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 15 毫秒
1.
Assembly of an infectious retrovirus requires the incorporation of the envelope glycoprotein complex during the process of particle budding. We have recently demonstrated that amino acid substitutions of a tyrosine residue in the cytoplasmic domain block glycoprotein incorporation into budding Mason-Pfizer monkey virus (M-PMV) particles and abrogate infectivity (C. Song, S. R. Dubay, and E. Hunter, J. Virol. 77:5192-5200, 2003). To investigate the contribution of other amino acids in the cytoplasmic domain to the process of glycoprotein incorporation, we introduced alanine-scanning mutations into this region of the transmembrane protein. The effects of the mutations on glycoprotein biosynthesis and function, as well as on virus infectivity, have been examined. Mutation of two cytoplasmic residues, valine 20 and histidine 21, inhibits viral protease-mediated cleavage of the cytoplasmic domain that is observed during virion maturation, but the mutant virions show only moderately reduced infectivity. We also demonstrate that the cytoplasmic domain of the M-PMV contains three amino acid residues that are absolutely essential for incorporation of glycoprotein into virions. In addition to the previously identified tyrosine at residue 22, an isoleucine at position 18 and a leucine at position 25 each mediate the process of incorporation and efficient release of virions. While isoleucine 18 may be involved in direct interactions with immature capsids, antibody uptake studies showed that leucine 25 and tyrosine 22 are part of an efficient internalization signal in the cytoplasmic domain of the M-PMV glycoprotein. These results demonstrate that the cytoplasmic domain of M-PMV Env, in part through its YXXL-mediated endocytosis and intracellular trafficking signals, plays a critical role in the incorporation of glycoprotein into virions.  相似文献   

2.
Song C  Micoli K  Hunter E 《Journal of virology》2005,79(18):11569-11579
Mason-Pfizer monkey virus (M-PMV) encodes a transmembrane glycoprotein with a 38-amino-acid-long cytoplasmic tail. After the release of the immature virus, a viral protease-mediated cleavage of the cytoplasmic tail (CT) results in the loss of 17 amino acids from the carboxy terminus and renders the envelope protein fusion competent. To investigate the role of individual amino acid residues in the CT in fusion, a series of mutations was introduced, and the effects of these mutations on glycoprotein biosynthesis and fusion were examined. Most of the alanine-scanning mutations in the CT had little effect on fusion activity. However, four amino acid substitutions (threonine 4, lysine 7, glutamine 9, and isoleucine 10) resulted in substantially increased fusogenicity, while six (leucine 2, phenylalanine 5, isoleucine 13, lysine 16, proline 17, and glycine 31) resulted in much-reduced fusion. Interestingly, the bulk of these mutations are located upstream of the CT cleavage site in a region that has the potential to form a coiled-coil in the Env trimer. Substitutions at glutamine 9 and isoleucine 10 with alanine had the most dramatic positive effect and resulted in the formation of large syncytia. Taken together, these data demonstrate that individual residues within the cytoplasmic domain of M-PMV Env can modulate, in both a positive and negative manner, biological functions that are associated with the extracellular domains of the glycoprotein complex.  相似文献   

3.
The human immunodeficiency virus type 1 transmembrane glycoprotein (TM) is efficiently endocytosed in a clathrin-dependent manner. Internalization is mediated by a tyrosine-containing motif within the cytoplasmic domain, and replacement of the cytoplasmic tyrosine by cysteine or phenylalanine increased expression of mutant glycoprotein on the surface of transfected cells by as much as 2.5-fold. Because interactions between the cytoplasmic domain of Env and the matrix protein (MA) have been suggested to mediate incorporation of Env in virus particles, we examined whether perturbation of endocytosis would alter incorporation. Proviruses were constructed to contain the wild-type or mutant Env in conjunction with point mutations in MA that had previously been shown to block Env incorporation. These constructs were used to evaluate the effect of glycoprotein endocytosis on incorporation into virus particles and to test the necessity for a specific interaction between Env and MA to mediate incorporation. Viruses produced from transfected 293T cells were used to infect various cell lines, including MAGI, H9, and CEMx174. Viruses encoding both a disrupted endocytosis motif signal and mutations within MA were significantly more infectious in MAGI cells than their counterparts encoding a mutant MA and wild-type Env. This complementation of infectivity for the MA incorporation mutant viruses was not due to increased glycoprotein incorporation into particles but instead reflected an enhanced fusogenicity of the mutated Env proteins. Our findings further support the concept that a specific interaction between the long cytoplasmic domain of TM and MA is required for efficient incorporation of Env into assembling virions. Alteration of the endocytosis signal of Env, and the resulting increase in cell surface glycoprotein, has no effect on incorporation despite demonstrable effects on fusion, virus entry, and infectivity.  相似文献   

