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1.
Two proteins, a 56-kDa protein (p56) and a 58-kDa protein (p58), are produced from the hepatitis C virus (HCV) nonstructural region 5A (NS5A). Recently, we found that both proteins are phosphorylated at serine residues and that p58 is a hyperphosphorylated form of p56. Furthermore, hyper-phosphorylation depends on the production of an intact form of the HCV NS4A protein. To clarify the nature of NS5A phosphorylation, pulse-chase analysis was performed with a transient protein production system in cultured cells. The study indicated that basal and hyperphosphorylation of NS5A occurred after proteolytic production of NS5A was complete. In an attempt to identify the location of the hyperphosphorylation sites in p58, proteins with sequential deletions from the C-terminal region of NS5A and with mutations of possible phosphorylated serine residues to a neutral amino acid, alanine, were constructed. The deleted or mutated proteins were then tested for hyperphosphorylation in the presence of the NS4A product. Here, we report that serine residues 2197, 2201, and/or 2204 are important for hyper-phosphorylation. Important sites for basal phosphorylation were identified in the region from residues 2200 to 2250 and in the C-terminal region of the NS5A product. A subcellular localization study showed that most of the NS5A products were localized in the nuclear periplasmic membrane fraction.  相似文献   

2.
The nonstructural protein NS5A of hepatitis c virus (HCV) has been demonstrated to be a phosphoprotein with an apparent molecular mass of 56 kDa. In the presence of other viral proteins, p56 is converted into a slower-migrating form of NS5A (p58) by additional phosphorylation events. In this report, we show that the presence of NS3, NS4A, and NS4B together with NS5A is necessary and sufficient for the generation of the hyperphosphorylated form of NS5A (p58) and that all proteins must be encoded on the same polyprotein (in cis). Kinetic studies of NS5A synthesis and pulse-chase experiments demonstrate that fully processed NS5A is the substrate for the formation of p58 and that p56 is converted to p58. To investigate the role of NS3 in NS5A hyperphosphorylation, point and deletion mutations were introduced into NS3 in the context of a polyprotein containing the proteins from NS3 to NS5A. Mutation of the catalytic serine residue into alanine abolished protease activity of NS3 and resulted in total inhibition of NS5A hyperphosphorylation, even if polyprotein processing was allowed by addition of NS3 and NS4A in trans. The same result was obtained by deletion of the first 10 or 28 N-terminal amino acids of NS3, which are known to be important for the formation of a stable complex between NS3 and its cofactor NS4A. These data suggest that the formation of p58 is closely connected to HCV polyprotein processing events. Additional data obtained with NS3 containing the 34 C-terminal residues of NS2 provide evidence that in addition to NS3 protease activity the authentic N-terminal sequence is required for NS5A hyperphosphorylation.  相似文献   

3.
Hepatitis C virus (HCV) serine proteinase (Cpro-2) is responsible for the processing of HCV nonstructural (NS) protein processing. To clarify the mechanism of Cpro-2-dependent processing, pulse-chase and mutation analyses were performed by using a transient protein production system in cultured cells. Pulse-chase study revealed the sequential production of HCV-NS proteins. Production of p70(NS3) and p66(NS5B) were rapid. An 89-kDa processing intermediate protein (p89) was observed during the early part of the chase. p89 seemed to be cleaved first into a 31-kDa protein (p31) and a p58/56(NS5A). p31 was further processed into p4(NS4A) and p27(NS4B). Mutation analysis of cleavage sites of NS4A/4B, NS4B/5A, and NS5A/5B revealed that cleavage at each site is essentially independent from cleavage occurring at the other site.  相似文献   

4.
A transient protein expression system in COS-1 cells was used to study the role of hepatitis C virus (HCV)-encoded NS4A protein on HCV nonstructural polyprotein processing. By analyzing the protein expression and processing of a deletion mutant polypeptide, NS delta 4A, which encodes the entire putative HCV nonstructural polyprotein except the region encoding NS4A, the versatile functions of NS4A were revealed. Most of the NS3 processed from NS delta 4A was localized in the cytosol fraction and was degraded promptly. Coproduction of NS4A stabilizes NS3 and assists in its localization in the membrane. NS4A was found to be indispensable for cleavage at the 4B/5A site but not essential for cleavage at the 5A/5B site in NS delta 4A. The functioning of NS4A as a cofactor for cleavage at the 4B/5A site was also observed when 30 amino acids around this site was used as a substrate and a serine proteinase domain of 167 amino acids, from Gly-1049 to Ser-1215, was used as an enzyme protein, suggesting that possible domains for the interaction of NS4A were in those regions of the enzyme protein (NS3) and/or the substrate protein. Two proteins, p58 and p56, were produced from NS5A. For the production of p58, equal or excess molar amounts of NS4A relative to NS delta 4A were required. Deletion analysis of NS4A revealed a minimum functional domain of NS4A of 10 amino acids, from Gly-1678 to Ile-1687.  相似文献   

