首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
Disulfide bridge-mediated folding of Sindbis virus glycoproteins.   总被引:3,自引:3,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
The Sindbis virus envelope is composed of 80 E1-E2 (envelope glycoprotein) heterotrimers organized into an icosahedral protein lattice with T=4 symmetry. The structural integrity of the envelope protein lattice is maintained by E1-E1 interactions which are stabilized by intramolecular disulfide bonds. Structural domains of the envelope proteins sustain the envelope's icosahedral lattice, while functional domains are responsible for virus attachment and membrane fusion. We have previously shown that within the mature Sindbis virus particle, the structural domains of the envelope proteins are significantly more resistant to the membrane-permeative, sulfhydryl-reducing agent dithiothreitol (DTT) than are the functional domains (R. P. Anthony, A. M. Paredes, and D. T. Brown, Virology 190:330-336, 1992). We have used DTT to probe the accessibility of intramolecular disulfides within PE2 (the precursor to E2) and E1, as these proteins fold and are assembled into the spike heterotrimer. We have determined through pulse-chase analysis that intramolecular disulfide bonds within PE2 are always sensitive to DTT when the glycoproteins are in the endoplasmic reticulum. The reduction of these disulfides results in the disruption of PE2-E1 associations. E1 acquires increased resistance to DTT as it folds through a series of disulfide intermediates (E1alpha, -beta, and -gamma) prior to assuming its native and most compact conformation (E1epsilon). The transition from a DTT-sensitive form into a form which exhibits increased resistance to DTT occurs after E1 has folded into its E1beta conformation and correlates temporally with the dissociation of BiP-E1 complexes and the formation of PE2-E1 heterotrimers. We propose that the disulfide bonds within E1 which stabilize the protein domains required for maintaining the structural integrity of the envelope protein lattice form early within the folding pathway of E1 and become inaccessible to DTT once the heterotrimer has formed.  相似文献   

2.
The Sindbis virus envelope protein spike is a hetero-oligomeric complex composed of a trimer of glycoprotein E1-E2 heterodimers. Spike assembly is a multistep process which occurs in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and is required for the export of E1 from the ER. PE2 (precursor to E2), however, can transit through the secretory pathway and be expressed at the cell surface in the absence of E1. Although oligomer formation does not appear to be required for the export of PE2, there is evidence that defects in E1 folding can affect PE2 transit from the ER. Temperature-sensitive mutant ts23 of Sindbis virus contains two amino acid substitutions in E1, while PE2 and capsid protein have the wild-type sequence; however, at the nonpermissive temperature, both E1 and PE2 are retained within the ER and can be isolated in protein aggregates with the molecular chaperone GRP78-BiP. We previously demonstrated that the temperature sensitivity for ts23 was lost as oligomer formation took place at the permissive temperature, suggesting that temperature sensitivity is initiated early in the process of viral spike assembly (M. Carleton and D. T. Brown, J. Virol. 70:952-959, 1996). Experiments described herein investigated the defects in envelope protein maturation that occur in ts23-infected cells and which result in retention of both envelope proteins in the ER. The data demonstrate that in ts23-infected cells incubated at the nonpermissive temperature, E1 folding is disrupted early after synthesis, resulting in the rapid incorporation of both E1 and PE2 into disulfide-stabilized aggregates. Furthermore, the aberrant E1 conformation which is responsible for induction of the ts phenotype requires the formation of intramolecular disulfide bridges formed prior to E1 association with PE2 and the completion of E1 folding.  相似文献   

3.
We have determined the three-dimensional structures of the wild-type Sindbis virus and two of its mutants that retain the E3 sequence within PE2. Using difference imaging between these mutants and the wild-type virus, we have assigned a location for the 64-amino-acid sequence corresponding to E3 in the mutant spike complex. In the wild-type virus, the spike is composed of an E1-E2 heterotrimer. The E3 protein was found to protrude midway between the center of the spike complex and the tips. Based on these results and the work of others, we propose a distribution for the functional domains of the spike proteins within the structure of wild-type Sindbis virus. Within the structure of the virus, the E1 domains form the central portion of the spike complex, while the tips are formed by the E2 domains that flare out from the center of the complex. The structural similarity between these Sindbis virus mutants and Ross River virus suggests that E3 may also be present in the latter, which is also a member of the Alphavirus genus.  相似文献   