4.
B A Brody  S S Rhee    E Hunter 《Journal of virology》1994,68(7):4620-4627
Viral protease-mediated cleavage within the cytoplasmic domain of the transmembrane (TM) glycoprotein of the type D retrovirus, Mason-Pfizer monkey virus, removes approximately 16 amino acids from the carboxy terminus of the protein. To determine the functional significance of this cleavage in the virus life cycle, we introduced premature stop codons into the TM coding domain, resulting in the production of truncated glycoproteins. Progressive truncated of the cytoplasmic domain identified the carboxy-terminal third as being required for efficient incorporation of the glycoprotein complex into budding virions and profoundly increased the fusogenic capability of the TM glycoprotein. These results, together with the ability of matrix protein mutations to suppress TM cleavage, imply that this portion of the glycoprotein interacts specifically with the capsid proteins during budding, suppressing glycoprotein fusion function until virus maturation has occurred.  相似文献   

5.
Mason-Pfizer monkey virus (M-PMV) is the prototype type D retrovirus which preassembles immature intracytoplasmic type A particles within the infected cell cytoplasm. Intracytoplasmic type A particles are composed of uncleaved polyprotein precursors which upon release are cleaved by the viral proteinase to their constituent mature proteins. This results in a morphological change in the virion described as maturation. We have investigated the role of the viral proteinase in virus maturation and infectivity by inhibiting the function of the enzyme through mutagenesis of the proteinase gene and by using peptide inhibitors originally designed to block human immunodeficiency virus type 1 proteinase activity. Mutation of the active-site aspartic acid, Asp-26, to asparagine abrogated the activity of the M-PMV proteinase but did not affect the assembly of noninfectious, immature virus particles. In mutant virions, the transmembrane glycoprotein (TM) of M-PMV, initially synthesized as a cell-associated gp22, is not cleaved to gp20, as is observed with wild-type virions. This demonstrates that the viral proteinase is responsible for this cleavage event. Hydroxyethylene isostere human immunodeficiency virus type 1 proteinase inhibitors were shown to block M-PMV proteinase cleavage of the TM glycoprotein and Gag-containing precursors in a dose-dependent manner. The TM cleavage event was more sensitive than cleavage of the Gag precursors to inhibition. The infectivity of treated particles was reduced significantly, but experiments showed that inhibition of precursor and TM cleavage may be at least partially reversible. These results demonstrate that the M-PMV aspartyl proteinase is activated in released virions and that the hydroxyethylene isostere proteinase inhibitors used in this study exhibit a broad spectrum of antiretroviral activity.  相似文献   

6.
The transmembrane (TM) glycoprotein gp41 of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 possesses an unusually long ( approximately 150 amino acids) and highly conserved cytoplasmic region. Previous studies in which this cytoplasmic tail had been deleted partially or entirely have suggested that it is important for virus infectivity and incorporation of the gp120-gp41 glycoprotein complex into virions. To determine which regions of the conserved C-terminal domains are important for glycoprotein incorporation and infectivity, several small deletions and amino acid substitutions which modify highly conserved motifs were constructed in the infectious proviral background of NL4.3. The effects of these mutations on infectivity and glycoprotein incorporation into virions produced from transfected 293-T cells and infected H9 and CEMx174 cells were determined. With the exception of a mutation deleting amino acids QGL, all of the constructs resulted in decreased infectivity of the progeny virus both in a single-round infectivity assay and in a multiple-infection assay in H9 and CEMx174 cells. For most mutations, the decreased infectivity was correlated with a decreased incorporation of glycoprotein into virions. Substitution of the arginines (residues 839 and 846) with glutamates also reduced infectivity, but without a noticeable decrease in the amount of glycoprotein incorporated into virus produced from infected T cells. These results demonstrate that minor alterations in the conserved C-terminal region of the gp41 cytoplasmic tail can result in reductions in infectivity that correlate for most but not all constructs with a decrease in glycoprotein incorporation. Observed cell-dependent differences suggest the involvement of cellular factors in regulating glycoprotein incorporation and infectivity.  相似文献   