5.
NS5A of the hepatitis C virus (HCV) is a highly phosphorylated protein involved in resistance against interferon and required most likely for replication of the viral genome. Phosphorylation of this protein is mediated by a cellular kinase(s) generating multiple proteins with different electrophoretic mobilities. In the case of the genotype 1b isolate HCV-J, in addition to the basal phosphorylated NS5A (designated pp56), a hyperphosphorylated form (pp58) was found on coexpression of NS4A (T. Kaneko, Y. Tanji, S. Satoh, M. Hijikata, S. Asabe, K. Kimura, and K. Shimotohno, Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 205:320-326, 1994). Using a comparative analysis of two full-length genomes of genotype 1b, competent or defective for NS5A hyperphosphorylation, we investigated the requirements for this NS5A modification. We found that hyperphosphorylation occurs when NS5A is expressed as part of a continuous NS3-5A polyprotein but not when it is expressed on its own or trans complemented with one or several other viral proteins. Results obtained with chimeras of both genomes show that single amino acid substitutions within NS3 that do not affect polyprotein cleavage can enhance or reduce NS5A hyperphosphorylation. Furthermore, mutations in the central or carboxy-terminal NS4A domain as well as small deletions in NS4B can also reduce or block hyperphosphorylation without affecting polyprotein processing. These requirements most likely reflect the formation of a highly ordered NS3-5A multisubunit complex responsible for the differential phosphorylation of NS5A and probably also for modulation of its biological activities.  相似文献   

6.
Nonstructural protein 5A of the hepatitis C virus (HCV) is a highly phosphorylated molecule implicated in multiple interactions with the host cell and most likely involved in RNA replication. Two phosphorylated variants of NS5A have been described, designated according to their apparent molecular masses (in kilodaltons) as p56 and p58, which correspond to the basal and hyperphosphorylated forms, respectively. With the aim of identifying a possible role of NS5A phosphorylation for RNA replication, we performed an extensive mutation analysis of three serine clusters that are involved in phosphorylation and hyperphosphorylation of NS5A. In most cases, alanine substitutions for serine residues in the central cluster 1 that enhanced RNA replication to the highest levels led to a reduction of NS5A hyperphosphorylation. Likewise, several highly adaptive mutations in NS4B, which is also part of the replication complex, resulted in a reduction of NS5A hyperphosphorylation too, arguing that alterations of the NS5A phosphorylation pattern play an important role for RNA replication. On the other hand, a deletion encompassing all highly conserved serine residues in the C-terminal region of NS5A that are involved in basal phosphorylation did not significantly affect RNA replication but reduced formation of p56. This region was found to tolerate even large insertions with only a moderate effect on replication. Based on these results, we propose a model of the role of NS5A phosphorylation in the viral life cycle.  相似文献   