4.
The rigidly ordered icosahedral lattice of the Sindbis virus envelope is composed of a host-derived membrane bilayer in which the viral glycoproteins E1 and E2 reside. E1-E1 interactions stabilized by intramolecular disulfide bridges play a significant role in maintaining the envelope's structural integrity (R. P. Anthony and D. T. Brown, J. Virol. 65:1187-1194, 1991; R. P. Anthony, A. M. Paredes, and D. T. Brown, Virology 190:330-336, 1992). We have examined the acquisition of disulfide bridges within E1 during its maturation. Prior to exit from the endoplasmic reticulum, E1 folds via at least three intermediates, differing in the number and/or arrangement of their disulfides, into a single, compact form. This E1 species remains stable with respect to its disulfides until late in the secretory pathway, when E1 attains a metastable conformation. At this point, when appropriately triggered, intramolecular thiol-disulfide exchange reactions within E1 can occur, resulting in the generation of alternative E1 species. This metastable nature of mature E1 may have important implications for the mechanism of virus disassembly during the initial stages of the infection process (B. Abell and D. T. Brown, J. Virol. 67:5496-5501, 1993).  相似文献   

5.
Interaction of Sindbis virus glycoproteins during morphogenesis.   总被引:14,自引:9,他引:5       下载免费PDF全文
In cells infected with the Sindbis temperature-sensitive mutants ts-23 and ts-10 (complementation group D), which contain a defect in the envelope glycoprotein E1, the precursor polypeptide PE2 is not cleaved to the envelope glycoprotein E2 at the nonpermissive temperature. This defect is phenotypically identical to the defect observed in the complementation group E mutant, ts-20. The lesion in ts-23 is reversible upon shift to permissive temperature, whereas that of ts-10 is not. Antiserum against whole virus, E1, or E2 also prevents the cleavage of PE2 in cells infected with wild-type Sindbis virus. Because the cleavage of PE2 is inhibited by the lesion in mutants that are genotypically distinct and by anti-E1 or -E2 serum, it appears that PE2 and E1 exist as a complex in the membrane of the infected cell.  相似文献   

6.
Temperature-sensitive mutations in proteins produced at or heated to a nonpermissive temperature render the proteins defective in some aspect of their maturation into functional entities. The characterization of temperature-sensitive mutations in model proteins, such as virus membrane proteins, has allowed the elucidation of critical events in the maturation of virus membranes as well as in the intracellular folding, processing, and transport of membrane proteins in general. We have used a transport-defective, temperature-sensitive mutant of Sindbis virus, ts23, which has two amino acid changes in the envelope protein E1, to further examine requirements placed upon the glycoproteins for their export to the plasma membrane. Pulse-chase experiments in which we utilized the transport inhibitors monensin and brefeldin A allowed us to synthesize and assemble the glycoproteins of ts23 into export-competent heterodimers at the permissive temperature while concurrently blocking their export to the cell surface. After removal of the inhibitors and a shift to the nonpermissive temperature, we assayed for protein transport, cell-cell fusion, and infectious-particle production. Taken together, the data show that the irreversible loss of the temperature-sensitive phenotype of ts23 can be correlated with the folding of E1 and the formation of export-competent PE2-E1 heterodimers in the endoplasmic reticulum. Furthermore, we have found that E1 pairs with PE2 to form the heterodimer prior to the completion of E1 folding.  相似文献   

