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Immature retrovirus particles are assembled from the multidomain Gag protein. In these particles, the Gag proteins are arranged radially as elongated rods. We have previously characterized the properties of HIV-1 Gag in solution. In the absence of nucleic acid, HIV-1 Gag displays moderately weak interprotein interactions, existing in monomer-dimer equilibrium. Neutron scattering and hydrodynamic studies suggest that the protein is compact, and biochemical studies indicate that the two ends can approach close in three-dimensional space, implying the need for a significant conformational change during assembly. We now describe the properties of the Gag protein of Moloney murine leukemia virus (MLV), a gammaretrovirus. We found that this protein is very different from HIV-1 Gag: it has much weaker protein-protein interaction and is predominantly monomeric in solution. This has allowed us to study the protein by small-angle X-ray scattering and to build a low-resolution molecular envelope for the protein. We found that MLV Gag is extended in solution, with an axial ratio of ~7, comparable to its dimensions in immature particles. Mutational analysis suggests that runs of prolines in its matrix and p12 domains and the highly charged stretch at the C terminus of its capsid domain all contribute to this extended conformation. These differences between MLV Gag and HIV-1 Gag and their implications for retroviral assembly are discussed.  相似文献   

3.
The molecular mechanism by which retroviral Gag proteins are directed to the plasma membrane for the formation of particles (budding) is unknown, but it is widely believed that the MA domain, located at the amino terminus, plays a critical role. Consistent with this idea, we found that small deletions in this segment of the Rous sarcoma virus Gag protein completely blocked particle formation. The mutant proteins appear to have suffered only localized structural damage since they could be rescued (i.e., packaged into particles) when coexpressed with Gag proteins that are competent for particle formation. To our surprise, the effects of the MA deletions could be completely suppressed by fusing as few as seven residues of the myristylated amino terminus of the oncoprotein p60src to the beginning of the mutant Gag proteins. Particles produced by the chimeras were of the same density as the wild type. Two myristylated peptides having sequences distinct from that of p60src were entirely unable to suppress MA deletions, indicating that myristate alone is not a sufficient membrane targeting signal. We hypothesize that the amino terminus of p60src suppresses the effects of MA deletions by diverting the Rous sarcoma virus Gag protein from its normal site of assembly to the Src receptor for particle formation.  相似文献   

4.
Joshi SM  Vogt VM 《Journal of virology》2000,74(21):10260-10268
Purified retrovirus Gag proteins can assemble in vitro into virus-like particles (VLPs) in the presence of RNA. It was shown previously that a Rous sarcoma virus Gag protein missing only the protease domain forms spherical particles resembling immature virions lacking a membrane but that a similar protein missing the p10 domain forms tubular particles. Thus, p10 plays a role in spherical particle formation. To further study this shape-determining function, we dissected the p10 domain by mutagenesis and examined VLPs assembled within Escherichia coli or assembled in vitro from purified proteins. The results identified a minimal contiguous segment of 25 amino acid residues at the C terminus of p10 that is sufficient to restore efficient spherical assembly to a p10 deletion mutant. Random and site-directed mutations were introduced into this segment of polypeptide, and the shapes of particles formed in E. coli were examined in crude extracts by electron microscopy. Three phenotypes were observed: tubular morphology, spherical morphology, or no regular structure. While the particle morphology visualized in crude extracts generally was the same as that visualized for purified proteins, some tubular mutants scored as spherical when tested as purified proteins, suggesting that a cellular factor may also play a role in shape determination. We also examined the assembly properties of smaller Gag proteins consisting of the capsid protein-nucleocapsid protein (CA-NC) domains with short N-terminal extensions or deletions. Addition of one or three residues allowed CA-NC to form spheres instead of tubes in vitro, but the efficiency of assembly was extremely low. Deletion of the N-terminal residue(s) abrogated assembly. Taken together, these results imply that the N terminus of CA and the adjacent upstream 25 residues play an important role in the polymerization of the Gag protein.  相似文献   