7.
Hepatitis C Virus (HCV) NS4B protein has many roles in HCV genome replication. Recently, our laboratory (Q. Han, J. Aligo, D. Manna, K. Belton, S. V. Chintapalli, Y. Hong, R. L. Patterson, D. B. van Rossum, and K. V. Konan, J. Virol. 85:6464–6479, 2011) and others (D. M. Jones, A. H. Patel, P. Targett-Adams, and J. McLauchlan, J. Virol. 83:2163–2177, 2009; D. Paul, I. Romero-Brey, J. Gouttenoire, S. Stoitsova, J. Krijnse-Locker, D. Moradpour, and R. Bartenschlager, J. Virol. 85:6963–6976, 2011) have also reported NS4B''s function in postreplication steps. Indeed, replacement of the NS4B C-terminal domain (CTD) in the HCV JFH1 (genotype 2a [G2a]) genome with sequences from Con1 (G1b) or H77 (G1a) had a negligible impact on JFH1 genome replication but attenuated virus production. Since NS4B interacts weakly with the HCV genome, we postulated that NS4B regulates the function of host or virus proteins directly involved in HCV production. In this study, we demonstrate that the integrity of the JFH1 NS4B CTD is crucial for efficient JFH1 genome encapsidation. Further, two adaptive mutations (NS4B N216S and NS5A C465S) were identified, and introduction of these mutations into the chimera rescued virus production to various levels, suggesting a genetic interaction between the NS4B and NS5A proteins. Interestingly, cells infected with chimeric viruses displayed a markedly decreased NS5A hyperphosphorylation state (NS5A p58) relative to JFH1, and the adaptive mutations differentially rescued NS5A p58 formation. However, immunofluorescence staining indicated that the decrease in NS5A p58 did not alter NS5A colocalization with the core around lipid droplets (LDs), the site of JFH1 assembly, suggesting that NS5A fails to facilitate the transfer of HCV RNA to the capsid protein on LDs. Alternatively, NS4B''s function in HCV genome encapsidation may entail more than its regulation of the NS5A phosphorylation state.  相似文献   

8.
Hepatitis C virus (HCV) replication involves many viral and host factors. Here, we employed a lentivirus-based RNA interference (RNAi) screening approach to search for possible cellular factors. By using a kinase-phosphatase RNAi library and an HCV replicon reporter system, we identified a serine-threonine kinase, Polo-like kinase 1 (Plk1), as a potential host factor regulating HCV replication. Knockdown of Plk1 reduced both HCV RNA replication and nonstructural (NS) protein production in both HCV replicon cells and HCV-infected cells while it did not significantly affect host cellular growth or cell cycle. Overexpression of Plk1 in the knockdown cells rescued HCV replication. Interestingly, the ratio between the hyperphosphorylated form (p58) and the basal phosphorylated form (p56) of NS5A was lower in the Plk1 knockdown cells and Plk1 kinase inhibitor-treated cells than in the control groups. Further studies showed that Plk1 could be immunoprecipitated together with NS5A. Both proteins partially colocalized in the perinuclear region. Furthermore, Plk1 could phosphorylate NS5A to both the p58 and p56 forms in an in vitro assay system; the phosphorylation efficiency was comparable to that of the reported casein kinase. Taken together, this study shows that Plk1 is an NS5A phosphokinase and thereby indirectly regulates HCV RNA replication. Because of the differential effects of Plk1 on HCV replication and host cell growth, Plk1 could potentially serve as a target for anti-HCV therapy.Hepatitis C virus (HCV) is the major causative agent of non-A/non-B hepatitis (26). More than 170 million people, or 3% of the population in the world, are infected with HCV (29). It establishes chronic infection in at least 85% of infected individuals and is associated with liver cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma. Current treatment, which combines polyethylene glycol-interferon (PEG-IFN) and ribavirin, is ineffective in 22% of patients with non-genotype 1 and in 45% of patients with genotype 1 HCV (1, 16, 23, 55). Therefore, identification of new targets for HCV therapy is an important issue, and cellular genes involved in the HCV life cycle may serve as good candidates.HCV is a positive-strand RNA virus and the only known member of Hepacivirus genus in the family Flaviviridae. Its genome has a length of about 9,600 nucleotides coding for a single polyprotein. The long