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1.
The interaction of TMV RNA with the disk aggregate of TMV protein at the initiation of assembly has been studied by using the techniques of RNA sequencing. The 5' end group has been identified, and shown not to be protected in the early stages of assembly from accessibility to nuclease digestion. A population of RNA fragments of average length 250 nucleotides, originating from a unique region of TMV RNA, is encapsidated by limited assembly, and sufficient sequence information is available to identify certain unusual features. The protected region does not contain highly reiterated simple repeating sequences, but may contain more complicated repeats. The length and complexity of the nucleation region may reflect adaptation to the efficient mediation of the conformational change from disk to helix of TMV protein, besides a requirement for binding to the disk, and this may be an important part of the mechanism of specificity in the nucleation of assembly.  相似文献   

2.
States of Aggregation of Tobacco Mosaic Virus Protein   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Self-assembly of the protein subunits of tobacco mosaic virus takes place by a series of steps. The natural state of aggregation of TMV protein is not the helix but the 20S disk, which consists of two paired rings of seventeen sub-units each. Movement of 5 Å is involved in the pairing. Control of the aggregation and its consequences for virus assembly are described in the next two articles.  相似文献   

3.
Bacteriophage Qβ is a small RNA virus that infects Escherichia coli. The virus particle contains a few copies of the minor coat protein A1, a C‐terminally prolonged version of the coat protein, which is formed when ribosomes occasionally read‐through the leaky stop codon of the coat protein. The crystal structure of the read‐through domain from bacteriophage Qβ A1 protein was determined at a resolution of 1.8 Å. The domain consists of a heavily deformed five‐stranded β‐barrel on one side of the protein and a β‐hairpin and a three‐stranded β‐sheet on the other. Several short helices and well‐ordered loops are also present throughout the protein. The N‐terminal part of the read‐through domain contains a prominent polyproline type II helix. The overall fold of the domain is not similar to any published structure in the Protein Data Bank.  相似文献   

4.
Assembly of nucleoprotein rods from tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) coat protein and poly(A) depends on the presence of 20S disks in a manner very similar to nucleation and growth of virions in reconstitution with TMV RNA. Products assembled with (A) approximately equal to 5000 appear to have the same buoyant density in CsCl, the same nucleotide/protein ratio and the same nuclease stability, as reconstituted and native TMV. Their rate of formation is very similar to the rate of reconstitution with TMV RNA when high-molecular-mass (A) approximately equal to 5000 is used, but becomes a function of chain length particularly with (A) less than or equal to 185. The composition of assembly products can be described sufficiently with the relation between number of capsid polypeptide monomers/particle, np, to the number of nucleotide residues/chain, nnt, of np = 1/3 (nnt + 50) with two important restrictions: (1) particles of less than four turns of helically arranged capsid subunits are unstable, and (2) particles with about 150 or less nucleotides per chain deviate in structure from mature virus and virus-like (= longer) assembly products. This is indicated by changes in both buoyant density in CsCl and optical properties, while 'dislocation' of the disk to the helical arrangement of capsid subunits ('helicalization') and nuclease stability already become established with chains as short as (A) approximately equal to 58 +/- 20. Consequently, we suggest that assembly proceeds through three distinct phases: (1) nucleation (resulting in helicalization) by interaction of nucleic acid with the first disk; (2) stabilization of the primary (unstable!) nucleation complex by addition of a second disk and formation of a four-turn virus-like and stable nucleoprotein helix, which is then fit for (3) elongation by addition of further disks. The question of what makes the TMV protein disk select specifically TMV RNA during virion assembly is discussed in some detail.  相似文献   

5.
A review of the structural studies of tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) is given. TMV is essentially a flat helical microcrystal with 16 1/3 subunits per turn. A single strand of RNA runs along the helix and is deeply embedded in the protein. The virus particles form oriented gels from which high-resolution X-ray fiber diffraction data can be obtained. This may be interpreted by the use of six heavy-atom derivatives to give an electron density map at 0.4 nm resolution from which the RNA configuration and the form of the inner part of the protein subunit may be determined. In addition, the protein subunits form a stable 17-fold two-layered disk which is involved in virus assembly and which crystallizes. By the use of noncrystallographic symmetry and a single heavy-atom derivative, it has been possible to solve the structure of the double disk to 0.28 nm resolution. In this structure one sees that an important structural role is played by four alpha-helices, one of which (the LR helix) appears to form the main binding site for the RNA. The main components of the binding site appear to be hydrophobic interactions with the bases, hydrogen bonds between aspartate groups and the sugars, and arginine salt bridges to the phosphate groups. The binding site is between two turns of the virus helix or between the turns of the double disk. In the disk, the region proximal to the RNA binding site is in a random coil until the RNA binds, whereupon the 24 residues involved build a well-defined structure, thereby encapsulating the RNA.  相似文献   