7.
Protein-protein interactions in an alphavirus membrane.   总被引:21,自引:16,他引:5       下载免费PDF全文
Using homobifunctional chemical cross-linkers with various span distances, we have determined the near-neighbor associations and planar organization of the E1 and E2 envelope glycoproteins which compose the icosahedral surface of Sindbis virus. We have found that E1-E2 heterodimers, which form the virus protomeric units, exist in two conformationally distinct forms, reflecting their nonequivalent positions in the icosahedron. Three of these heterodimers form the trimeric morphologic units (capsomeres) which are held together by central E1-E1 interactions. In addition, we present data which suggest that E2-E2 interactions organize the capsomeres into pentameric and hexameric geometric units and that E1-E1 interactions between capsomeres maintain the icosahedral lattice in mature virions.  相似文献   

8.
Non-histone proteins and long-range organization of HeLa interphase DNA   总被引:22,自引:0,他引:22  
We have studied the association of the Sindbis virus glycoproteins in mature virions and infected cells. The glycoproteins were cross-linked with bifunctional amino-reactive reagents (11 Å cross-linking distance), some of which could be subsequently cleaved by reduction. Using monospecific rabbit antisera against each viral envelope glycoprotein it was found that >90% of the cross-linked glycoprotein dimers from intact virions or virions solubilized with Triton X100 prior to cross-linking were heterodimers of E1 and E2. The pattern of cross-linked glycoproteins from intact virions as well as infected cells suggested that three E1-E2 dimers may be associated to form a hexameric subunit. Cross-linking of pulselabeled infected monolayers showed that PE2 was cross-linked to E1 less efficiently than was E2, suggesting that if PE2 and E1 are associated as a complex in infected cells then their conformation with respect to reactive amino groups is distinct from that of the mature virion glycoproteins. ts mutants of Sindbis virus in the complementation groups corresponding to E1 and PE2 fail to cleave PE2 at the non-permissive temperature (40 °C). In monolayers infected with these mutants or a heat-resistant variant of Sindbis virus, the glycoprotein precursors synthesized at the elevated temperature were readily cross-linked into large aggregates, indicating a temperature-sensitive tendency for the proteins to aggregate.  相似文献   

9.
There are 80 trimeric, glycoprotein spikes that cover the surface of an alphavirus particle. The spikes, which are composed of three E2 and E1 glycoprotein heterodimers, are responsible for receptor binding and mediating fusion between the viral and host-cell membranes during entry. In addition, the cytoplasmic domain of E2 interacts with the nucleocapsid core during the last stages of particle assembly, possibly to aid in particle stability. During assembly, the spikes are nonfusogenic until the E3 glycoprotein is cleaved from E2 in the trans-Golgi network. Thus, a mutation in E2 potentially has effects on virus entry, spike assembly, or spike maturation. E2 is a highly conserved, cysteine-rich transmembrane glycoprotein. We made single cysteine-to-serine mutations within two distinct regions of the E2 ectodomain in both Sindbis virus and Ross River virus. Each of the E2 Cys mutants produced fewer infectious particles than wild-type virus. Further characterization of the mutant viruses revealed differences in particle morphology, fusion activity, and polyprotein cleavage between Sindbis and Ross River virus mutants, despite the mutations being made at corresponding positions in E2. The nonconserved assembly defects suggest that E2 folding and function is species dependent, possibly due to interactions with a virus-specific chaperone.  相似文献   

10.
Previous work has shown that the Sindbis structural proteins, core, the internal protein, and PE2 and E1, the integral membrane glycoproteins are synthesized as a polyprotein from a 26S mRNA; core PE2 and E1 are derived by proteolytic cleavage of a nascent chain. Newly synthesized core protein remains on the cytoplasmic side of the endoplasmic reticulum while newly synthesized PE2 and E1 are inserted into the lipid bilayer, presumably via their amino-termini. PE2 and E1 are glycosylated as nascent chains. Here, we examine a temperature-sensitive mutant of Sindbis virus which fails to cleave the structural proteins, resulting in the production of a polyprotein of 130,000 mol wt in which the amino-termini of PE2 and E1 are internal to the protein. Although the envelope sequences are present in this protein, it is not inserted into the endoplasmic reticulum bilayer, but remains on the cytoplasmic side as does the core protein in cells infected with wild-type Sindbis virus. We have also examined the fate of PE2 and E1 in cells treated with tunicamycin, an inhibitor of glycosylation. Unglycosylated PE2 and E1 are inserted normally into the lipid bilayer as are the glycosylated proteins. These results are consistent with the notion that a specific amino-terminal sequence is required for the proper insertion of membrane proteins into the endoplasmic reticulum bilayer, but that glycosylation is not required for this insertion.  相似文献   