polyprotein is further processed into at least 10 different products, including four structural proteins (core, E1, E2, and p7) and six nonstructural (NS) proteins (NS2, NS3, NS4A, NS4B, NS5A, and NS5B). Nonstructural proteins NS3-NS5B are components of the membrane-associated HCV replication complex (8, 13, 36, 45). NS3 is a bifunctional protein containing an N-terminal protease domain and a C-terminal helicase/NTPase domain, and NS4A serves as a cofactor for NS3 protease. NS4B protein is known to induce intracellular membrane changes that probably serve as the site for viral RNA replication (8). NS5A is required for RNA replication, but little is known about its function. NS5B is the RNA-dependent RNA polymerase (reviewed in reference 47).NS5A is phosphorylated on multiple serine and threonine residues and exists in basal phosphorylated (p56) and hyperphosphorylated (p58) forms (49). Increasing evidence suggests that the regulation of NS5A phosphorylation is important for HCV RNA replication. Adaptive mutations or kinase inhibitors, which reduce NS5A hyperphosphorylation, increased the replication of an HCV replicon in cell culture (HCVcc) systems (2, 4, 38). However, when an adaptive replicon with reduced p58 was further treated with the same kinase inhibitor or introduced with a second adaptive mutation, RNA replication was completely blocked (32, 38). Furthermore, the mutations that reduce NS5A hyperphosphorylation and promote RNA replication in cell culture, paradoxically, prevented productive replication in the chimpanzee model (6). These results imply that the tight control of the p58/p56 ratio is important for HCV replication. The detailed mechanism is still not clear, but a clue was provided by the finding of differential association of NS5A phospho-forms with the host vesicle-associated membrane protein-associated protein A (VAP-A) protein, which is an essential molecule for HCV replicase (9, 12). On the other hand, NS5A phosphorylation was recently found to regulate the production of infectious virus (34, 50). Alanine substitutions in the C-terminal domain III of NS5A impaired NS5A phosphorylation, leading to a decrease in NS5A-core protein interaction, disturbance of subcellular localization of NS5A, and disruption of virion production (3, 34, 50). In summary, phosphorylation on NS5A is not only important for HCV RNA replication but also critical for infectious virus production.Since the phosphorylation state of NS5A is correlated with HCV RNA replication and virion production, cellular kinases responsible for NS5A phosphorylation may serve as good candidates for drug targets. Several kinases have been shown to target NS5A in vitro, including casein kinase I (CKI), CKII, MEK1, MKK6, MKK7, AKT, and p70S6K (7, 24). Among these proteins, CKI and CKII are better characterized for NS5A phosphorylation. CKIα has been identified as the target of kinase inhibitors which decrease the hyperphosphorylation of NS5A and was further confirmed as a direct kinase of NS5A (41, 42). CKI requires prephosphorylation of residues near the predicted phosphorylation site in NS5A for effective modification, suggesting that other kinases are also involved in this process (42). CKII has been shown to bind to the C-terminal domain of NS5A and phosphorylate NS5A in vitro (24). Inhibition of CKII with chemical compounds or small interfering RNA (siRNA) did not significantly affect HCV RNA replication but severely disrupted virus production (50).In this study, using lentivirus-based RNA interference (RNAi) screening, we identified a serine/threonine kinase, Polo-like kinase 1 (Plk1), which is involved in HCV replication. Expression of short hairpin RNAs (shRNAs) targeting Plk1 decreased HCV replication and virus production. Moreover, silencing of Plk1 decreased the hyperphosphorylated form of NS5A. In cells treated with a Plk1-specific kinase inhibitor, HCV replication and NS5A hyperphosphorylation were significantly reduced, indicating that Plk1 kinase activity is required for this process. Further studies showed that Plk1 was coimmunoprecipitated and partially colocalized with NS5A, suggesting NS5A as a possible substrate for Plk1. Finally, NS5A is hyperphosphorylated by Plk1 in vitro, supporting the proposition that Plk1 regulates HCV replication through hyperphosphorylation of NS5A.  相似文献   