7.
We recently demonstrated that a single amino acid substitution in matrix residue 12 (12LE) or 30 (30LE) blocks the incorporation of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) envelope glycoproteins into virions and that this block can be reversed by pseudotyping with heterologous retroviral envelope glycoproteins with short cytoplasmic tails or by truncating the cytoplasmic tail of HIV-1 transmembrane glycoprotein gp41 by 104 or 144 amino acids. In this study, we mapped the domain of the gp41 cytoplasmic tail responsible for the block to incorporation into virions by introducing a series of eight truncation mutations that eliminated 23 to 93 amino acids from the C terminus of gp41. We found that incorporation into virions of a HIV-1 envelope glycoprotein with a deletion of 23, 30, 51, or 56 residues from the C terminus of gp41 is specifically blocked by the 12LE matrix mutation, whereas truncations of greater than 93 amino acids reverse this defect. To elucidate the role of matrix residue 12 in this process, we introduced a number of additional single amino acid substitutions at matrix positions 12 and 13. Charged substitutions at residue 12 blocked envelope incorporation and virus infectivity, whereas more subtle amino acid substitutions resulted in a spectrum of envelope incorporation defects. To characterize further the role of matrix in envelope incorporation into virions, we obtained and analyzed second-site revertants to two different matrix residue 12 mutations. A Val-->Ile substition at matrix amino acid 34 compensated for the effects of both amino acid 12 mutations, suggesting that matrix residues 12 and 34 interact during the incorporation of HIV-1 envelope glycoproteins into nascent virions.  相似文献   

8.
Harman A  Browne H  Minson T 《Journal of virology》2002,76(21):10708-10716
Herpes simplex virus glycoprotein H (gH) is one of the four virion envelope proteins which are required for virus entry and for cell-cell fusion in a transient system. In this report, the role of the transmembrane and cytoplasmic tail domains of gH in membrane fusion was investigated by generating chimeric constructs in which these regions were replaced with analogous domains from other molecules and by introducing amino acid substitutions within the membrane-spanning sequence. gH molecules which lack the authentic transmembrane domain or cytoplasmic tail were unable to mediate cell-cell fusion when coexpressed with gB, gD, and gL and were unable to rescue the infectivity of a gH-null virus as efficiently as a wild-type gH molecule. Many amino acid substitutions of specific amino acid residues within the transmembrane domain also affected cell-cell fusion, in particular, those introduced at a conserved glycine residue. Some gH mutants that were impaired in cell-cell fusion were nevertheless able to rescue the infectivity of a gH-negative virus, but these pseudotyped virions entered cells more slowly than wild-type virions. These results indicate that the fusion event mediated by the coexpression of gHL, gB, and gD in cells shares common features with the fusion of the virus envelope with the plasma membrane, they point to a likely role for the membrane-spanning and cytoplasmic tail domains of gH in both processes, and they suggest that a conserved glycine residue in the membrane-spanning sequence is crucial for efficient fusion.  相似文献   

