses lacking functional U(L)6, U(L)17, U(L)28, U(L)32, and U(L)33 genes (B. Salmon and J. D. Baines, J. Virol. 72:3045-3050, 1998). Thus, all viral mutants that fail to cleave viral DNA into genomic-length molecules also fail to produce capsid-associated U(L)15 80,000- and 79,000-M(r) proteins. In contrast, the 80,000- and 79,000-M(r) proteins were readily detected in capsids purified from cells infected with a U(L)25 null virus that cleaves, but does not package, DNA. The conclusion that the amino terminus of the 83,000-M(r) protein is truncated to produce the 80,000- and/or 79,000-M(r) protein was supported by the following observations. (i) Whereas the C termini of the 83,000-, 80, 000-, and 79,000-M(r) proteins are identical, immunoreactivity dependent on the first 35 amino acids of the U(L)15 83,000-M(r) protein was absent from the 80,000- and 79,000-M(r) proteins. (ii) The 79,000- and 80,000-M(r) proteins were detected in capsids from cells infected with HSV-1(U(L)15M36V), an engineered virus encoding valine rather than methionine at codon 36. Thus, initiation at codon 36 is unlikely to account for production of the 80,000- and/or 79, 000-M(r) protein. Taken together, these data strongly suggest that capsid-associated U(L)15-encoded protein is proteolytically cleaved near the N terminus and indicate that this modification is tightly linked to maturation of genomic DNA.  相似文献   

12.
At least seven viral genes encode proteins (UL6, UL15, UL17, UL25, UL28, UL32, and UL33) that are required for DNA cleavage and packaging of herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) DNA. Sequence analysis reveals that UL15 shares homology with gp17, the large catalytic subunit of the bacteriophage T4 terminase. Thus, UL15 may play a direct role in the cleavage of viral DNA replication intermediates into monomers. In this study, we asked whether UL15 and other cleavage and packaging proteins could be detected in capsids isolated from infected cells. Consistent with previous studies showing that UL6 and UL25 are minor protein constituents of the capsids, we detected these proteins in both B and C capsids. In contrast, the previously identified full-length version (81 kDa) of UL15 was found predominantly in B capsids and in much smaller amounts in C capsids. In addition, the UL28 protein was found predominantly in B but not C capsids in a distribution similar to that of the 81-kDa version of UL15. These results suggest that UL28 and the 81-kDa form of UL15 are transiently associated with capsid intermediates during the packaging process. Surprisingly, however, a previously unidentified 87-kDa form of UL15 was found in the B and C capsids and in virions. Analysis of cells infected with mutants individually lacking UL6, UL15, UL25, UL28, or UL32 demonstrates that the lack of one cleavage and packaging protein does not affect the expression of the others. Furthermore, this analysis, together with guanidine HCl extraction analysis of purified capsids, indicates that UL6, UL25, and UL28 are able to associate with B capsids in the absence of other DNA cleavage and packaging proteins. On the other hand, the two UL15-related proteins (81 and 87 kDa) do not associate efficiently with B capsids in cells infected with UL6 and UL28 mutants. These results suggest that the ability of the UL15-related proteins to bind to B capsids may be mediated through interactions with UL6 and UL28.  相似文献   

13.
Earlier studies have shown that the Golgi apparatus was fragmented and dispersed in herpes simplex virus 1-infected Vero and HEp-2 cells but not in human 143TK- cells, that the fragmentation and dispersal required viral functions expressed concurrently with or after the onset of DNA synthesis (G. Campadelli-Fiume, R. Brandimarti, C. Di Lazzaro, P. L. Ward, B. Roizman, and M. R. Torrisi, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 90:2798-2802, 1993), and that in 143TK- cells, but not Vero or HEp-2 cells, infected with viral mutants lacking the UL20 gene virions were glycosylated and transported to extracellular space (J. D. Baines, P. L. Ward, G. Campadelli-Fiume, and B. Roizman, J. Virol. 65:6414-6424, 1991; E. Avitabile, P. L. Ward, C. Di Lazzaro, M. R. Torrisi, B. Roizman, and G. Campadelli-Fiume, J. Virol. 68:7397-7405, 1994). Experiments designed to elucidate the role of the microtubules and of intact or fragmented Golgi apparatus in the exocytosis of virions showed the following. (i) In all cell lines tested (Vero, 143TK-, BHK, and Hep-2) microtubules underwent fragmentation particularly evident at the cell periphery and then reorganized into bundles which circumvent the nucleus. This event was not affected by inhibitors of viral DNA synthesis. We conclude that redistribution of microtubules may be required but is not sufficient for the fragmentation and dispersal of the Golgi apparatus. (ii) In all infected cell lines tested, nocodazole caused fragmentation and dispersal of the Golgi and a far more extensive depolymerization of the microtubules than was seen in untreated, infected Vero or HEp-2 cells. Taxol precluded the depolymerization of the microtubules and fragmentation of the Golgi in both infected cell lines. Neither nocodazole nor taxol affected the exocytosis of infectious virus from Vero, HEp-2, or 143TK- cells infected with wild-type virus. We conclude that the effects of nocodazole or of taxol are dominant over the effects of viral infection in the cell lines tested and that viral exocytosis is independent of the organization of microtubules or of the integrity of the Golgi apparatus. Lastly, the data suggest that herpes simplex viruses have evolved an exocytic pathway for which the UL20 protein is a component required in some cells but not others and in which this protein does not merely compensate for the fragmentation and dispersal of the Golgi apparatus.  相似文献   