9.
C Lin  J A Thomson    C M Rice 《Journal of virology》1995,69(7):4373-4380
A virus-encoded serine proteinase mediates four site-specific cleavages in the hepatitis C virus polyprotein. In addition to the catalytic domain, which is located in the N-terminal one-third of nonstructural protein NS3, the 54-residue NS4A protein is required for cleavage at some but not all sites. Here, we provide evidence for a non-ionic detergent-stable interaction between NS4A and the NS3 serine proteinase domain and demonstrate that the central region of NS4A plays a key role in NS4A-dependent processing. Hydrophobic residues, in particular Ile-29, were shown to be important for NS4A activity, and a synthetic peptide, spanning NS4A residues 22 to 34, could substitute for intact NS4A in a cell-free trans cleavage assay. Furthermore, NS4A mutations, which abolished or inhibited processing, correlated with destabilization of the NS3-NS4A complex. These results suggest that a stable interaction exists between the central region of NS4A and the NS3 catalytic domain which is required for NS4A-dependent processing. Since NS4A is required for processing at certain serine proteinase-dependent cleavage sites, this interaction may represent a new target for development of antiviral compounds.  相似文献   

10.
11.
Hepatitis C virus (HCV) is a significant pathogen, infecting some 170 million people worldwide. Persistent virus infection often leads to cirrhosis and liver cancer. In the infected cell many RNA directed processes must occur to maintain and spread infection. Viral genomic RNA is constantly replicating, serving as template for translation, and being packaged into new virus particles; processes that cannot occur simultaneously. Little is known about the regulation of these events. The viral NS5A phosphoprotein has been proposed as a regulator of events in the HCV life cycle for years, but the details have remained enigmatic. NS5A is a three-domain protein and the requirement of domains I and II for RNA replication is well documented. NS5A domain III is not required for RNA replication, and the function of this region in the HCV lifecycle is unknown. We have identified a small deletion in domain III that disrupts the production of infectious virus particles without altering the efficiency of HCV RNA replication. This deletion disrupts virus production at an early stage of assembly, as no intracellular virus is generated and no viral RNA and nucleocapsid protein are released from cells. Genetic mapping has indicated a single serine residue within the deletion is responsible for the observed phenotype. This serine residue lies within a casein kinase II consensus motif, and mutations that mimic phosphorylation suggest that phosphorylation at this position regulates the production of infectious virus. We have shown by genetic silencing and chemical inhibition experiments that NS5A requires casein kinase II phosphorylation at this position for virion production. A mutation that mimics phosphorylation at this position is insensitive to these manipulations of casein kinase II activity. These data provide the first evidence for a function of the domain III of NS5A and implicate NS5A as an important regulator of the RNA replication and virion assembly of HCV. The ability to uncouple virus production from RNA replication, as described herein, may be useful in understanding HCV assembly and may be therapeutically important.  相似文献   

12.
Phosphorylation of the expressed NS5A protein of hepatitis C virus (HCV), a member of the Hepacivirus genus of the family Flaviviridae, has been demonstrated in mammalian cells and in a cell-free assay by an associated kinase activity. In this report, phosphorylation is also shown for the NS5A and NS5 proteins, respectively, of bovine viral diarrhea virus (BVDV) and yellow fever virus (YF), members of the other two established genera in this family. Phosphorylation of BVDV NS5A and YF NS5 was observed in infected cells, transient expression experiments, and a cell-free assay similar to the one developed for HCV NS5A. Phosphoamino acid analyses indicated that all three proteins were phosphorylated by serine/threonine kinases. Similarities in the properties of BVDV NS5A, YF NS5, and HCV NS5A phosphorylation in vitro further suggested that closely related kinases or the same kinase may phosphorylate these viral proteins. Conservation of this trait among three quite distantly related viruses representing three separate genera suggests that phosphorylation of the NS5A/NS5 proteins or their association with cellular kinases may play an important role in the flavivirus life cycle.  相似文献   

13.
The proteolytic cleavages at the NS3-NS4A, NS4A-NS4B, NS4B-NS5A, and NS5A-NS5B junctions of hepatitis C virus (HCV) polyprotein are effected by the virus-encoded serine protease contained within NS3. Using transient expression in HeLa cells of cDNA fragments that code for regions of the HCV polyprotein, we studied whether viral functions other than NS3 are required for proteolytic processing at these sites. We found that, in addition to NS3, a C-terminal 33-amino-acid sequence of the NS4A protein is required for cleavage at the NS3-NS4A and NS4B-NS5A sites and that it accelerates the rate of cleavage at the NS5A-NS5B junction. In addition, we show that NS4A can activate the NS3 protease when supplied in trans. Our data suggest that HCV NS4A may be the functional analog of flavivirus NS2B and pestivirus p10 proteins.  相似文献   

