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1.
The vaccinia virus strain Western Reserve (WR) A34R gene encodes a C-type lectin-like glycoprotein, gp22-24, that is present in the outer membrane of extracellular enveloped virus (EEV) with type II membrane topology (S.A. Duncan and G.L. Smith, J. Virol. 66:1610-1621, 1992). Here we that a WR A34R deletion mutant (WR delta A34R) released 19- to 24-fold more EEV from infected cells than did WR virus, but the specific infectivity of the released virions was reduced 5- to 6-fold. Rupture of the WR delta A34R EEV outer envelope by freeze-thawing increased virus infectivity by five- to sixfold, because of the release of infectious intracellular mature virus. All other known EEV-specific proteins are incorporated into WR delta A34R EEV, and thus the loss of gp22-24 is solely responsible for the reduction of EEV specific infectivity. The WR delta A34R virus is highly attenuated in vivo compared with WR or a revertant virus in which the A34R gene was reinserted into WR delta A34R. This attenuation is consistent with the known important role of EEV in virus dissemination and virulence. Vaccinia virus strain International Health Department-J (IHD-J) produces large amounts of EEV and forms comets because of an amino acid substitution within the A34R protein (R. Blasco, R. Sisler, and B. Moss, J. Virol. 67:3319-3325, 1993), but despite this, IHD-J EEV has a specific infectivity equivalent to that of WR EEV. Substitution of the IHD-J A34R gene into the WR strain induced comet formation and greater release of EEV, while coexpression of both genes did not; hence, the WR phenotype is dominant. All orthopoxviruses tested express the A34R protein, but most viruses, including variola virus, have the WR rather than the IHD-J A34R genotype. The A34R protein affects plaque formation, EEV release, EEV infectivity, and virus virulence.  相似文献   

2.
R Blasco  B Moss 《Journal of virology》1992,66(7):4170-4179
The roles of intracellular naked (INV), cell-associated enveloped (CEV), and extracellular enveloped (EEV) forms of vaccinia virus in cell-to-cell and longer-range spread were investigated by using two closely related strains of vaccinia virus, WR and IHD-J. We confirmed previous results that WR and IHD-J produced similar amounts of INV and formed similar-size primary plaques but that IHD-J produced 10 to 40 times more EEV and spread to distant cells much more efficiently than did WR. Nevertheless, cells infected with WR and IHD-J had similar amounts of CEV, indicating that wrapping and transport of WR virions were unimpaired. A WR mutant with a deletion in VP37, the major outer envelope protein, formed normal amounts of INV; however, the generation of CEV was blocked and plaque formation was inhibited. These results suggested that CEV is the form of virus that mediates cell-to-cell spread. Marker rescue experiments indicated that the differences in EEV production by WR and IHD-J were not due to sequence differences in VP37. The low amount of WR EEV could be attributed to retention of CEV on the cell membrane. In support of this hypothesis, mild treatment with trypsin released as much or more infectious virus from cells infected with WR as it did with cells infected with IHD-J. Most of the virus released by trypsin sedimented with the buoyant density of EEV. Also, addition of trypsin to cells following inoculation with WR led to a comet-shaped distribution of secondary plaques characteristic of IHD-J. These results demonstrated that the release of CEV from the cell surface was limiting for extracellular virus formation and affirmed the role of EEV in long-range spread.  相似文献   