6.
The in vitro reassembly of tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) begins with the specific recognition by the viral coat protein disk aggregate of an internal TMV RNA sequence, known as the assembly origin (Oa). This RNA sequence contains a putative stem-loop structure (loop 1), believed to be the target for disk binding in assembly initiation, which has the characteristic sequence AAGAAGUCG exposed as a single strand at its apex. We show that a 75-base RNA sequence encompassing loop 1 is sufficient to direct the encapsidation by TMV coat protein disks of a heterologous RNA fragment. This RNA sequence and structure, which is sufficient to elicit TMV assembly in vitro, was explored by site-directed mutagenesis. Structure analysis of the RNA identified mutations that appear to effect assembly via a perturbation in RNA structure, rather than by a direct effect on coat protein binding. The binding of the loop 1 apex RNA sequence to coat protein disks was shown to be due primarily to its regularly repeated G residues. Sequences such as (UUG)3 and (GUG)3 are equally effective at initiating assembly, indicating that the other bases are less functionally constrained. However, substitution of the sequences (CCG)3, (CUG)3 or (UCG)3 reduced the assembly initiation rate, indicating that C residues are unfavourable for assembly. Two additional RNA sequences within the 75-base Oa sequence, both of the form (NNG)3, may play subsidiary roles in disk binding. RNA structure plays an important part in permitting selective protein-RNA recognition, since altering the RNA folding close to the apex of the loop 1 stem reduces the rate of disk binding, as does shortening the stem itself. Whereas the RNA sequence making up the hairpin does not in general affect the specificity of the protein-RNA interaction, it is required to present the apex signal sequence in a special conformation. Mechanisms for this are discussed.  相似文献   

7.
David Zimmern  P.J.G. Butler 《Cell》1977,11(3):455-462
Upon mixing purified TMV RNA with limited amounts of viral coat protein in the form of the disk aggregate, a unique region of the whole RNA becomes protected from nuclease digestion. The protected RNA consists of fragments up to 500 nucleotides long in varying yields, which are found in nucleoprotein particles having a protein-nucleic acid ratio similar to the mature virus. The protected RNA, when reextracted, is able to rebind to coat protein disks rapidly, quantitatively and with high affinity, becoming once more RNAase-resistant in the process. Small aggregates of TMV protein (A protein) are inactive in formation of the nuclease-resistant complexes. On the basis of this evidence, we identify the isolated RNA fragments as portions of TMV RNA containing the origin or initiation site for in vitro reassembly, which have been protected from digestion by incorporation into assembly nucleation complexes.The yield, but not the length distribution, of the protected RNA pieces is found to double upon increasing the protein added from 1–2 disk-equivalents of protein per RNA molecule. This implies that the formation of the nucleation complexes may involve a highly cooperative initial addition of protein.  相似文献   

8.
The tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) particle was the first macromolecular structure to be shown to self-assemble in vitro, allowing detailed studies of the mechanism. Nucleation of TMV self-assembly is by the binding of a specific stem-loop of the single-stranded viral RNA into the central hole of a two-ring sub-assembly of the coat protein, known as the 'disk'. Binding of the loop onto its specific binding site, between the two rings of the disk, leads to melting of the stem so more RNA is available to bind. The interaction of the RNA with the protein subunits in the disk cause this to dislocate into a proto-helix, rearranging the protein subunits in such a way that the axial gap between the rings at inner radii closes, entrapping the RNA. Assembly starts at an internal site on TMV RNA, about 1 kb from its 3'-terminus, and the elongation in the two directions is different. Elongation of the nucleated rods towards the 5'-terminus occurs on a 'travelling loop' of the RNA and, predominantly, still uses the disk sub-assembly of protein subunits, consequently incorporating approximately 100 further nucleotides as each disk is added, while elongation towards the 3'-terminus uses smaller protein aggregates and does not show this 'quantized' incorporation.  相似文献   

9.