9.
Endoproteolytic cleavage of the glycoprotein precursor to the mature SU and TM proteins is an essential step in the maturation of retroviral glycoproteins. Cleavage of the precursor polyprotein occurs at a conserved, basic tetrapeptide sequence and is carried out by a cellular protease. The glycoprotein of the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 contains two potential cleavage sequences immediately preceding the N terminus of the TM protein. To determine the functional significance of these two potential cleavage sites, a series of mutations has been constructed in each site individually, as well as in combinations that altered both sites simultaneously. A majority of the mutations in either potential cleavage site continued to allow efficient cleavage when present alone but abrogated cleavage of the precursor when combined. Despite being transported efficiently to the cell surface, these cleavage-defective glycoproteins were unable to initiate cell-cell fusion and viruses containing them were not infectious. Viruses that contained glycoproteins with a single mutation, and that retained the ability to be processed, were capable of mediating a productive infection, although infectivity was impaired in several of these mutants. Protein analyses indicated that uncleaved glycoprotein precursors were inefficiently incorporated into virions, suggesting that cleavage of the glycoprotein may be a prerequisite to incorporation into virions. The substitution of a glutamic acid residue for a highly conserved lysine residue in the primary cleavage site (residue 510) had no effect on glycoprotein cleavage or function, even though it removed the only dibasic amino acid pair in this site. Peptide sequencing of the N terminus of gp41 produced from this mutant glycoprotein demonstrated that cleavage continued to take place at this site. These results, demonstrating that normal cleavage of the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 glycoprotein can occur when no dibasic sequence is present at the cleavage site, raise questions about the specificity of the cellular protease that mediates this cleavage and suggest that cleavage of the glycoprotein is required for efficient incorporation of the glycoprotein into virions.  相似文献   

10.
The cytoplasmic tail of the immature Moloney murine leukemia virus (MoMuLV) envelope protein is approximately 32 amino acids long. During viral maturation, the viral protease cleaves this tail to release a 16-amino-acid R peptide, thereby rendering the envelope protein fusion competent. A series of truncations, deletions, and amino acid substitutions were constructed in this cytoplasmic tail to examine its role in fusion and viral transduction. Sequential truncation of the cytoplasmic tail revealed that removal of as few as 11 amino acids resulted in significant fusion when the envelope protein was expressed in NIH 3T3 cells, similar to that seen following expression of an R-less envelope (truncation of 16 amino acids). Further truncation of the cytoplasmic tail beyond the R-peptide cleavage site toward the membrane-spanning region had no additional effect on the level of fusion observed. In contrast, some deletions and nonconservative amino acid substitutions in the membrane-proximal region of the cytoplasmic tail (residues L602 to F605) reduced the amount of fusion observed in XC cell cocultivation assays, suggesting that this region influences the fusogenicity of full-length envelope protein. Expression of the mutant envelope proteins in a retroviral vector system revealed that decreased envelope-mediated cell-cell fusion correlated with a decrease in infectivity of the resulting virions. Additionally, some mutant envelope proteins which were capable of mediating cell-cell fusion were not efficiently incorporated into retroviral particles, resulting in defective virions. The cytoplasmic tail of MoMuLV envelope protein therefore influences both the fusogenicity of the envelope protein and its incorporation into virions.  相似文献   

11.
X Yu  X Yuan  M F McLane  T H Lee    M Essex 《Journal of virology》1993,67(1):213-221
In-frame stop codons were introduced into the coding region of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) transmembrane protein (gp41). Truncation of 147 amino acids from the carboxyl terminus of gp41 (TM709) significantly decreased the stability and cell surface expression of the viral Env proteins, while truncation of 104 amino acids (TM752) did not. Truncation of 43 or more amino acids from the carboxyl terminus of gp41 generated mutant viruses which were noninfectious in several human CD4+ T lymphoid cell lines and fresh peripheral blood mononuclear cells. Analysis of the noninfectious mutant virions revealed significantly reduced incorporation of the Env proteins compared with the wild-type virions. Comparable amounts of Env proteins were detected on the surfaces of wild-type- and TM752-transfected cells, suggesting that the structures of gp41 required for efficient incorporation of Env proteins were disrupted in mutant TM752. Truncation of the last 12 amino acids (TM844) from the carboxyl terminus of gp41 did not significantly affect the assembly and release of virions or the incorporation of Env proteins into mature virions. However, the TM844 virus had dramatically decreased infectivity compared with the wild-type virus. This suggests that the cytoplasmic domain of gp41 also plays a role in other steps of virus replication.  相似文献   