3.
E J Wolffe  S N Isaacs    B Moss 《Journal of virology》1993,67(8):4732-4741
The structure, formation, and function of the virion membranes are among the least well understood aspects of vaccinia virus replication. In this study, we investigated the role of gp42, a glycoprotein component of the extracellular enveloped form of vaccinia virus (EEV) encoded by the B5R gene. The B5R gene was deleted by homologous recombination from vaccinia virus strains IHD-J and WR, which produce high and low levels of EEV, respectively. Isolation of recombinant viruses was facilitated by the insertion into the genome of a cassette containing the Escherichia coli gpt and lacZ genes flanked by the ends of the B5R gene to provide simultaneous antibiotic selection and color screening. Deletion mutant viruses of both strains formed tiny plaques, and those of the IHD-J mutant lacked the characteristic comet shape caused by release of EEV. Nevertheless, similar yields of intracellular infectious virus were obtained whether cells were infected with the B5R deletion mutants or their parental strains. In the case of IHD-J, however, this deletion severely reduced the amount of infectious extracellular virus. Metabolic labeling studies demonstrated that the low extracellular infectivity corresponded with a decrease in EEV particles in the medium. Electron microscopic examination revealed that mature intracellular naked virions (INV) were present in cells infected with mutant virus, but neither membrane-wrapped INV nor significant amounts of plasma membrane-associated virus were observed. Syncytium formation, which occurs in cells infected with wild-type WR and IHD-J virus after brief low-pH treatment, did not occur in cells infected with the B5R deletion mutants. By contrast, syncytium formation induced by antibody to the viral hemagglutinin occurred, suggesting that different mechanisms are involved. When assayed by intracranial injection into weanling mice, both IHD-J and WR mutant viruses were found to be significantly attenuated. These findings demonstrate that the 42-kDa glycoprotein of the EEV is required for efficient membrane enwrapment of INV, externalization of the virus, and transmission and that gp42 contributes to viral virulence in strains producing both low and high levels of EEV.  相似文献   

4.
HeLa, SIRC, and RK-13 cells were compared as to their production of intracellular naked vaccinia virus (INV) and extracellular enveloped vaccinia virus (EEV) after infection with vaccinia strains WR and IHD-J. IHD-J produced more EEV from all three cell lines than did WR, although both strains produced approximately the same quantity of INV. The most efficient EEV release was from RK-13 cells infected with IHD-J, which was 200 times more than from WR-infected SIRC cells. This permitted for the first time the purification of milligram quantities of EEV that contained much fewer cell protein contaminants than could be obtained from HeLa or SIRC cells. The INV surface proteins 200K, 95K, 65K, and 13K were present in both HeLa and RK-13 cell-derived INV but were absent in SIRC cell INV. These proteins were absent in EEV from all three cell lines. Four glycoproteins of molecular weights 210 x 10(3) (210K), 110K, 89K, and 42K and five glycoproteins in the 23K to 20K range plus a nonglycosylated protein of 37K were detected in EEV from the hemagglutinin-positive IHD-J vaccinia strain. The 89K glycoprotein was not present in EEV or membranes from cells infected with the hemagglutinin-negative vaccinia strain IHD-W. Antisera to IHD-W lacking hemagglutinin-inhibiting antibodies did not precipitate the 89K glycoprotein of IHD-J. The only glycoprotein that specifically attached to rooster erythrocytes was the 89K glycoprotein. This evidence indicates that the 89K glycoprotein is the vaccinia hemagglutinin.  相似文献   

5.
R W Doms  R Blumenthal    B Moss 《Journal of virology》1990,64(10):4884-4892
The membrane fusion activities of the isolated single-envelope intracellular form of vaccinia virus (INV) and the double-envelope extracellular (EEV) form were studied by using a lipid-mixing assay based on the dilution of a fluorescent probe. Fluorescently labeled INV and EEV from both the IHD-J and WR strains of vaccinia virus fused with HeLa cells at neutral pH, suggesting that fusion occurs with the plasma membrane during virus entry. EEV fused more efficiently and with faster kinetics than INV: approximately 50% of bound EEV particles fused over the course of 1 h, compared with only 25% of the INV particles. Fusion of INV and EEV was strongly temperature dependent, being decreased by 50% at 34 degrees C and by 90% at 28 degrees C. A monoclonal antibody to a 14-kilodalton envelope protein of INV that has been implicated in the fusion reaction (J. F. Rodriguez, E. Paez, and M. Esteban, J. Virol. 61:395-404, 1987) completely suppressed the initial rate of fusion of INV but had no effect on the fusion activity of EEV, suggesting that vaccinia virus encodes two or more membrane fusion proteins. Finally, cells infected with the WR strain of vaccinia virus formed syncytia when briefly incubated at pH 6.4 or below, indicating that an acid-activated viral fusion protein is expressed on the cell surface. However, WR INV and EEV did not display increased fusion activity at acid pH, suggesting that the acid-dependent fusion factor is not incorporated into virions or that its activity there is masked.  相似文献   