Background

Crystal structures of the tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) coat protein (CP) in its helical and disk conformations have previously been determined at the atomic level. For the helical structure, interactions of proteins and nucleic acids in the main chains were clearly observed; however, the conformation of residues at the C-terminus was flexible and disordered. For the four-layer aggregate disk structure, interactions of the main chain residues could only be observed through water–mediated hydrogen bonding with protein residues. In this study, the effects of the C-terminal peptides on the interactions of TMV CP were investigated by crystal structure determination.

Methodology/Principal Findings

The crystal structure of a genetically engineered TMV CP was resolved at 3.06 Å. For the genetically engineered TMV CP, a six-histidine (His) tag was introduced at the N-terminus, and the C-terminal residues 155 to 158 were truncated (N-His-TMV CP19). Overall, N-His-TMV CP19 protein self-assembled into the four-layer aggregate form. The conformations of residues Gln36, Thr59, Asp115 and Arg134 were carefully analyzed in the high radius and low radius regions of N-His-TMV CP19, which were found to be significantly different from those observed previously for the helical and four-layer aggregate forms. In addition, the aggregation of the N-His-TMV CP19 layers was found to primarily be mediated through direct hydrogen-bonding. Notably, this engineered protein also can package RNA effectively and assemble into an infectious virus particle.

Conclusion

The terminal sequence of amino acids influences the conformation and interactions of the four-layer aggregate. Direct protein–protein interactions are observed in the major overlap region when residues Gly155 to Thr158 at the C-terminus are truncated. This engineered TMV CP is reassembled by direct protein–protein interaction and maintains the normal function of the four-layer aggregate of TMV CP in the presence of RNA.  相似文献   

10.
Zimmern D 《The EMBO journal》1983,2(11):1901-1907
Recognition of the unique internal assembly origin on tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) RNA by the disk aggregate of the viral coat protein probably involves an extended region of the RNA (larger than that coated by a single disk) folded into a specific conformation. A secondary structure model is proposed for the RNA preferentially coated by limiting amounts of coat protein disks on the basis of partial nuclease digestion data. Part of this sequence can form three symmetrically spaced hairpins with marginally stable base paired sequences at the tips of the stems. The pattern of progressive protection of the RNA from nuclease attack during assembly suggests that these three hairpins are successively coated by the first three disks to add. The spacing of these hairpins is identical to that of three hairpins in the pseudo assembly origin (part of the coat protein gene homologous to the assembly origin). In Ni 2519, a TMV mutant whose assembly is defective at high temperature because it can no longer discriminate between the true and pseudo assembly origins, a point mutation has occurred near the tip of the third metastably base paired stem of the true assembly origin which would disrupt its structure and alter one copy of a repeated heptanucleotide. This suggests an important role for the ordered and cooperative recognition of successive loops in determining the specificity of assembly.  相似文献   

11.
The trinucleoside diphosphate A-A-G and the hexanucleotide fraction from a ribonuclease I digest of yeast RNA have been soaked into crystals of the disk aggregate of tobacco mosaic virus protein. At high concentrations these cause disruption of the crystal, probably by mimicking the normal nucleation of assembly. At lower nucleotide concentrations the crystals remain intact and the differences caused by nucleotide binding have been studied by X-ray diffraction. The most obvious change is an upwards movement of about 0.3 nm at the low-radius end of the left radial helix in the protein with some stiffening of the helix so that it now extends visibly in from 4 nm to 6 nm radius. Similar shifts also occur in the right radial and left slewed helices. A positive peak, which is tentatively identified with the bound oligonucleotide, is seen around 4 nm radius and below the right radial helix. The amino acid residues in possible contact with this feature are discussed.  相似文献   

