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The encapsidation signal of the yeast L-A virus contains a 24-nucleotide stem-loop structure with a 5-nucleotide loop and an A bulged at the 5' side of the stem. The Pol part of the Gag-Pol fusion protein is responsible for encapsidation of viral RNA. Opened empty viral particles containing Gag-Pol specifically bind to this encapsidation signal in vitro. We found that binding to empty particles protected the bulged A and the flanking-two nucleotides from cleavage by Fe(II)-EDTA-generated hydroxyl radicals. The five nucleotides of the loop sequence ((4190)GAUCC(4194)) were not protected. However, T1 RNase protection and in vitro mutagenesis experiments indicated that G(4190) is essential for binding. Although the sequence of the other four nucleotides of the loop is not essential, data from RNase protection and chemical modification experiments suggested that C(4194) was also directly involved in binding to empty particles rather than indirectly through its potential base pairing with G(4190). These results suggest that the Pol domain of Gag-Pol contacts the encapsidation signal at two sites: one, the bulged A, and the other, G and C bases at the opening of the loop. These two sites are conserved in the encapsidation signal of M1, a satellite RNA of the L-A virus.  相似文献   

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pet18 mutations in Saccharomyces cerevisiae confer on the cell the inability to maintain either L-A or M double-stranded RNAs (dsRNAs) at the nonpermissive temperature. In in vitro experiments, we examined the effects of pet18 mutations on the RNA-dependent RNA polymerase activity associated with virus-like particles (VLPs). pet18 mutations caused thermolabile RNA polymerase activity of L-A VLPs, and this thermolability was found to be due to the instability of the L-A VLP structure. The pet18 mutations did not affect RNA polymerase activity of M VLPs. Furthermore, the temperature sensitivity of wild-type L-A RNA polymerase differed substantially from that of M RNA polymerase. From these results, and from other genetic and biochemical lines of evidence which suggest that replication of M dsRNA requires the presence of L-A dsRNA, we propose that the primary effect of the pet18 mutation is on the L-A VLP structure and that the inability of pet18 mutants to maintain M dsRNA comes from the loss of L-A dsRNA.  相似文献   

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The (+) single-stranded RNA (ssRNA) of the L-A virus is the species packaged to form new viral particles. Empty L-A viral particles specifically bind viral (+) ssRNA, and a sequence 400 bases from the 3' end is necessary for this activity. We show that its stem-loop structure, the A residue protruding from the stem, and the loop sequence are all important for the binding, and that this 34 base region is sufficient for the binding. M1, a satellite virus of L-A, has a similar structure on its (+) strand that is likewise sufficient for the binding. Heterologous RNA with the binding sequence from L-A or M1, when expressed in vivo, was packaged in L-A viral particles. Thus, the sites necessary to bind to empty particles are encapsidation signals for the L-A virus. Since the pol domain of the 180 kd minor coat protein appears to be responsible for the binding, this result suggests that the RNA polymerase molecule recognizes the viral genome for packaging.  相似文献   

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X double-stranded RNA (dsRNA) is a 0.52-kilobase dsRNA molecule that arose spontaneously in a nonkiller strain of Saccharomyces cerevisiae originally containing L-A and L-BC dsRNAs (L-BC is the same size as L-A but shares no homology with it). X hybridized with L-A, and direct RNA sequencing of X showed that the first 5' 25 base pairs (of the X positive strand) and at least the last 110 base pairs of the 3' end were identical to the ends of L-A dsRNA. X showed cytoplasmic inheritance and, like M1, was dependent on L-A for its maintenance. X was encapsidated in viruslike particles whose major coat protein was provided by L-A (as is true for M1), and X was found in viruslike particles with one to eight X molecules per particle. This finding confirms our "head-full replication" model originally proposed for M1 and M2. Like M1 or M2, X lowers the copy number of L-A, especially in a ski host. Surprisingly, X requires many chromosomal MAK genes that are necessary for M1 but not for L-A.  相似文献   