6.
Vaccinia virus has two forms of infectious virions: the intracellular mature virus and the extracellular enveloped virus (EEV). EEV is critical for cell-to-cell and long-range spread of the virus. The B5R open reading frame (ORF) encodes a membrane protein that is essential for EEV formation. Deletion of the B5R ORF results in a dramatic reduction of EEV, and as a consequence, the virus produces small plaques in vitro and is highly attenuated in vivo. The extracellular portion of B5R is composed mainly of four domains that are similar to the short consensus repeats (SCRs) present in complement regulatory proteins. To determine the contribution of these putative SCR domains to EEV formation, we constructed recombinant vaccinia viruses that replaced the wild-type B5R gene with a mutated gene encoding a B5R protein lacking the SCRs. The resulting recombinant viruses produced large plaques, indicating efficient cell-to-cell spread in vitro, and gradient centrifugation of supernatants from infected cells confirmed that EEV was formed. In contrast, phalloidin staining of infected cells showed that the virus lacking the SCR domains was deficient in the induction of thick actin bundles. Thus, the highly conserved SCR domains present in the extracellular portion of the B5R protein are dispensable for EEV formation. This indicates that the B5R protein is a key viral protein with multiple functions in the process of virus envelopment and release. In addition, given the similarity of the extracellular domain to complement control proteins, the B5R protein may be involved in viral evasion from host immune responses.  相似文献   

7.
R Blasco  B Moss 《Journal of virology》1991,65(11):5910-5920
There are two types of infectious vaccinia virus particles: intracellular naked virions and extracellular enveloped virions (EEV). To determine the biological role of the enveloped form of vaccinia virus, we produced and characterized a mutant that is defective in EEV formation. The strategy involved replacement by homologous recombination of the gene F13L, encoding a 37,000-Da protein (VP37) that is specific for the outer envelope of EEV, with a selectable antibiotic resistance marker, the Escherichia coli gpt gene. Initial experiments, however, suggested that such a mutation was lethal or prevented plaque formation. By employing a protocol consisting of high-multiplicity passages of intracellular virus from the transfected cells and then limiting dilution cloning, we succeeded in isolating the desired mutant, which was defective in production of plaques and extracellular virus but made normal amounts of intracellular naked virions. Electron microscopic examination indicated that the mutant virus particles, unlike wild type, were neither wrapped with Golgi-derived membranes nor associated with the cell surface. The absence of VP37 did not prevent the transport of the viral hemagglutinin to the plasma membrane but nevertheless abrogated both low-pH- and antibody-mediated cell fusion. These results indicate that VP37 is required for EEV formation and also plays a critical role in the local cell-to-cell transmission of vaccinia virus, perhaps via enveloped virions attached to or released from the cell membrane. By contrast, a mutated virus with a deletion of the K4L open reading frame, which is a homolog of the VP37 gene, was not defective in formation of plaques or EEV.  相似文献   

8.
The vaccinia virus E2L (VACWR058) gene is conserved in all sequenced chordopoxviruses and is predicted to encode an 86-kDa protein with no recognizable functional motifs or nonpoxvirus homologs. Although the region immediately upstream of the open reading frame lacked optimal consensus promoter motifs, expression of the E2 protein occurred after viral DNA replication. Transfection studies, however, indicated that the promoter was weak compared to well-characterized intermediate and late promoters. The E2 protein was present in mature virions purified from infected cells but was more abundant in extracellular enveloped forms. Despite the conservation of the E2L gene in chordopoxviruses, deletion mutants could be isolated from both the WR and IHD-J strains of vaccinia virus. These null mutants produced very small plaques in all cell lines tested, reduced amounts of mature infectious virions, and very low numbers of extracellular virions. Nevertheless, viral protein synthesis appeared qualitatively and quantitatively normal. The defect in extracellular virus formation was corroborated by electron microscopy, which also showed some aberration in the wrapping of virions by cisternal membranes. Extracellular virions that did form, however, were able to induce actin tail formation.  相似文献   