12.
Specific encapsidation of fragments of TMV RNA.   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The in vitro reconstitution of tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) is initiated by the binding of a disk of TMV protein to the 'disk recognition site', a region of the RNA chain at or near the 5'-terminus for which the disk has special affinity. In order to gain insight into the recognition process, we have studied the ability of disks to encapsidate short RNA fragments produced by partial pancreatic or T1 RNase digestion of TMV RNA. The disk is capable of dicriminating among such fragments, encapsidating only a few of the many present in the digest. The products of encapsidation are short nucleoprotein rods of the same diameter as TMV and of length proportional to that of the encapsidated RNA fragment. The particles differ from TMV, however, in one significant aspect (apart from their length): they possess rings of RNA-free protein at one or both extremities of the rod. In the case of T1 RNase digestion the principal encapsidated fragments were fragments T1 (105 nucleotides) and a family of smaller fragments containing elements of the same sequence. Partial digestion with pancreatic RNase generated only one major fragment (fragment P1; 150 nucleotides) with affinity for the disk. Fragment T1 has been sequenced and shown to represent a portion of the coat protein cistron. Fragment P1 has been partially sequenced but its function is not yet known. Several lines of evidence indicate that fragment T1 is not the disk recognition site. The portion of the TMV RNA chain from which fragment P1 is derived, on the other hand, is encapsidated early in the reconstitution process; thus fragment P1 may contain the disk recognition site. Fragment T1 and fragment P1 both have purine-rich and cytosine-poor sequences near their termini. In addition, fragment T1, and possibly fragment P1, possess a periodicity of order three in purine residues. It seems likely that one or both of the aforesaid properties are largely responsible for the affinity of these fragments for the disk.  相似文献   

13.
The coat protein of tobacco mosaic virus forms numerous aggregates, including the small A-protein, the disk, and two helical forms. The structures of the disk, the helical protein forms, and the virus are compared. Most of the differences are in the conformation of the chain between residues 89 and 113, which lies in the region of protein at the center of the virus, inside the RNA. It is disordered in the disk, but has a fixed conformation in the virus and the protein helices. The differences between the virus and the two helical protein forms are largely in the conformations of arginines and carboxylic acids in this region.  相似文献   

14.
Treatment of tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) RNA with T1 RNase under mild conditions cuts the RNA molecule into a large number of fragments, only a few of which may be specifically recognized by disks of TMV protein. It has been shown elsewhere that these specifically recognized RNA fragments are a part of the coat protein cistron, the portion coding for amino acids 95 to 129 of the coat protein. It is reported that different size classes of partially uncoated virus particles were prepared by limited reconstitution between TMV RNA and protein or by partial stripping of intact virus with DMSO. Both procedures produce nucleoprotein rods in which the 5'-terminal portion of the RNA is encapsidated and the 3'-terminal region is free. The free and the encapsidated portions of the RNA were each tested for the ability to give rise to the aforesaid specifically recognized fragments of the coat protein cistron upon partial T1 RNase digestion. It was found that only the 3'-terminal third of the virus particle need to be uncoated in order to expose the portion of the RNA molecule from which these fragments are derived. We conclude, therefore, that the coat protein cistron is situated upon the 3'-terminal third of the RNA chain, i.e. within 2000 nucleotides of the 3'-end.  相似文献   

15.
The Rx1 gene in potato confers extreme resistance to potato virus X (PVX). To investigate the mechanism and elicitation of Rx resistance, protoplasts of potato cv. Cara (Rx1 genotype) and Maris Bard (rx1 genotype) were inoculated with PVX and tobacco mosaic virus (TMV). At 24 h post-inoculation in Maris Bard protoplasts there was at least 100-fold more PVX RNA than in protoplasts of Cara. TMV RNA accumulated to the same level in both types of protoplast. However, when the TMV was inoculated together with PVX the accumulation of TMV RNA was suppressed in the Cara (Rx1 genotype) protoplasts to the same extent as PVX. The Rx1 resistance also suppressed accumulation of a recombinant TMV in which the coat protein gene was replaced with the coat protein gene of PVX. It is therefore concluded that Rx1-mediated resistance is elicited by the PVX coat protein, independently of any other proteins encoded by PVX. The domain of the coat protein with elicitor activity was localized by deletion and mutation analysis to the structural core of a non-virion form of the coat protein.  相似文献   

16.
We have investigated whether the presence of the origin of assembly sequence (OAS) of tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) is necessary for the specific encapsidation of replicating viral RNA. To this end TMV coat protein was expressed from replicating RNA constructs with or without the OAS in planta. In both cases the replicating RNA was specifically encapsidated to give nucleoprotein nanorods, though the yield in the absence of the OAS was reduced to about 60% of that in its presence. Moreover, the nanorods generated in the absence of the OAS were more heterogeneous in length and contained frequent structural discontinuities. These results strongly suggest that the function of the OAS is to provide a unique site for the initiation of viral assembly, leading to a one-start helix, rather than the selection of virus RNA for packaging.  相似文献   