14.
K E Reed  J Xu    C M Rice 《Journal of virology》1997,71(10):7187-7197
NS5A derived from a hepatitis C virus (HCV) genotype 1b isolate has previously been shown to undergo phosphorylation on serine residues (T. Kaneko, Y. Tanji, S. Satoh, M. Hijikata, S. Asabe, K. Kimura, and K. Shimotohno, Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 205:320-326, 1994). In this report, phosphorylation of NS5A derived from HCV isolates of the 1a and distantly related 2a genotypes is demonstrated. Phosphoamino acid analysis of NS5A from the 1a isolate indicated that phosphorylation occurs predominantly on serine, with a minor fraction of threonine residues also being phosphorylated. NS5A phosphorylation was observed in diverse cell types, including COS-1, BHK-21, HeLa, and the hepatoma cell line HuH-7. Phosphorylation of a glutathione S-transferase (GST)/HCV-H NS5A fusion protein was also demonstrated in an in vitro kinase assay. This activity seemed to be highest when the pH of the reaction was neutral or slightly alkaline and displayed a preference for Mn2+ over Mg2+, with an optimum concentration of approximately 10 mM Mn2+. Somewhat surprisingly, in vitro phosphorylation of NS5A was inhibited by the addition of > or = 0.25 mM Ca2+ to reaction buffer containing Mn2+ and/or Mg2+. Comparison of phosphopeptide maps of NS5A phosphorylated in vitro and in cultured cells showed that most of the phosphopeptides comigrated, suggesting that one or more kinases involved in NS5A phosphorylation in vivo and in vitro are the same. The effects of various kinase inhibitors on NS5A phosphorylation were consistent with a kinase activity belonging to the CMGC group of serine-threonine kinases. The development of an in vitro kinase assay for NS5A phosphorylation should facilitate identification of kinase(s) responsible for its phosphorylation and of phosphorylation sites which may influence the function of NS5A in HCV propagation.  相似文献   

15.
Hepatitis C virus (HCV) genomic RNA is translated into a large polyprotein that is processed into structural and nonstructural proteins. Processing at the N termini of several nonstructural proteins requires sequences contained in both NS3 and NS4A. NS3 contains a serine protease, whereas the function of NS4A in proteolysis is yet to be determined. By using the vaccinia virus-T7 hybrid expression system to transiently express HCV polypeptides in HeLa cells, we studied the effect of several N-terminal and C-terminal deletions of HCV NS3 on the processing activity at all the downstream cleavage sites. In this way, we have delineated the minimal domain of NS3 required for the serine protease activity associated with this protein. In addition, we demonstrate the formation of a stable complex between NS3 and NS4A: analysis of the deletion mutants reveals a region at the N terminus of NS3 that is necessary for both complex formation and modulation of the proteolytic activity by NS4A but not for the NS4A-independent serine protease activity of NS3.  相似文献   

16.
Hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection results in the activation of numerous stress responses including oxidative stress, with the potential to induce an apoptotic state. Previously we have shown that HCV attenuates the stress-induced, p38MAPK-mediated up-regulation of the K+ channel Kv2.1, to maintain the survival of infected cells in the face of cellular stress. We demonstrated that this effect was mediated by HCV non-structural 5A (NS5A) protein, which impaired p38MAPK activity through a polyproline motif-dependent interaction, resulting in reduction of phosphorylation activation of Kv2.1. In this study, we investigated the host cell proteins targeted by NS5A to mediate Kv2.1 inhibition. We screened a phage-display library expressing the entire complement of human SH3 domains for novel NS5A-host cell interactions. This analysis identified mixed lineage kinase 3 (MLK3) as a putative NS5A interacting partner. MLK3 is a serine/threonine protein kinase that is a member of the MAPK kinase kinase (MAP3K) family and activates p38MAPK. An NS5A-MLK3 interaction was confirmed by co-immunoprecipitation and Western blot analysis. We further demonstrate a novel role of MLK3 in the modulation of Kv2.1 activity, whereby MLK3 overexpression leads to the up-regulation of channel activity. Accordingly, coexpression of NS5A suppressed this stimulation. Additionally we demonstrate that overexpression of MLK3 induced apoptosis, which was also counteracted by NS5A. We conclude that NS5A targets MLK3 with multiple downstream consequences for both apoptosis and K+ homeostasis.  相似文献   

17.
The NS3 protein of hepatitis C virus (HCV) possesses protease activity responsible for the proteolytic cleavage of the viral polyprotein at the junctions of nonstructural proteins downstream of NS3. The NS3 protein was also found to be internally cleaved. In this study, we demonstrated that internal cleavages occurred on the NS3 protein of genotype 1b in the presence of NS4A, both in culture cells and with a mouse model system. No internal cleavage products were detected with the NS3 and NS4A proteins of genotype 2a. Three potential cleavage sites were detected in the NS3 protein (genotype 1b), with IPT(402)|S being the major one. The internal cleavage requires the polyprotein processing activity of NS3 protease, but when supplemented in trans, the internal cleavage efficiency is reduced. In addition, several mutations in NS4A disrupted the internal cleavage of NS3 but did not affect polyprotein processing, indicating that NS4A contributes differently to these two proteolytic activities. Furthermore, Ile-25, Val-26, and Ile-29 of the NS4A protein, important for the NS4A-dependent internal cleavages, were also shown to be critical for the transforming activity of NS3, but mutations at these critical residues resulted only in a slight increase of HCV replicating efficiency. The internal cleavage-associated enhancement of the transforming activity of NS3 was reduced when a T402A substitution at the major internal cleavage site was introduced. The multiple roles of NS4A in viral multiplication and pathogenesis make NS4A an ideal molecular target for HCV therapy.  相似文献   

