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Influenza virus PA is a subunit of RNA-dependent RNA polymerase. We demonstrated that PA has a unique chymotrypsin-like serine protease activity with Ser624 as an active site. To obtain further insight into the role of the protease activity of PA in viral proliferation, we examined the interaction between PA and matrix protein (M1). Both M1 purified from virion and hexa-histidine-tagged M1 expressed in Escherichia coli bound to PA. Hexa-histidine-tagged M1 pulled down PA. The interaction of PA with M1 was sensitive to ionic strength, suggesting that the interaction is formed by electrostatic force. Using Suc-Leu-Leu-Val-Tyr-MCA, a specific substrate for PA protease, M1 was demonstrated to inhibit the amidolytic activity of PA, whereas M1 did not inhibit that of chymotrypsin or trypsin at all. These results suggest that M1 binds to and inhibits the amidolytic activity of PA.  相似文献   

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Liang Y  Danzy S  Dao LD  Parslow TG  Liang Y 《PloS one》2012,7(1):e29485
Influenza A viral polymerase is a heterotrimeric complex that consists of PA, PB1, and PB2 subunits. We previously reported that a di-codon substitution mutation (G507A-R508A), denoted J10, in the C-terminal half of PA had no apparent effect on viral RNA synthesis but prevented infectious virus production, indicating that PA may have a novel role independent of its polymerase activity. To further examine the roles of PA in the viral life cycle, we have now generated and characterized additional mutations in regions flanking the J10 site from residues 497 to 518. All tested di-codon mutations completely abolished or significantly reduced viral infectivity, but they did so through disparate mechanisms. Several showed effects resembling those of J10, in that the mutant polymerase supported normal levels of viral RNA synthesis but nonetheless failed to generate infectious viral particles. Others eliminated polymerase activity, in most cases by perturbing the normal nuclear localization of PA protein in cells. We also engineered single-codon mutations that were predicted to pack near the J10 site in the crystal structure of PA, and found that altering residues K378 or D478 each produced a J10-like phenotype. In further studies of J10 itself, we found that this mutation does not affect the formation and release of virion-like particles per se, but instead impairs the ability of those particles to incorporate each of the eight essential RNA segments (vRNAs) that make up the viral genome. Taken together, our analysis identifies mutations in the C-terminal region of PA that differentially affect at least three distinct activities: protein nuclear localization, viral RNA synthesis, and a trans-acting function that is required for efficient packaging of all eight vRNAs.  相似文献   

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Background

Influenza A virus can infect a variety of different hosts and therefore has to adapt to different host temperatures for its efficient viral replication. Influenza virus codes for an RNA polymerase of 3 subunits: PB1, PB2 and PA. It is well known that the PB2 subunit is involved in temperature sensitivity, such as cold adaptation. On the other hand the role of the PA subunit in thermal sensitivity is still poorly understood.

Methodology/Principal Findings

To test which polymerase subunit(s) were involved in thermal stress we reconstituted artificial hybrids of influenza RNA polymerase in ribonucleoprotein (RNP) complexes and measured steady-state levels of mRNA, cRNA and vRNA at different temperatures. The PA subunit was involved in modulating RNP activity under thermal stress. Residue 114 of the PA subunit was an important determinant of this activity.

Conclusions/Significance

These findings suggested that influenza A virus may acquire an RNA polymerase adapted to different body temperatures of the host by reassortment of the RNA polymerase genes.  相似文献   

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Adaptive mutations in viral polymerase, which is composed of PB1, PB2, and PA, of avian influenza viruses are major genetic determinants of the host range. In this study, to elucidate the molecular mechanism of mammalian adaptation of avian viral polymerase, we performed cell-based vRNP reconstitution assays and biochemical analyses using purified recombinant viral polymerase complexes. We found that avian viral polymerase from A/duck/Pennsylvania/10,218/84 (DkPen) enhances the viral polymerase activity in mammalian cells by replacing the PA or PB2 gene with that from human influenza virus A/WSN/33 (WSN). Chimeric constructs between DkPen PA and WSN PA showed that the N-terminal endonuclease domain of WSN PA was essential for the mammalian adaptation of DkPen viral polymerase. We also found that the cap-snatching activity of purified DkPen viral polymerase was more than 5 times weaker than that of WSN in vitro in a PB2 Glu627-dependent manner. However, the cap-snatching activity of DkPen viral polymerase was hardly increased by replacing DkPen PA to WSN PA. These results suggest that the activity of viral genome replication may be enhanced in the DkPen reassortant containing WSN PA.  相似文献   