5.
Ono A  Demirov D  Freed EO 《Journal of virology》2000,74(11):5142-5150
The human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) Gag precursor, Pr55(Gag), is necessary and sufficient for the assembly and release of viruslike particles. Binding of Gag to membrane and Gag multimerization are both essential steps in virus assembly, yet the domains responsible for these events have not been fully defined. In addition, the relationship between membrane binding and Gag-Gag interaction remains to be elucidated. To investigate these issues, we analyzed, in vivo, the membrane-binding and assembly properties of a series of C-terminally truncated Gag mutants. Pr55(Gag) was truncated at the C terminus of matrix (MAstop), between the N- and C-terminal domains of capsid (CA146stop), at the C terminus of capsid (p41stop), at the C terminus of p2 (p43stop), and after the N-terminal 35 amino acids of nucleocapsid (NC35stop). The ability of these truncated Gag molecules to assemble and release viruslike particles and their capacity to copackage into particles when coexpressed with full-length Gag were determined. We demonstrate that the amount of truncated Gag incorporated into particles is incrementally increased by extension from CA146 to NC35, suggesting that multiple sites in this region are involved in Gag multimerization. Using membrane flotation centrifugation, we observe that MA shows significantly reduced membrane binding relative to full-length Gag but that CA146 displays steady-state membrane-binding properties comparable to those of Pr55(Gag). The finding that the CA146 mutant, which contains only matrix and the N-terminal domain of capsid, exhibits levels of steady-state membrane binding equivalent to those of full-length Gag indicates that strong Gag-Gag interaction domains are not required for the efficient binding of HIV-1 Gag to membrane.  相似文献   

6.
The structure of the N-terminal domain (NTD) of Rous sarcoma virus (RSV) capsid protein (CA), with an upstream 25 amino acid residue extension corresponding to the C-terminal portion of the Gag p10 protein, has been determined by X-ray crystallography. Purified Gag proteins of retroviruses can assemble in vitro into virus-like particles closely resembling in vivo-assembled immature virus particles, but without a membrane. When the 25 amino acid residues upstream of CA are deleted, Gag assembles into tubular particles. The same phenotype is observed in vivo. Thus, these residues act as a “shape determinant” promoting spherical assembly, when they are present, or tubular assembly, when they are absent. We show that, unlike the NTD on its own, the extended NTD protein has no β-hairpin loop at the N terminus of CA and that the molecule forms a dimer in which the amino-terminal extension forms the interface between monomers. Since dimerization of Gag has been inferred to be a critical step in assembly of spherical, immature Gag particles, the dimer interface may represent a structural feature that is essential in retrovirus assembly.  相似文献   

7.
Size polydispersity of immature human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) particles represents a challenge for traditional methods of biological ultrastructural analysis. An in vitro model for immature HIV-1 particles constructed from recombinant Gag proteins lacking residues 16-99 and the p6 domain assembled around spherical nanoparticles functionalized with DNA. This template-directed assembly approach led to a significant reduction in size polydispersity and revealed previously unknown structural features of immature-like HIV-1 particles. Electron microscopy and image reconstruction of these particles suggest that the Gag shell formed from different protein regions that are connected by a “scar”—an extended defect connecting the edges of two continuous, regularly packed protein layers. Thus, instead of a holey protein array, the experimental model presented here appears to consist of a continuous array of ∼ 5000 proteins enveloping the core, in which regular regions are separated by extended areas of disorder.  相似文献   

8.
A single retroviral protein, termed Gag, is sufficient for assembly of retrovirus-like particles in mammalian cells. Gag normally selects the genomic RNA of the virus with high specificity; the nucleocapsid (NC) domain of Gag plays a crucial role in this selection process. However, encapsidation of the viral RNA is completely unnecessary for particle assembly. We previously showed that mutant murine leukemia virus (MuLV) particles that lack viral RNA because of a deletion in the cis-acting packaging signal ("Psi") in the genomic RNA compensate for the loss of the viral RNA by incorporating cellular mRNA. The RNA in wild-type and Psi- particles was also found to be necessary for virion core structure. In the present work, we explored the role of RNA in MuLV particles that lack genomic RNA because of mutations in the NC domain of Gag. Using a fluorescent dye assay, we observed that NC mutant particles contain the same amount of RNA that wild-type virions do. Surprisingly enough, these particles contained large amounts of rRNAs. Furthermore, ribosomal proteins were detected by immunoblotting, and ribosomes were observed inside the particles by electron microscopy. The biological significance of the presence of ribosomes in NC mutant particles lacking genomic RNA is discussed.  相似文献   