11.
We have shown previously that processing of the Sindbis virus envelope protein precursor PE2 to envelope protein E2 is not required for virus maturation in cultured vertebrate fibroblast cells and that unprocessed PE2 can be incorporated into infectious virus in place of E2 (J. F. Presley and D. T. Brown, J. Virol. 63:1975-1980, 1989; D. L. Russell, J. M. Dalrymple, and R. E. Johnston, J. Virol. 63:1619-1629, 1989). To better understand the role of this processing event in the invertebrate vector portion of the alphavirus life cycle, we have examined the maturation of Sindbis virus mutants defective in PE2 processing in cultured mosquito cells. We found that although substantial amounts of structural proteins PE2, E1, and C were produced in infected mosquito (aedine) cell lines, very little infectious virus was released. When the period of infection was extended, plaque size variants appeared, some of which exhibited a restored ability to grow in mosquito cells. The nucleotide sequences of two such variants were determined. These variants contained point mutations that restored PE2 cleavage, indicating a genetic linkage between failure to cleave PE2 and failure to grow in mosquito cells.  相似文献   

12.
We describe the use of herpesvirus promoters to regulate the expression of a Sindbis virus replicon (SINrep/LacZ). We isolated cell lines that contain the cDNA of SINrep/LacZ under the control of a promoter from a herpesvirus early gene which requires regulatory proteins encoded by immediate-early genes for expression. Wild-type Sindbis virus and replicons derived from this virus cause death of most vertebrate cells, but the cells discussed here grew normally and expressed the replicon and β-galactosidase only after infection with a herpesvirus. Vero cell lines in which the expression of SINrep/LacZ was regulated by the herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) infected-cell protein 8 promoter were generated. One Vero cell line (V3-45N) contained, in addition to the SINrep/LacZ cDNA, a Sindbis virus-defective helper cDNA which provides the structural proteins for packaging the replicon. Infection of V3-45N cells with HSV-1 resulted in the production of packaged SINrep/LacZ replicons. HSV-1 induction of the Sindbis virus replicon and packaging and spread of the replicon led to enhanced expression of the reporter gene, suggesting that this type of cell could be used to develop sensitive assays to detect herpesviruses. We also isolated a mink lung cell line that was transformed with SINrep/LacZ cDNA under the control of the promoter from the human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) early gene UL45. HCMV carries out an abortive infection in mink lung cells, but it was able to induce the SINrep/LacZ replicon. These results, and those obtained with an HSV-1 mutant, demonstrate that this type of signal amplification system could be valuable for detecting herpesviruses for which a permissive cell culture system is not available.  相似文献   

13.
14.
Exposure of Sindbis virus-infected chicken embryo cells to a short pulse of radioactive amino acids revealed the formation of primarily three proteins: the nucleocapsid (C) of the virus, one of the viral envelope proteins (E1), and a glycoprotein that did not appear in the virion. This third protein (PE2) has now been identified as a precursor of the other viral envelope protein (E2) on the basis of two observations: (i) the simultaneous disappearance of radioactive PE2 and appearance of labeled E2 in pulse-chase experiments, and (ii) the identity of (14)C-arginine tryptic peptides in fingerprints of the two proteins. The nucleocapsid was the most heavily labeled protein in the cell and appeared in the virus during the short pulse. The two (14)C-labeled envelope proteins, although having different kinetics of labeling in the cell, appeared simultaneously in the virus only after the chase. Addition of pactamycin, a drug inhibiting initiation of protein synthesis, preferentially inhibited the formation of capsid protein Assuming that Sindbis virus proteins are formed initially as a single polypeptide, our studies locate the nucleocapsid at the amino-terminal end of the polypeptide chain.  相似文献   