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The RNA-dependent RNA polymerase of influenza A virus is composed of three subunits that together synthesize all viral mRNAs and also replicate the viral genomic RNA segments (vRNAs) through intermediates known as cRNAs. Here we describe functional characterization of 16 site-directed mutants of one polymerase subunit, termed PA. In accord with earlier studies, these mutants exhibited diverse, mainly quantitative impairments in expressing one or more classes of viral RNA, with associated infectivity defects of varying severity. One PA mutant, however, targeting residues 507 and 508, caused only modest perturbations of RNA expression yet completely eliminated the formation of plaque-forming virus. Polymerases incorporating this mutant, designated J10, proved capable of synthesizing translationally active mRNAs and of replicating diverse cRNA or vRNA templates at levels compatible with viral infectivity. Both the mutant protein and its RNA products were appropriately localized in the cytoplasm, where influenza virus assembly occurs. Nevertheless, J10 failed to generate infectious particles from cells in a plasmid-based influenza virus assembly assay, and hemagglutinating material from the supernatants of such cells contained little or no nuclease-resistant genomic RNA. These findings suggest that PA has a previously unrecognized role in assembly or release of influenza virus virions, perhaps influencing core structure or the packaging of vRNAs or other essential components into nascent influenza virus particles.  相似文献   

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K Shimizu  H Handa  S Nakada    K Nagata 《Nucleic acids research》1994,22(23):5047-5053
An in vitro RNA synthesis system mimicking replication of genomic influenza virus RNA was developed with nuclear extracts prepared from influenza virus-infected HeLa cells using exogenously added RNA templates. The RNA synthesizing activity was divided into two complementing fractions, i.e. the ribonucleoprotein (RNP) complexes and the fraction free of RNP, which could be replaced with RNP cores isolated from virions and nuclear extracts from uninfected cells, respectively. When nuclear extracts from uninfected cells were fractionated by phosphocellulose column chromatography, the stimulatory activity for RNA synthesis was further separated into two distinct fractions. One of them, tentatively designated RAF (RNA polymerase activating factor), stimulated RNA synthesis with either RNP cores or RNA polymerase and nucleocapsid protein purified from RNP cores as the enzyme source. In contrast, the other, designated PRF (polymerase regulating factor), functioned as an activator only when RNP cores were used as the enzyme source. Biochemical analyses revealed that PRF facilitates dissociation of RNA polymerase from RNP cores. Of interest is that virus-coded non-structural protein 1 (NS1), which has been thought to be involved in regulation of replication, counteracted PRF function. Roles of cellular factors and viral proteins, NS1 in particular, are discussed in terms of regulation of influenza virus RNA genome replication.  相似文献   

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Fodor E  Smith M 《Journal of virology》2004,78(17):9144-9153
The RNA genome of influenza virus is transcribed and replicated by the viral RNA polymerase complex in the cell nucleus. We have generated green fluorescent protein (GFP)-tagged polymerase subunits to study the assembly of the polymerase complex. Our results show that individually expressed polymerase basic protein 1 (PB1) and polymerase acidic protein (PA) subunits were distributed in both the cytoplasm and the nucleus, while the polymerase basic protein 2 (PB2) subunit accumulated in the nucleus. Although it has been reported that PB1 alone accumulates in the nucleus, we demonstrate that PB1 requires the coexpression of PA for efficient nuclear accumulation. Our results support a model which proposes that PB1 and PA are transported into the nucleus as a complex.  相似文献   

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