14.
Replication of human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) produces large DNA concatemers of head-to-tail-linked viral genomes that upon packaging into capsids are cut into unit-length genomes. The mechanisms underlying cleavage-packaging and the subsequent steps prior to nuclear egress of DNA-filled capsids are incompletely understood. The hitherto uncharacterized product of the essential HCMV UL52 gene was proposed to participate in these processes. To investigate the function of pUL52, we constructed a ΔUL52 mutant as well as a complementing cell line. We found that replication of viral DNA was not impaired in noncomplementing cells infected with the ΔUL52 virus, but viral concatemers remained uncleaved. Since the subnuclear localization of the known cleavage-packaging proteins pUL56, pUL89, and pUL104 was unchanged in ΔUL52-infected fibroblasts, pUL52 does not seem to act via these proteins. Electron microscopy studies revealed only B capsids in the nuclei of ΔUL52-infected cells, indicating that the mutant virus has a defect in encapsidation of viral DNA. Generation of recombinant HCMV genomes encoding epitope-tagged pUL52 versions showed that only the N-terminally tagged pUL52 supported viral growth, suggesting that the C terminus is crucial for its function. pUL52 was expressed as a 75-kDa protein with true late kinetics. It localized preferentially to the nuclei of infected cells and was found to enclose the replication compartments. Taken together, our results demonstrate an essential role for pUL52 in cleavage-packaging of HCMV DNA. Given its unique subnuclear localization, the function of pUL52 might be distinct from that of other cleavage-packaging proteins.  相似文献   

15.
The UL11 gene of herpes simplex virus 1 was reported to encode a myristylated protein (C. A. MacLean, B. Clark, and D. J. McGeoch, J. Gen. Virol. 70:3147-3157, 1989). To determine the function of the gene product, a recombinant virus (R7219) lacking 61% of the codons (176 bp of the 288-bp coding domain) was genetically engineered. The deletion mutant replicated in all cell lines tested, albeit to titers 30- to 250-fold lower than those obtained from cells infected with wild-type virus. Electron microscopic analyses indicated that both full and empty capsids accumulated in the nuclei, juxtaposed with the inner lamellae of the nuclear membranes, and that increased numbers of naked particles were present in the cytoplasm of cells infected with the mutant virus. There was a greater than 1,000-fold decrease in the amount of infectious extracellular virus released from Vero cells infected with the deletion mutant compared with that from cells infected with wild-type virus. Furthermore, the onset of release of infectious virus from cells infected with the UL11- mutant was significantly delayed: levels of extracellular UL11- virus increased 15-fold between 20 and 26 h after infection, while levels of wild-type extracellular virus increased 500-fold between 8 and 14 h after infection. A virus in which the UL11 gene was restored produced wild-type levels of total and extracellular virus and was indistinguishable from wild-type virus upon analysis by electron microscopy. Taken together, the data indicate that the absence of the UL11 gene causes a reduced capacity to envelope and transport virions into the extracellular space.  相似文献   

16.
P L Ward  W O Ogle    B Roizman 《Journal of virology》1996,70(7):4623-4631
In cells infected with herpes simplex virus 1 (HSV-1), the viral proteins ICP5 (infected-cell protein 5) and VP19c (the product of UL38) are associated with mature capsids, whereas the same proteins, along with ICP35, are components of immature capsids. Here we report that ICP35, ICP5, and UL38 (VP19c) coalesce at late times postinfection and form antigenically dense structures located at the periphery of nuclei, close to but not abutting nuclear membranes. These structures were formed in cells infected with a virus carrying a temperature-sensitive mutation in the UL15 gene at nonpermissive temperatures. Since at these temperatures viral DNA is made but not packaged, these structures must contain the proteins for immature-capsid assembly and were therefore designated assemblons. These assemblons are located at the periphery of a diffuse structure composed of proteins involved in DNA synthesis. This structure overlaps only minimally with the assemblons. In contrast, tegument proteins were located in asymmetrically distributed structures also partially overlapping with assemblons but frequently located nearer to nuclear membranes. Of particular interest is the finding that the UL15 protein colocalized with the proteins associated with viral DNA synthesis rather than with assemblons, suggesting that the association with DNA may take place during its synthesis and precedes the involvement of this protein in packaging of the viral DNA into capsids. The formation of three different compartments consisting of proteins involved in viral DNA synthesis, the capsid proteins, and tegument proteins suggests that there exists a viral machinery which enables aggregation and coalescence of specific viral protein groups on the basis of their function.  相似文献   