8.
The eukaryotic ribosomal stalk, composed of the P-proteins, is a part of the GTPase-associated-center which is directly responsible for stimulation of translation-factor-dependent GTP hydrolysis. Here we report that yeast mutant strains lacking P1/P2-proteins show high propagation of the yeast L-A virus. Affinity-capture-MS analysis of a protein complex isolated from a yeast mutant strain lacking the P1A/P2B proteins using anti-P0 antibodies showed that the Gag protein, the major coat protein of the L-A capsid, is associated with the ribosomal stalk. Proteomic analysis revealed that the elongation factor eEF1A was also present in the isolated complex. Additionally, yeast strains lacking the P1/P2-proteins are hypersensitive to paromomycin and hygromycin B, underscoring the fact that structural perturbations in the stalk strongly influence the ribosome function, especially at the level of elongation.  相似文献   

9.
L-A is a 4.6-kilobase double-stranded RNA virus of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. The in vitro L-A replication reaction ((-)-strand synthesis) requires an internal site 400 bases from the 3' end in addition to the 3'-terminal 30 nucleotides of the L-A (+)-single-stranded RNA. Elimination of the internal site reduces the template activity 5-10-fold. Here we investigate how the internal site can stimulate the replication reaction which starts at the 3' end of the template. When these two sites are split into two distinct RNA molecules, the internal site can no longer stimulate replication (no trans-activation). However, establishment of an intermolecular hydrogen bonding between these RNAs restored the replication-enhancing activity of the internal site. This result is consistent with a model wherein L-A's RNA polymerase interacts first with the internal site and then with the 3' end site by either looping or by a local dissociation-reassociation mechanism. These results, however, clearly eliminate anchored tracking and sliding models which require continuity of the RNA molecule between these two cis sites.  相似文献   

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The plus strand of the L-A double-stranded RNA virus of Saccharomyces cerevisiae has two large open reading frames, ORF1, which encodes the major coat protein, and ORF2, which encodes a single-stranded RNA-binding protein having a sequence diagnostic of viral RNA-dependent RNA polymerases. ORF2 is expressed only as a Gag-Pol-type fusion protein with ORF1. We have constructed a plasmid which expresses these proteins from the yeast PGK1 promoter. We show that this plasmid can support the replication of the killer toxin-encoding M1 satellite virus in the absence of an L-A double-stranded RNA helper virus itself. This requires ORF2 expression, providing a potential in vivo assay for the RNA polymerase and single-stranded RNA-binding activities of the fusion protein determined by ORF2. ORF1 expression, like a host ski- mutation, can suppress the usual requirement of M1 for the MAK11, MAK18, and MAK27 genes and allow a defective L-A (L-A-E) to support M1 replication. These results suggest that expression of ORF1 from the vector makes the cell a ski- phenocopy. Indeed, expression of ORF1 in a wild-type killer makes it a superkiller, suggesting that a target of the SKI antiviral system may be the major coat protein.  相似文献   

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Polyvalent carbohydrate-protein interactions play a key role in bio- and pathological processes, including cell-cell communication and pathogen invasion. In order to study, control and manipulate these interactions gold nanoparticles have been employed as a 3D scaffold, presenting carbohydrate ligands in a multivalent fashion for use as high affinity binding partners and a model system for oligosaccharide presentation at biomacromolecular surfaces. In this study, the binding of a series of mannose-functionalised gold nanoparticles to the dimeric BC2L-A lectin from Burkholderia cenocepacia has been evaluated. BC2L-A is known to exhibit a high specificity for (oligo)mannosides. Due to the unique structure and binding nature of this lectin, it provides a useful tool to study (oligo)saccharides presented on multivalent scaffolds. Surface plasmon resonance and isothermal titration calorimetric assays were used to investigate the effect of ligand presentation density towards binding to the bacterial lectin. We show how a combination of structural complementarities between ligand presentation and lectin architecture and statistical re-binding effects are important for increasing the avidity of multivalent ligands for recognition by their protein receptors; further demonstrating the application of glyconanotechnology towards fundamental glycobiology research as well as a potential towards biomedical diagnostics and therapeutic treatments.  相似文献   