9.
The vaccinia virus (VV) A33R gene encodes a highly conserved 23- to 28-kDa glycoprotein that is specifically incorporated into the viral outer envelope. The protein is expressed early and late after infection, consistent with putative early and late promoter sequences. To determine the role of the protein, two inducible A33R mutants were constructed, one with the late promoter and one with the early and late A33R promoter elements. Decreased A33R expression was associated with small plaques that formed comets in liquid medium. Using both an antibiotic resistance gene and a color marker, an A33R deletion mutant, vA33Δ, was isolated, indicating that the A33R gene is not essential for VV replication. The plaques formed by vA33Δ, however, were tiny, indicating that the A33R protein is necessary for efficient cell-to-cell spread. Rescue of the large-plaque phenotype was achieved by inserting a new copy of the A33R gene into the thymidine kinase locus, confirming the specific genetic basis of the phenotype. Although there was a reduction in intracellular virus formed in cells infected with vA33Δ, the amount of infectious virus in the medium was increased. The virus particles in the medium had the buoyant density of extracellular enveloped viruses (EEV). Additionally, amounts of vA33Δ cell-associated extracellular enveloped viruses (CEV) were found to be normal. Immunogold electron microscopy of cells infected with vA33Δ demonstrated the presence of the expected F13L and B5R proteins in wrapping membranes and EEV; however, fully wrapped vA33Δ intracellular enveloped viruses (IEV) were rare compared to partially wrapped particles. Specialized actin tails that propel IEV particles to the periphery and virus-tipped microvilli (both common in wild-type-infected cells) were absent in cells infected with vA33Δ. This is the first deletion mutant in a VV envelope gene that produces at least normal amounts of fully infectious EEV and CEV and yet has a small-plaque phenotype. These data support a new model for VV spread, emphasizing the importance of virus-tipped actin tails.  相似文献   

10.
Sequence analysis of the vaccinia virus strain Western Reserve genome revealed the presence of an open reading frame (ORF), SalL4R, which has the potential to encode a transmembrane glycoprotein with homology to C-type animal lectins (G. L. Smith, Y. S. Chan, and S. T. Howard, J. Gen. Virol. 72:1349-1376, 1991). Here we show that the SalL4R gene is transcribed late during infection from a TAAATG motif at the beginning of the ORF. Antisera raised against a TrpE-SalL4R fusion protein identified three glycoprotein species of Mr 22,000 to 24,000 in infected cells. Immunogold electron microscopy demonstrated that SalL4R protein is present in purified extracellular enveloped virus particles but not in intracellular naked virus (INV). A mutant virus was constructed by placing a copy of the SalL4R ORF downstream of an isopropyl-beta-D-thiogalactopyranoside (IPTG)-inducible vaccinia virus promoter within the thymidine kinase locus and subsequently deleting the endogenous SalL4R gene. The growth kinetics of this virus demonstrated that SalL4R was nonessential for the production of infectious INV but was required for virus dissemination. Consistent with this finding, the formation of wild-type-size plaques by this mutant was dependent on the presence of IPTG. Electron microscopy showed that without SalL4R expression, the inability of the virus to spread is due to a lack of envelopment of INV virions by Golgi-derived membrane, a morphogenic event required for virus egress.  相似文献   