12.
Budding of retroviruses from polarized epithelial Madin-Darby canine kidney cells (MDCK) takes place specifically at the basolateral membrane surface. This sorting event is suspected to require a specific signal harbored by the viral envelope glycoprotein and it was previously shown that, as for most basolateral proteins, the intracytoplasmic domain plays a crucial role in this targeting phenomenon. It is well known that tyrosine-based motifs are a central element in basolateral targeting signals. In the present study, site-directed mutagenesis was used to generate conservative or non-conservative substitutions of each four intracytoplasmic tyrosines of the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV-1) envelope glycoprotein. This approach revealed that the membrane-proximal tyrosine is essential to ensure both the basolateral localization of envelope glycoprotein and the basolateral targeting of HIV-1 virions. Substitutions of the membrane-proximal tyrosine did not appear to affect incorporation of envelope glycoprotein into the virions, as assayed by virion infectivity and protein content, nor its capability to ensure its role in viral infection, as determined by viral multiplication kinetics. Altogether, these results indicate that the intracytoplasmic domain of the HIV-1 envelope glycoprotein harbors a unique, tyrosine-based, basolateral targeting signal. Such a tyrosine-based targeting signal may play a fundamental role in HIV transmission and pathogenesis.  相似文献   

13.
The matrix (MA) protein of the simian immunodeficiency viruses (SIVs) is encoded by the amino-terminal region of the Gag precursor and is the component of the viral capsid that lines the inner surface of the virus envelope. Previously, we identified domains in the SIV MA that are involved in the transport of Gag to the plasma membrane and in particle assembly. In this study, we characterized the role in the SIV life cycle of highly conserved residues within the SIV MA region spanning the two N-terminal alpha-helices H1 and H2. Our analyses identified two classes of MA mutants: (i) viruses encoding amino acid substitutions within alpha-helices H1 or H2 that were defective in envelope (Env) glycoprotein incorporation and exhibited impaired infectivity and (ii) viruses harboring mutations in the beta-turn connecting helices H1 and H2 that were more infectious than the wild-type virus and displayed an enhanced ability to incorporate the Env glycoprotein. Remarkably, among the latter group of MA mutants, the R22L/G24L double amino acid substitution increased virus infectivity eightfold relative to the wild-type virus in single-cycle infectivity assays, an effect that correlated with a similar increase in Env incorporation. Furthermore, the R22L/G24L MA mutation partially or fully complemented single-point MA mutations that severely impair or block Env incorporation and virus infectivity. Our finding that the incorporation of the Env glycoprotein into virions can be upregulated by specific mutations within the SIV MA amino terminus strongly supports the notion that the SIV MA domain mediates Gag-Env association during particle formation.  相似文献   

14.
In the murine leukemia viruses (MuLVs), the Env complex is initially cleaved by a cellular protease into gp70SU and pre15ETM. After the virus particle is released from the cell, the C-terminal 16 residues are removed from the cytoplasmic domain of pre15E by the viral protease, yielding the mature p15ETM and p2E. We have investigated the function of this cleavage by generating a Moloney MuLV mutant, termed p2E-, in which the Env coding region terminates at the cleavage site. This mutant synthesizes only the truncated, mature form of TM rather than its extended precursor. When cells expressing this truncated Env protein are cocultivated with NIH 3T3 cells, they induce rapid cell-cell fusion. Thus, the truncated form, which is normally found in virions but not in virus-producing cells, is capable of causing membrane fusion. We conclude that the 16-residue p2E tail inhibits this activity of Env until the virus has left the cell. p2E- virions were found to be infectious, though with a lower specific infectivity than that of the wild type, showing that p2E does not play an essential role in the process of infection. Fusion was also observed with a chimeric p2E- virus in which gp70SU and nearly all of p15ETM are derived from amphotropic, rather than Moloney, MuLV. In a second mutant, an amino acid at the cleavage site was changed. The pre15E protein in this mutant is not cleaved. While the mutant Env complex is incorporated into virions, these particles have a very low specific infectivity. This result suggests that the cleavage event is essential for infectivity, in agreement with the idea that removal of p2E activates the membrane fusion capability of the Env complex.  相似文献   