15.
J S Yao  E G Strauss    J H Strauss 《Journal of virology》1996,70(11):7910-7920
During the assembly of alphaviruses, a preassembled nucleocapsid buds through the cell plasma membrane to acquire an envelope containing two virally encoded glycoproteins, E2 and E1. Using two chimeric viruses, we have studied interactions between E1, E2, and a viral peptide called 6K, which are required for budding. A chimeric Sindbis virus (SIN) in which the 6K gene had been replaced with that from Ross River virus (RR) produced wild-type levels of nucleocapsids and abundant PE2/E1 heterodimers that were processed and transported to the cell surface. However, only about 10% as much chimeric virus as wild-type virus was assembled, demonstrating that there is a sequence-specific interaction between 6K and the glycoproteins required for efficient virus assembly. In addition, the conformation of E1 in the E2/E1 heterodimer on the cell surface was different for the chimeric virus from that for the wild type, suggesting that one function of 6K is to promote proper folding of E1 in the heterodimer. A second chimeric SIN, in which both the 6K and E1 genes, as well as the 3' nontranslated region, were replaced with the corresponding regions of RR also resulted in the production of large numbers of intracellular nucleocapsids and of PE2/E1 heterodimers that were cleaved and transported to the cell surface. Budding of this chimera was severely impaired, however, and the yield of the chimera was only approximately 10(-7) of the SIN yield in a parallel infection. The conformation of the SIN E2/RR E1 heterodimer on the cell surface was different from that of the SIN E2/SIN E1 heterodimer, and no interaction between viral glycoproteins and nucleocapsids at the cell plasma membrane could be detected in the electron microscope. We suggest that proper folding of the E2/E1 heterodimer must occur before the E2 tail is positioned properly in the cytoplasm for budding and before heterodimer trimerization can occur to drive virus budding.  相似文献   

16.
The hepatitis C virus (HCV) genome encodes two envelope glycoproteins (E1 and E2) which interact noncovalently to form a heterodimer (E1-E2). During the folding and assembly of HCV glycoproteins, a large portion of these proteins are trapped in aggregates, reducing the efficiency of native E1-E2 complex assembly. To better understand this phenomenon and to try to increase the efficiency of HCV glycoprotein folding, endoplasmic reticulum chaperones potentially interacting with these proteins were studied. Calnexin, calreticulin, and BiP were shown to interact with E1 and E2, whereas no interaction was detected between GRP94 and HCV glycoproteins. The association of HCV glycoproteins with calnexin and calreticulin was faster than with BiP, and the kinetics of interaction with calnexin and calreticulin were very similar. However, calreticulin and BiP interacted preferentially with aggregates whereas calnexin preferentially associated with monomeric forms of HCV glycoproteins or noncovalent complexes. Tunicamycin treatment inhibited the binding of HCV glycoproteins to calnexin and calreticulin, indicating the importance of N-linked oligosaccharides for these interactions. The effect of the co-overexpression of each chaperone on the folding of HCV glycoproteins was also analyzed. However, the levels of native E1-E2 complexes were not increased. Together, our data suggest that calnexin plays a role in the productive folding of HCV glycoproteins whereas calreticulin and BiP are probably involved in a nonproductive pathway of folding.  相似文献   

17.
Indirect fluorescent-antibody studies of living and fixed chick cells infected with temperature-sensitive mutants of Sindbis virus suggest that functional envelope glycoprotein E1 must be inserted through the plasma membrane before E2. PE2 and E2 do not affect the insertion of E1. The experiments also suggest that normal PE2, a glycosylated precursor to E2, reacts with anti-E2 serum; the abnormal PE2 made by a temperature-sensitive PE2 cleavage-defective mutant did not. Abnormal E1 proteins made by E1-defective mutants also failed to react with anti-E1 serum.  相似文献   