11.
The potential threat of smallpox bioterrorism has made urgent the development of lower-virulence vaccinia virus vaccines. An attenuated LC16m8 (m8) vaccine was developed in 1975 from the Lister strain used in the World Health Organization smallpox eradication program but was not used against endemic smallpox. Today, no vaccines can be tested with variola virus for efficacy in humans, and the mechanisms of immune protection against the major intracellular mature virion (IMV) and minor extracellular enveloped virion (EEV) populations of poxviruses are poorly understood. Here, we determined the full-genome sequences of the m8, parental LC16mO (mO), and grandparental Lister (LO) strains and analyzed their evolutionary relationships. Sequence data and PCR analysis indicated that m8 was a progeny of LO and that m8 preserved almost all of the open reading frames of vaccinia virus except for the disrupted EEV envelope gene B5R. In accordance with this genomic background, m8 induced 100% protection against a highly pathogenic vaccinia WR virus in mice by a single vaccination, despite the lack of anti-B5R and anti-EEV antibodies. The immunogenicity and priming efficacy with the m8 vaccine consisting mainly of IMV were as high as those with the intact-EEV parental mO and grandparental LO vaccines. Thus, mice vaccinated with 10(7) PFU of m8 produced low levels of anti-B5R antibodies after WR challenge, probably because of quick clearance of B5R-expressing WR EEV by strong immunity induced by the vaccination. These results suggest that priming with m8 IMV provides efficient protection despite undetectable levels of immunity against EEV.  相似文献   

12.
Wild-type rabbitpox virus (RPV) produces red hemorrhagic pocks on the chorioallantoic membranes (CAMs) of embryonated chicken eggs. Like the crmA (SPI-2) gene of cowpox virus, disruption of the RPV ps/hr gene results in a mutant which produces white pocks on the CAMs. An examination of the properties of the RPV(ps/hr) mutant in cell culture also reveals a significantly reduced host range, defined as the inability to form plaques, compared with wild-type virus. One of several cell types on which RPV(ps/hr) mutants fail to produce plaques is chicken embryo fibroblasts, cells which have been traditionally used to propagate spontaneously arising white pock mutants isolated from CAMs. The inability of the RPV(ps/hr) mutant to form plaques in chicken embryo fibroblasts correlates with a failure of a low multiplicity of infection to spread to neighboring cells and to form extracellular enveloped virus (EEV), although the formation and yields of infectious intracellular naked virus appear relatively normal. The gene product of the ps/hr gene, initially synthesized as a 45-kDa glycoprotein, is found as a component of EEV, but not intracellular naked virus, and as a smaller, secreted soluble protein of 35 kDa. Production of the secreted 35-kDa protein was found to be independent of any viral morphogenesis, suggesting two distinct pathways for release of the ps/hr gene product from the cell, i.e., as a component of the EEV particle and as a separately secreted glycoprotein.  相似文献   

13.
Katz E  Wolffe E  Moss B 《Journal of virology》2002,76(22):11637-11644
The spread of most strains of vaccinia virus in cell monolayers occurs predominantly via extracellular enveloped virions that adhere to the tips of actin-containing microvilli and to a lesser extent via diffusion of released virions. The mechanism by which virions adhere to the cell surface is unknown, although several viral proteins may be involved. The present investigation was initiated with the following premise: spontaneous mutations that increase virus release will be naturally selected by propagating a virus unable to spread by means of actin tails. Starting with an A36R deletion mutant that forms small, round plaques, five independent virus clones with enhanced spread due to the formation of comet or satellite plaques were isolated. The viral membrane glycoprotein genes of the isolates were sequenced; four had mutations causing C-terminal truncations of the A33R protein, and one had a serine replacing proline 189 of the B5R protein. The comet-forming phenotype was specifically reproduced or reversed by homologous recombination using DNA containing the mutated or natural sequence, respectively. Considerably more extracellular enveloped virus was released into the medium by the second-site mutants than by the parental A36R deletion mutant, explaining their selection in tissue culture as well as their comet-forming phenotype. The data suggest that the B5R protein and the C-terminal region of the A33R protein are involved in adherence of cell-associated enveloped virions to cells. In spite of their selective advantage in cultured cells, the second-site mutants were not detectably more virulent than the A36R deletion mutant when administered to mice by the intranasal route.  相似文献   