9.
Wang SW  Aldovini A 《Journal of virology》2002,76(23):11853-11865
The nucleocapsid (NC) domain of retroviruses plays a critical role in specific viral RNA packaging and virus assembly. RNA is thought to facilitate viral particle assembly, but the results described here with NC mutants indicate that it also plays a critical role in particle integrity. We investigated the assembly and integrity of particles produced by the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 M1-2/BR mutant virus, in which 10 of the 13 positive residues of NC have been replaced with alanines and incorporation of viral genomic RNA is virtually abolished. We found that the mutations in the basic residues of NC did not disrupt Gag assembly at the cell membrane. The mutant Gag protein can assemble efficiently at the cell membrane, and viral proteins are detected outside the cell as efficiently as they are for the wild type. However, only approximately 10% of the Gag molecules present in the supernatant of this mutant sediment at the correct density for a retroviral particle. The reduction of positive charge in the NC basic domain of the M1-2/BR virus adversely affects both the specific and nonspecific RNA binding properties of NC, and thus the assembled Gag polyprotein does not bind significant amounts of viral or cellular RNA. We found a direct correlation between the percentage of Gag associated with sedimented particles and the amount of incorporated RNA. We conclude that RNA binding by Gag, whether the RNA is viral or not, is critical to retroviral particle integrity after cell membrane assembly and is less important for Gag-Gag interactions during particle assembly and release.  相似文献   

10.
The capsid domain of the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) Gag polyprotein is a critical determinant of virus assembly, and is therefore a potential target for developing drugs for AIDS therapy. Recently, a 12-mer α-helical peptide (CAI) was reported to disrupt immature- and mature-like capsid particle assembly in vitro; however, it failed to inhibit HIV-1 in cell culture due to its inability to penetrate cells. The same group reported the X-ray crystal structure of CAI in complex with the C-terminal domain of capsid (C-CA) at a resolution of 1.7 Å. Using this structural information, we have utilized a structure-based rational design approach to stabilize the α-helical structure of CAI and convert it to a cell-penetrating peptide (CPP). The modified peptide (NYAD-1) showed enhanced α-helicity. Experiments with laser scanning confocal microscopy indicated that NYAD-1 penetrated cells and colocalized with the Gag polyprotein during its trafficking to the plasma membrane where virus assembly takes place. NYAD-1 disrupted the assembly of both immature- and mature-like virus particles in cell-free and cell-based in vitro systems. NMR chemical shift perturbation analysis mapped the binding site of NYAD-1 to residues 169-191 of the C-terminal domain of HIV-1 capsid encompassing the hydrophobic cavity and the critical dimerization domain with an improved binding affinity over CAI. Furthermore, experimental data indicate that NYAD-1 most likely targets capsid at a post-entry stage. Most significantly, NYAD-1 inhibited a large panel of HIV-1 isolates in cell culture at low micromolar potency. Our study demonstrates how a structure-based rational design strategy can be used to convert a cell-impermeable peptide to a cell-permeable peptide that displays activity in cell-based assays without compromising its mechanism of action. This proof-of-concept cell-penetrating peptide may aid validation of capsid as an anti-HIV-1 drug target and may help in designing peptidomimetics and small molecule drugs targeted to this protein.  相似文献   