18.
Sindbis virus codes for two membrane glycoproteins, E1 and PE2, which assemble into heterodimers within the endoplasmic reticulum. We have examined the role of the molecular chaperone BiP (grp78) in the maturation of these two proteins. E1, which folds into its mature conformation via at least three intermediates differing in the configurations of their disulfide bonds, was found to interact strongly and transiently with BiP after synthesis. ATP depletion mediated by carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone treatment results in the stabilization of complexes between BiP and E1. The depletion of intracellular ATP levels also greatly inhibits conversions between the E1 folding intermediates and results in the slow incorporation of E1 into disulfide-stabilized aggregates. These results suggest that the ATP-regulated binding and release of BiP have a role in modulating disulfide bond formation during E1 folding. In comparison with E1, very little PE2 is normally recovered in association with BiP. However, under conditions in which E1 folding is aberrant, increased amounts of PE2 become directly associated with BiP. The formation of these BiP-PE2 interactions occurs after E1 begins to misfold or fails to fold efficiently. We propose that nascent PE2 is stable prior to pairing with E1 for only a limited period of time, after which unpaired PE2 becomes recognized by BiP. This implies that the productive association of PE2 and E1 must occur within a restricted time frame and only after E1 has accomplished certain folding steps mediated by BiP binding and release. Kinetic studies which show that the pairing of E1 with PE2 is delayed after translocation support this conclusion.  相似文献   

19.
Sindbis virus can infect a broad range of insect and vertebrate cell types. The ability to restrict tissue tropism and target virus infection to specific cell types would expand the usefulness of engineered alphaviruses as gene expression vectors. In this study, virus pools derived from libraries of full-length Sindbis virus cDNA clones containing random insertion mutations in the PE2 or E1 virion glycoprotein gene were screened for mutants defective for binding to vertebrate cells. Binding-competent mutants were depleted by serial adsorption to chicken embryo fibroblast (CEF) monolayers at 4 degrees C, and the remaining population was amplified by immune-enhanced infection of P388D1 cells. From the PE2 libraries, 12 candidate mutants showing reduced cytopathic effects on CEF monolayers were isolated and three representative mutants, NB1, NB2, and NB12, were characterized in detail. Insertion mutations for NB1 and NB12 were found near the PE2 cleavage site, whereas the insertion in NB2 occurred between residues 69 and 74 of E2. Although virion assembly and release occurred normally for all three mutants, PE2 cleavage was completely (NB1) or partially (NB12) blocked for the mutants with insertions near the PE2 cleavage site. Both NB1 and NB2 were defective for binding to CEF and BHK-21 cells. Mild trypsin digestion of isolated NB1 virions resulted in PE2 cleavage and partially restored binding to CEF. Besides defective binding, NB1 also exhibited slower CEF penetration kinetics. Consistent with previous work, these results implicate PE2 cleavage and domains in the N-terminal portion of E2 as important determinants of alphavirus binding and penetration. Binding-defective mutants such as NB2, which exhibit normal particle assembly, release, and penetration, may be useful for future efforts to target Sindbis virus infection.  相似文献   

20.
Barmah Forest virus (BFV) is a mosquito-borne alphavirus that infects humans. A 6-Å-resolution cryo-electron microscopy three-dimensional structure of BFV exhibits a typical alphavirus organization, with RNA-containing nucleocapsid surrounded by a bilipid membrane anchored with the surface proteins E1 and E2. The map allows details of the transmembrane regions of E1 and E2 to be seen. The C-terminal end of the E2 transmembrane helix binds to the capsid protein. Following the E2 transmembrane helix, a short α-helical endodomain lies on the inner surface of the lipid envelope. The E2 endodomain interacts with E1 transmembrane helix from a neighboring E1-E2 trimeric spike, thereby acting as a spacer and a linker between spikes. In agreement with previous mutagenesis studies, the endodomain plays an important role in recruiting other E1-E2 spikes to the budding site during virus assembly. The E2 endodomain may thus serve as a target for antiviral drug design.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号