14.
Using a reverse genetic approach, we have demonstrated that the product of the B5R open reading frame (ORF), which has homology with members of the family of complement control proteins, is a membrane glycoprotein present in the extracellular enveloped (EEV) form of vaccinia virus but absent from the intracellular naked (INV) form. An antibody (C'-B5R) raised to a 15-amino-acid peptide from the translated B5R ORF reacted with a 42-kDa protein (gp42) found in vaccinia virus-infected cells and cesium chloride-banded EEV but not INV. Under nonreducing conditions, an 85-kDa component, possibly representing a hetero- or homodimeric form of gp42, was detected by both immunoprecipitation and Western immunoblot analysis. Metabolic labeling with [3H]glucosamine and [3H]palmitate revealed that the B5R product is glycosylated and acylated. The C-terminal transmembrane domain of the protein was identified by constructing a recombinant vaccinia virus that overexpressed a truncated, secreted form of the B5R ORF product. By N-terminal sequence analysis of this secreted protein, the site of signal peptide cleavage of gp42 was determined. A previously described monoclonal antibody (MAb 20) raised to EEV, which immunoprecipitated a protein with biochemical characteristics similar to those of wild-type gp42, reacted with the recombinant, secreted product of the B5R ORF. Immunofluorescence of wild-type vaccinia virus-infected cells by using either MAb 20 or C'-B5R revealed that the protein is expressed on the cell surface and within the cytoplasm. Immunogold labeling of EEV and INV with MAb 20 demonstrated that the protein was found exclusively on the EEV membrane.  相似文献   

15.
E J Wolffe  E Katz  A Weisberg    B Moss 《Journal of virology》1997,71(5):3904-3915
The mechanisms allowing vaccinia virus to spread from cell to cell are incompletely understood. The A34R gene of vaccinia virus encodes a glycoprotein that is localized in the outer membranes of extracellular virions. The small-plaque phenotype of an A34R deletion mutant was similar to that of mutants with deletions in other envelope genes that fail to produce extracellular vaccinia virions. Transmission electron microscopy, however, revealed that the A34R mutant produced numerous extracellular particles that were labeled with antibodies to other outer-envelope proteins and with protein A-colloidal gold. Fluorescence and scanning electron microscopy indicated that expression of the A34R protein was necessary for detection of vaccinia virus-induced actin tails, which provide motility to the intracellular enveloped form of vaccinia virus, and of virus-tipped specialized microvilli that project from the cell. The ability of vaccinia virus-infected cells to form syncytia after a brief exposure to a pH below 6, known as fusion from within, failed to occur in the absence of expression of the A34R protein; nevertheless, purified A34R- virions were capable of mediating low-pH-induced fusion from without. The present study provides genetic and microscopic evidence for the involvement of a specific viral protein in the formation or stability of actin-containing microvilli and for a role of these structures in cell-to-cell spread rather than in formation of extracellular virions.  相似文献   

16.
Ward BM  Moss B 《Journal of virology》2001,75(10):4802-4813
We produced an infectious vaccinia virus that expressed the B5R envelope glycoprotein fused to the enhanced green fluorescent protein (GFP), allowing us to visualize intracellular virus movement in real time. Previous transfection studies indicated that fusion of GFP to the C-terminal cytoplasmic domain of B5R did not interfere with Golgi localization of the viral protein. To determine whether B5R-GFP was fully functional, we started with a B5R deletion mutant that made small plaques and inserted the B5R-GFP gene into the original B5R locus. The recombinant virus made normal-sized plaques and acquired the ability to form actin tails, indicating reversal of the mutant phenotype. Moreover, immunogold electron microscopy revealed that both intracellular enveloped virions (IEV) and extracellular enveloped virions contained B5R-GFP. By confocal microscopy of live infected cells, we visualized individual fluorescent particles, corresponding to IEV in size and shape, moving from a juxtanuclear location to the periphery of the cell, where they usually collected prior to association with actin tails. The fluorescent particles could be seen emanating from cells at the tips of microvilli. Using a digital camera attached to an inverted fluorescence microscope, we acquired images at 1 frame/s. At this resolution, IEV movement appeared saltatory; in some frames there was no net movement, whereas in others movement exceeded 2 microm/s. Further studies indicated that IEV movement was reversibly arrested by the microtubule-depolymerizing drug nocodazole. This result, together with the direction, speed, and saltatory motion of IEV, was consistent with a role for microtubules in intracellular transport of IEV.  相似文献   