18.
TT virus (TTV) is a newly discovered human virus with a single-stranded, circular DNA genome. The TTV DNA sequence includes two major open reading frames (ORFs), ORF1 and ORF2. Recently, spliced TTV mRNAs were detected and revealed two additional coding regions, ORF3 and ORF4. We found sequence similarity between the TTV ORF3 protein and hepatitis C virus (HCV) nonstructural 5A (NS5A) protein, which is a phosphoprotein and is thought to associate with various cellular proteins. To test whether the TTV ORF3 protein is phosphorylated, the state of phosphorylation was analyzed with a transient protein production system. The TTV ORF3 protein was phosphorylated at the serine residues in its C-terminal portion. Furthermore, the TTV ORF3 gene generated two forms of proteins with a different phosphorylation state, similar to the HCV NS5A region, suggesting that TTV ORF3 protein has function(s) similar to phosphorylated viral proteins such as the HCV NS5A protein.  相似文献   

19.
A tetracycline-regulated gene expression system and a panel of novel monoclonal antibodies were used to examine the subcellular localization, stability, and trans-cleavage competence of the hepatitis C virus (HCV) NS3-NS4A complex in inducible cell lines. The NS3 serine protease domain and the full-length NS3 protein expressed in the absence of the NS4A cofactor were diffusely distributed in the cytoplasm and nucleus. Coexpression of NS4A, however, directed NS3 to the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) or an ER-like modified compartment, as demonstrated by colocalization with 3,3'-dihexyloxacarbocyanine iodide, protein disulfide isomerase, and calnexin, as well as subcellular fractionation analyses. In addition, coexpression with NS4A dramatically increased the intracellular stability of NS3 (mean protein half-life of 26 versus 3 h) and allowed for NS4A-dependent trans-cleavage at the NS4B-NS5A junction. Deletion analyses revealed that the hydrophobic amino-terminal domain of NS4A was required for ER targeting of NS3. These results demonstrate the importance of studying HCV proteins in their biological context and define a well-characterized cell culture system for further analyses of the NS3-NS4A complex and the evaluation of novel antiviral strategies against hepatitis C.  相似文献   

20.
Initiation, a major rate-limiting step of host protein translation, is a critical target in many viral infections. Chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection results in hepatocellular carcinoma. Translation initiation, up-regulated in many cancers, plays a critical role in tumorigenesis. mTOR is a major regulator of host protein translation. Even though activation of PI3K-AKT-mTOR by HCV non-structural protein 5A (NS5A) is known, not much is understood about the regulation of host translation initiation by this virus. Here for the first time we show that HCV up-regulates host cap-dependent translation machinery in Huh7.5 cells through simultaneous activation of mTORC1 and eukaryotic translation initiation factor 4E (eIF4E) by NS5A. NS5A, interestingly, overexpressed and subsequently hyperphosphorylated 4EBP1. NS5A phosphorylated eIF4E through the p38 MAPK-MNK pathway. Both HCV infection and NS5A expression augmented eIF4F complex assembly, an indicator of cap-dependent translation efficiency. Global translation, however, was not altered by HCV NS5A. 4EBP1 phosphorylation, but not that of S6K1, was uniquely resistant to rapamycin in NS5A-Huh7.5 cells, indicative of an alternate phosphorylation mechanism of 4EBP1. Resistance of Ser-473, but not Thr-308, phosphorylation of AKT to PI3K inhibitors suggested an activation of mTORC2 by NS5A. NS5A associated with eIF4F complex and polysomes, suggesting its active involvement in host translation. This is the first report that implicates an HCV protein in the up-regulation of host translation initiation apparatus through concomitant regulation of multiple pathways. Because both mTORC1 activation and eIF4E phosphorylation are involved in tumorigenesis, we propose that their simultaneous activation by NS5A might contribute significantly to the development of hepatocellular carcinoma.  相似文献   

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