17.
Homologs of the UL25 gene product of herpes simplex virus 1 (HSV-1) are highly conserved among the Herpesviridae. However, their exact function during viral replication is unknown. Current evidence suggests that in the alphaherpesvirus pseudorabies virus (PrV) the capsid-associated pUL25 plays a role in primary envelopment of DNA-containing mature capsids at the inner nuclear membrane. In the absence of pUL25, capsids were found in close association with the inner nuclear membrane, but nuclear egress was not observed (B. G. Klupp, H. Granzow, G. M. Keil, and T. C. Mettenleiter, J. Virol. 80:6235-6246, 2006). In contrast, HSV-1 pUL25 has been assigned a role in stable packaging of viral genomes (N. Stow, J. Virol. 75:10755-10765, 2001). Despite these apparently divergent functions, we wanted to assess whether the high sequence homology translates into functional homology. Therefore, we first analyzed a newly constructed HSV-1 UL25 deletion mutant in our assay system and observed a similar phenotype as in PrV. In the nuclei of infected cells, numerous electron-dense C capsids were detected, whereas primary envelopment of these capsids did not ensue. In agreement with results from PrV, vesicles were observed in the perinuclear space. Since these data indicated functional homology, we analyzed the ability of pUL25 of HSV-1 to complement a PrV UL25 deletion mutant and vice versa. Whereas a HSV-1 pUL25-expressing cell line partially complemented the pUL25 defect in PrV, reciprocal complementation of a HSV-1 UL25 deletion mutant by PrV pUL25 was not observed. Thus, our data demonstrate overlapping, although not identical functions of these two conserved herpesvirus proteins, and point to a conserved functional role in herpes virion formation.  相似文献   

18.
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   

19.
Protein-protein interactions are required for many biological functions. Previous work has demonstrated an interaction between the human cytomegalovirus DNA polymerase subunit UL44 and the viral replication factor UL84. In this study, glutathione S-transferase pulldown assays indicated that residues 1 to 68 of UL84 are both necessary and sufficient for efficient interaction of UL84 with UL44 in vitro. We created a mutant virus in which sequences encoding these residues were deleted. This mutant displayed decreased virus replication compared to wild-type virus. Immunoprecipitation assays showed that the mutation decreased but did not abrogate association of UL84 with UL44 in infected cell lysate, suggesting that the association in the infected cell can involve other protein-protein interactions. Further immunoprecipitation assays indicated that IRS1, TRS1, and nucleolin are candidates for such interactions in infected cells. Quantitative real-time PCR analysis of viral DNA indicated that the absence of the UL84 amino terminus does not notably affect viral DNA synthesis. Western blotting experiments and pulse labeling of infected cells with [(35)S]methionine demonstrated a rather modest downregulation of levels of multiple proteins and particularly decreased levels of the minor capsid protein UL85. Electron microscopy demonstrated that viral capsids assemble but are mislocalized in nuclei of cells infected with the mutant virus, with fewer cytoplasmic capsids detected. In sum, deletion of the sequences encoding the amino terminus of UL84 affects interaction with UL44 and virus replication unexpectedly, not viral DNA synthesis. Mislocalization of viral capsids in infected cell nuclei likely contributes to the observed decrease in virus replication.  相似文献   

20.
The herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) UL25 gene contains a 580-amino-acid open reading frame that codes for an essential protein. Previous studies have shown that the UL25 gene product is a virion component (M. A. Ali et al., Virology 216:278–283, 1996) involved in virus penetration and capsid assembly (C. Addison et al., Virology 138:246–259, 1984). In this study, we describe the isolation of a UL25 mutant (KUL25NS) that was constructed by insertion of an in-frame stop codon in the UL25 open reading frame and propagated on a complementing cell line. Although the mutant was capable of synthesis of viral DNA, it did not form plaques or produce infectious virus in noncomplementing cells. Antibodies specific for the UL25 protein were used to demonstrate that KUL25NS-infected Vero cells did not express the UL25 protein. Western immunoblotting showed that the UL25 protein was associated with purified, wild-type HSV A, B, and C capsids. Transmission electron microscopy indicated that the nucleus of Vero cells infected with KUL25NS contained large numbers of both A and B capsids but no C capsids. Analysis of infected cells by sucrose gradient sedimentation analysis confirmed that the ratio of A to B capsids was elevated in KUL25NS-infected Vero cells. Following restriction enzyme digestion, specific terminal fragments were observed in DNA isolated from KUL25NS-infected Vero cells, indicating that the UL25 gene was not required for cleavage of replicated viral DNA. The latter result was confirmed by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE), which showed the presence of genome-size viral DNA in KUL25NS-infected Vero cells. DNase I treatment prior to PFGE demonstrated that monomeric HSV DNA was not packaged in the absence of the UL25 protein. Our results indicate that the product of the UL25 gene is required for packaging but not cleavage of replicated viral DNA.  相似文献   

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