17.
Vaccinia virus (VV) produces two antigenically and structurally distinct infectious virions, intracellular mature virus (IMV) and extracellular enveloped virus (EEV), which bind to unidentified and possibly different cellular receptors. Studies of VV binding have been hampered by having two infectious virions and by the rupture of the EEV outer membrane in the majority of EEV virions during purification. To overcome these problems, we have developed a novel approach to study VV binding that is based on confocal microscopy and does not require EEV purification. In this assay, individual virus particles adsorbed to the cell are simultaneously distinguished and quantified by double immunofluorescence labelling with antibody markers for EEV and IMV. By this method, we show unequivocally that IMV and EEV bind to different cellular receptors. Three independent observations allow this conclusion. First, the efficiencies with which IMV and EEV bind to different cell lines are unrelated; second, cell surface digestion with some enzymes affects IMV and EEV binding differently; and third, the binding of a monoclonal antibody to cells prevents IMV binding but not EEV binding. This technique may be widely applicable for studying the binding of different viruses.  相似文献   

18.
Vaccinia virus is the prototypical member of the family Poxviridae. Three morphologically distinct forms are produced during infection: intracellular mature virions (IMV), intracellular enveloped virions (IEV), and extracellular enveloped virions (EEV). Two viral proteins, F12 and A36, are found exclusively on IEV but not on IMV and EEV. Analysis of membranes from infected cells showed that F12 was only associated with membranes and is not an integral membrane protein. A yeast two-hybrid assay revealed an interaction between amino acids 351 to 458 of F12 and amino acids 91 to 111 of A36. We generated a recombinant vaccinia virus that expresses an F12, which lacks residues 351 to 458. Characterization of this recombinant revealed a small-plaque phenotype and a subsequent defect in virus release similar to a recombinant virus that had F12L deleted. In addition, F12 lacking residues 351 to 458 was unable to associate with membranes in infected cells. These results suggest that F12 associates with IEV through an interaction with A36 and that this interaction is critical for the function of F12 during viral egress.  相似文献   

19.
20.
R L Roper  L G Payne    B Moss 《Journal of virology》1996,70(6):3753-3762
With the aid of three monoclonal antibodies (MAbs), a glycoprotein specifically localized to the outer envelope of vaccinia virus was shown to be encoded by the A33R gene. These MAbs reacted with a glycosylated protein that migrated as 23- to 28-kDa and 55-kDa species under reducing and nonreducing conditions, respectively. The protein recognized by the three MAbs was synthesized by all 11 orthopoxviruses tested: eight strains of vaccinia virus (including modified vaccinia virus Ankara) and one strain each of cowpox, rabbitpox, and ectromelia viruses. The observation that the protein synthesized by ectromelia virus-infected cells reacted with only one of the three MAbs provided a means of mapping the gene encoding the glycoprotein. By transfecting vaccinia virus DNA into cells infected with ectromelia virus and assaying for MAb reactivity, we mapped the glycoprotein to the A33R open reading frame. The amino acid sequence and hydrophilicity plot predicted that the A33R gene product is a type II membrane protein with two asparagine-linked glycosylation sites. Triton X-114 partitioning experiments indicated that the A33R gene product is an integral membrane protein. The ectromelia virus homolog of the vaccinia virus A33R gene was sequenced, revealing 90% predicted amino acid identity. The vaccinia and variola virus homolog sequences predict 94% identical amino acids, the latter having one fewer internal amino acid. Electron microscopy revealed that the A33R gene product is expressed on the surface of extracellular enveloped virions but not on the intracellular mature form of virus. The conservation of this protein and its specific incorporation into viral envelopes suggest that it is important for virus dissemination.  相似文献   

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