17.
As reported previously, UV-irradiation induces crosslinking between tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) coat protein molecules and intraviral RNA nucleotides. We have irradiated [3H]-uridine labeled TMV and isolated TMV coat protein subunits with the attached nucleotide label. These TMV protein subunits were hydrolyzed with trypsin. The tryptic peptides were separated by high-performance liquid chromatography and [3H]-labeled peptides were identified. The UV-irradiation of TMV was found to result in crosslinking to intraviral RNA of the T8 tryptic peptide (residues 93-112) of TMV coat protein.  相似文献   

18.
The effects of 254 nm UV-irradiation of tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) and potato virus X (PVX) RNA preparations on the RNA ability to self-assembly in vitro with the viral coat proteins were studied. It was found that while TMV RNA ability to assemble with the homologous protein is rapidly inactivated by the UV-irradiation, PVX RNA ability to be encapsidated by the PVX coat protein is quite resistant to the irradiation. More than that, the irradiation of TMV RNA with the dose strongly inhibiting its assembly with the homologous protein, did not result in any significant inhibition of this RNA ability to be coated with the PVX protein. The results testify to the profound differences in the mechanisms of RNA-protein interactions in the processes of self-assembly in vitro of tobamoviruses and potexviruses.  相似文献   

19.
M Ishikawa  S Naito    T Ohno 《Journal of virology》1993,67(9):5328-5338
For the multiplication of RNA viruses, specific host factors are considered essential, but as of yet little is known about this aspect of virus multiplication. To identify such host factors, we previously isolated PD114, a mutant of Arabidopsis thaliana, in which the accumulation of the coat protein of tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) in uninoculated leaves of an infected plant was reduced to low levels. The causal mutation, designated tom1, was single, nuclear, and recessive. Here, we demonstrate that the tom1 mutation affects the amplification of TMV-related RNAs in a single cell. When protoplasts were inoculated with TMV RNA by electroporation, the percentage of TMV-positive protoplasts (detected by indirect immunofluorescence staining with anti-TMV antibodies) was lower (about 1/5 to 1/10) among PD114 protoplasts than among wild-type protoplasts. In TMV-positive PD114 protoplasts, the amounts of the positive-strand RNAs (the genomic RNA and subgenomic mRNAs) and coat protein reached levels similar to, or slightly lower than, those reached in TMV-positive wild-type protoplasts, but the accumulation of the positive-strand RNAs and coat protein occurred more slowly than with the wild-type protoplasts. The parallel decrease in the amounts of the coat protein and its mRNA suggests that the coat protein is translated from its mRNA with normal efficiency. These observations support the idea that the TOM1 gene encodes a host factor necessary for the efficient amplification of TMV RNA in an infected cell. Furthermore, we show that TMV multiplication in PD114 protoplasts is severely affected by the coinoculation of cucumber mosaic virus (CMV) RNA. When PD114 protoplasts were inoculated with a mixture of TMV and CMV RNAs by electroporation, the accumulation of TMV-related molecules was approximately one-fifth of that in PD114 protoplasts inoculated with TMV RNA alone. No such reduction in the accumulation of TMV-related molecules was observed when wild-type protoplasts were inoculated with a mixture of TMV and CMV RNAs or when wild-type and PD114 protoplasts were inoculated with a mixture of TMV and turnip crinkle virus RNAs. These observations are compatible with a hypothetical model in which a gene(s) that is distinct from the TOM1 gene is involved in both TMV and CMV multiplication.  相似文献   

20.
Experiments have been carried out on the coat protein of tobacco mosaic virus (TMVP) to test for the occurrence of the previously postulated RNA-induced direct switching, during in vitro assembly of tobacco mosaic virus (TMV), of the subunit packing from the cylindrical bilayer disk to the virus helical arrangement. No evidence was found for such RNA-induced switching and no evidence for the direct participation of the bilayer disk in either the nucleation or elongation phases of the in vitro virus assembly. Instead, virus assembly proceeds by an initiation step involving the binding of the RNA to the previously characterized two-plus turn helical aggregate that is formed from small oligomers of subunits. However, a bilayer disk, which has been characterized in high ionic strength crystals, has been observed in low ionic strength virus assembly solutions only as a transient species upon depolymerization of dimers of bilayer disks formed in solution at high ionic strength, and not as an equilibrium species of TMVP.  相似文献   

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