15.
The human T-cell leukemia virus type 1 (HTLV-1) transmembrane glycoprotein has a 24-amino-acid cytoplasmic domain whose function in the viral life cycle is poorly understood. We introduced premature-stop mutations and 18 single-amino-acid substitutions into this domain and studied their effects on cell-to-cell transmission of the virus. The results show that the cytoplasmic domain is absolutely required for cell-to-cell transmission of HTLV-1, through amino acids which cluster in a Y-S-L-I tyrosine-based motif. The transmission defect in two motif mutants did not result from a defect in glycoprotein incorporation or fusion. It appears that the Y-S-L-I tyrosine-based motif of the HTLV-1 glycoprotein cytoplasmic domain has multiple functions, including involvement in virus transmission at a postfusion step.  相似文献   

16.
We have identified mutations in the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) matrix protein (MA) which block infectivity of virions pseudotyped with murine leukemia virus (MuLV) envelope (Env) glycoproteins without affecting infectivity conferred by HIV-1 Env or vesicular stomatitis virus G glycoproteins. This inhibition is very potent and displays a strong transdominant effect; infectivity is reduced more than 100-fold when wild-type and mutant molecular clones are cotransfected at a 1:1 ratio. This phenomenon is observed with both ecotropic and amphotropic MuLV Env. The MA mutations do not affect the incorporation of MuLV Env into virions. We demonstrate that in HIV-1 virions pseudotyped with MuLV Env, the HIV-1 protease (PR) efficiently catalyzes the cleavage of the p15(E) transmembrane (TM) protein to p12(E). Immunoprecipitation analysis of pseudotyped virions reveals that the mutant MA blocks this HIV-1 PR-mediated cleavage of MuLV TM. Furthermore, the transdominant inhibition exerted by the mutant MA on wild-type infectivity correlates with the relative level of p15(E) cleavage. Consistent with the hypothesis that abrogation of infectivity imposed by the mutant MA is due to inhibition of p15(E) cleavage, mutant virions are significantly more infectious when pseudotyped with a truncated p12(E) form of MuLV Env. These results indicate that HIV-1 Gag sequences can influence the viral PR-mediated processing of the MuLV TM Env protein p15(E). These findings have implications for the development of HIV-1-based retroviral vectors pseudotyped with MuLV Env, since p15(E) cleavage is essential for activating membrane fusion and virus infectivity.  相似文献   

17.
The ability of mutant or chimeric A/Japan hemagglutinins (HAs) to compete for space in the envelope of A/WSN influenza viruses was investigated with monkey kidney fibroblasts that were infected with recombinant simian virus 40 vectors expressing the Japan proteins and superinfected with A/WSN influenza virus. Wild-type Japan HA assembled into virions as well as WSN HA did. Japan HA lacking its cytoplasmic sequences, HAtail-, was incorporated into influenza virions at half the efficiency of wild-type Japan HA. Chimeric HAs containing the 11 cytoplasmic amino acids of the herpes simplex virus type 1gC glycoprotein or the 29 cytoplasmic amino acids of the vesicular stomatitis virus G protein were incorporated into virions at less than 1% the efficiency of HAtail-. Thus, the cytoplasmic domain of HA was not required for the selection process; however, foreign cytoplasmic sequences, even short ones, were excluded. A chimeric HA having the gC transmembrane domain and the HA cytoplasmic domain (HgCH) was incorporated at 4% the efficiency of HAtail-. When expressed from simian virus 40 recombinants in this system, vesicular stomatitis virus G protein with or without (Gtail-) its cytoplasmic domain was essentially excluded from influenza virions. Taken together, these data indicate that the HA transmembrane domain is required for incorporation of HA into influenza virions. The slightly more efficient incorporation of HgCH than G or Gtail- could indicate that the region important for assembling HA into virions extends into part of the cytoplasmic domain.  相似文献   