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The Pol region of the Gag-Pol fusion protein of the L-A double-stranded (ds) RNA virus of Saccharomyces cerevisiae has (i) a domain essential for packaging viral positive strands, (ii) consensus amino acid sequence patterns typical of RNA-dependent RNA polymerases, and (iii) two single-stranded RNA binding domains. We describe here a third single-stranded RNA binding domain (Pol residues 374 to 432), which is unique in being cryptic. Its activity is revealed only after deletion of an inhibitory region C terminal to the binding domain itself. This cryptic RNA binding domain is necessary for propagation of M1 satellite dsRNA, but it is not necessary for viral particle assembly or for packaging of viral positive-strand single-stranded RNA. The cryptic RNA binding domain includes a sequence pattern common among positive-strand single-stranded RNA and dsRNA viral RNA-dependent RNA polymerases, suggesting that it has a role in RNA polymerase activity.  相似文献   

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The eukaryotic mRNA 5' cap structure m7GpppX (where X is any nucleotide) interacts with a number of cellular proteins. Several of these proteins were studied in mammalian, yeast, and drosophila cells and found to be involved in translation initiation. Here we describe a novel cap-binding protein, the coat protein of L-A, a double-stranded RNA virus that is persistently maintained in many Saccharomyces cerevisiae strains. The results also suggest that the coat protein of a related double-stranded RNA virus (L-BC) is likewise a cap-binding protein. Strikingly, in contrast to the cellular cap-binding proteins, the interaction between the L-A virus coat protein and the cap structure is through a covalent bond.  相似文献   

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The L-A double-stranded RNA virus of Saccharomyces cerevisiae encodes its major coat protein (80 kDa) and a minor single-stranded RNA binding protein (180 kDa) that has immunological cross-reactivity with the major coat protein. The sequence of L-A cDNA clones revealed two open reading frames (ORF), ORF1 and ORF2. These two reading frames overlap by 130 base pairs and ORF2 is in the -1 reading frame with respect to ORF1. Although the major coat protein of the viral particles is encoded by ORF1, the 180-kDa protein is derived from the entire double-stranded RNA genome by fusing ORF1 and ORF2, probably by a -1 translational frameshift. Within the overlapping region is a sequence similar to that producing a -1 frameshift by "simultaneous slippage" in retroviruses. The coding sequence of ORF2 shows a pattern characteristic of viral RNA-dependent RNA polymerases of icosahedral (+)-strand RNA viruses. Thus, the 180-kDa protein is analogous to gag-pol fusion proteins.  相似文献   

20.
The MAK3 gene is necessary for propagation of the L-A double-stranded RNA virus of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. MAK3 encodes a protein with substantial homology to the Escherichia coli rimI N-acetyltransferase that acetylates the NH2 terminus of ribosomal protein S18, and shares consensus sequences with a group of N-acetyltransferases. The NH2 terminus of the viral major coat protein encoded by L-A is normally blocked, but we find that it is unblocked in a mak3-1 mutant. L-A virus-encoded proteins produced from a cDNA clone of L-A can encapsidate the L-A (+)-strands in a wild-type host, but not in a mak3-1 mutant strain. The amount of major coat protein found in the particle fraction is reduced greater than 100-fold, and the amount in the total cell extract is reduced 5-10-fold. A modified beta-galactosidase, having as its NH2-terminal the NH2-terminal 13 residues of the L-A-encoded major coat protein, is blocked in a wild-type host, but not in a mak3-1 host. We propose that MAK3 encodes an N-acetyltransferase whose modification of the L-A major coat protein NH2 terminus is essential for viral assembly, and that unassembled coat protein is unstable.  相似文献   

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