18.
We investigated the influence of transmembrane protein (TM) domains on incorporation of retroviral envelopes into virions and on infectivity. We introduced complete, truncated, or chimeric Friend murine leukemia virus (F-MuLV) and human T-cell leukemia virus type 1 (HTLV-1) envelopes into an MuLV particle-producing complementation cell line. As shown previously for HTLV-1 envelopes containing extracellular domains of F-MuLV TM (C. Denesvre, P. Sonigo, A. Corbin, H. Ellerbrok, and M. Sitbon, J. Virol. 69:4149-4157, 1995), reverse chimeric F-MuLV envelopes containing the extracellular domain of HTLV-1 TM were not processed. In contrast, a chimeric MuLV envelope containing the entire HTLV membrane-spanning and cytoplasmic domains (FHTMi) was efficiently processed, fusogenic as tested in a cell-to-cell assay, and efficiently incorporated into MuLV particles. However, these MuLV particles bearing FHTMi envelope proteins could not infect mouse or rat cells which are susceptible to wild-type F-MuLV. Therefore, envelopes which are readily fusogenic in cell-to-cell assays and also efficiently incorporated into virions may not necessarily confer virus-to-cell fusogenicity. HTLV envelopes, whether parental, chimeric (containing the MuLV cytoplasmic tail) or with a truncated cytoplasmic domain, were incorporated into MuLV particles with equal efficiencies, indicating that the cytoplasmic tails of these envelopes did not determine their incorporation into virions. In contrast to FHTMi envelope, HTLV-1 envelopes with F-MuLV membrane-spanning and cytoplasmic domains, as well as wild-type HTLV-1 envelopes, conferred virion infectivity. These results help to define requirements for envelope incorporation into retroviral particles and their cell-free infectivity.  相似文献   

19.
Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 contains a transmembrane glycoprotein with an unusually long cytoplasmic domain. To determine the role of this domain in virus replication, a series of single nucleotide changes that result in the insertion of premature termination codons throughout the cytoplasmic domain has been constructed. These mutations delete from 6 to 192 amino acids from the carboxy terminus of gp41 and do not affect the amino acid sequence of the regulatory proteins encoded by rev and tat. The effects of these mutations on glycoprotein biosynthesis and function as well as on virus infectivity have been examined in the context of a glycoprotein expression vector and the viral genome. All of the mutant glycoproteins were synthesized, processed, and transported to the cell surface in a manner similar to that of the wild-type glycoprotein. With the exception of mutants that remove the membrane anchor domain, all of the mutant glycoproteins retained the ability to cause fusion of CD4-bearing cells. However, deletion of more than 19 amino acids from the C terminus of gp41 blocked the ability of mutant virions to infect cells. This defect in virus infectivity appeared to be due at least in part to a failure of the virus to efficiently incorporate the truncated glycoprotein. Similar data were obtained for mutations in two different env genes and two different target cell lines. These results indicate that the cytoplasmic domain of gp41 plays a critical role during virus assembly and entry in the life cycle of human immunodeficiency virus type 1.  相似文献   

20.
We have investigated how truncation of the cytoplasmic domain of the transmembrane (TM) glycoprotein of simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) modulates the host range of this virus. Termination codons were introduced into the env gene of SIVmac239 which resulted in the truncation of the transmembrane protein from a wild-type 354 amino acids (TM354) to 207 (TM207) and 193 (TM193) amino acids. Expression of the wild-type and mutant env genes from a simian virus 40-based vector resulted in normal biosynthesis and processing of the glycoproteins to gp130 and gp41 or the truncated TM proteins (gp28 and gp27). When expressed on the surface of COS-1 cells, all three glycoproteins mediated fusion of both CEMX174 and HUT78 cells. Virions containing the wild-type and mutant glycoproteins were capable of efficient replication in macaque peripheral blood lymphocytes and CEMX174 cells; in contrast, only virions that contained TM207 were capable of rapid infection of HUT78 cells. Both truncated glycoproteins were capable of efficiently mediating infection of both CEMX174 and HUT78 cells by an env-deficient human immunodeficiency virus. The wild-type SIV glycoprotein, however, was unable to mediate human immunodeficiency virus infection of HUT78 cells when assayed with this system. An analysis of the protein composition of SIV released from infected CEMX174 cells showed that the mutant virions contained significantly higher levels of glycoprotein compared with the wild type. These results demonstrate that truncation of the SIV cytoplasmic domain removes a block at the level of glycoprotein-mediated virus entry into HUT78 cells and points to a role for glycoprotein density in determining virus tropism.  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