11.
Type C retroviruses assemble at the plasma membrane of the infected cell. Attachment of myristic acid to the N terminus of the Gag precursor polyprotein has been shown to be essential for membrane localization and virus morphogenesis. Here, we report that the matrix (MA) protein contains regions that in conjunction with myristylation are important for Gag protein stability and the assembly of murine leukemia viruses. We identified these domains by generating a series of Akv murine leukemia virus mutants carrying small in-frame deletions within the coding region of the MA protein encompassing 129 amino acids. Studies show that mutants with deletions within the segment encoding the first 102 amino acids were all replication defective, whereas the C-terminal residues 103 to 124 seem not to have any critical function in virus maturation. Cells expressing the replication-defective genomes did not release any detectable Gag proteins. In one mutant, deletion of 3 amino acids in the N terminus resulted in an inefficiently myristylated, stable Gag polyprotein. The remaining defect genomes encoded unstable Gag proteins, although they were modified with myristic acid. The results suggest that the matrix domain plays an important role in stabilizing the Gag polyprotein.  相似文献   

12.
Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 assembly is a multistep process that occurs at the plasma membrane (PM). Targeting and binding of Gag to the PM are the first steps in this assembly process and are mediated by the matrix domain of Gag. This review highlights our current knowledge on viral and cellular determinants that affect specific interactions between Gag and the PM. We will discuss potential mechanisms by which the matrix domain might integrate three regulatory components, myristate, phosphatidylinositol-(4,5)-bisphosphate, and RNA, to ensure that human immunodeficiency virus type 1 assembly occurs at the PM.  相似文献   

13.
Retroviruses are unusual in that expression of a single protein, Gag, leads to budding of virus-like particles into the extracellular space. We have developed conditions under which virus-like particles are formed spontaneously in vitro from fragments of Rous sarcoma virus (RSV) Gag protein purified after expression in Escherichia coli. The CA-NC fragment of Gag was shown previously to assemble into hollow cylinders (S. Campbell and V. M. Vogt, J. Virol. 69:6487-6497, 1995). We have now extended these studies to larger Gag proteins. In every case examined, assembly into regular structures required RNA. A nearly full-length Gag missing only the C-terminal PR domain, as well as similar proteins missing in addition the N-terminal half of MA, the C-terminal half of MA, the entire MA sequence, or the entire p2 sequence, all assembled into spherical particles resembling RSV in size. By contrast, proteins missing p10 assembled into cylindrical particles like those formed by CA-NC alone. Thin section electron microscopy showed that each of these Gag proteins formed in the expressing E. coli cells particles similar in shape to those seen in vitro. We conclude from these results that neither the sequences required for membrane binding in vivo, near the N terminus of Gag, nor the sequences required for a late step in budding, in the p2 portion of Gag, are essential for formation of virus-like particles in this system. Furthermore, we postulate the existence of a shape-determining sequence in p10, which provides or facilitates interactions required for the growing particle to be constrained to a spherical shape.  相似文献   

14.
The Mason-Pfizer monkey virus (M-PMV) Gag protein possesses the ability to assemble into an immature capsid when synthesized in a reticulocyte lysate translation system. In contrast, the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) Gag protein is incapable of assembly in parallel assays. To enable the assembly of HIV Gag, we have combined or inserted regions of M-PMV Gag into HIV Gag. By both biochemical and morphological criteria, several of these chimeric Gag molecules are capable of assembly into immature capsid-like structures in this in vitro system. Chimeric species containing large regions of M-PMV Gag fused to HIV Gag sequences failed to assemble, while species consisting of only the M-PMV p12 region, and its internal scaffold domain (ISD), fused to HIV Gag were capable of assembly, albeit at reduced kinetics compared to M-PMV Gag. The ability of the ISD to induce assembly of HIV Gag, which normally assembles at the plasma membrane, suggests a common requirement for a concentrating factor in retrovirus assembly. Despite the dramatic effect of the ISD on chimera assembly, the function of HIV Gag domains in that process was found to remain essential, since an assembly-defective mutant of HIV CA, M185A, abolished assembly when introduced into the chimera. This continued requirement for HIV Gag domain function in the assembly of chimeric molecules will allow this in vitro system to be used for the analysis of potential inhibitors of HIV immature particle assembly.  相似文献   

15.
Expression of the retroviral Gag protein leads to formation of virus-like particles in mammalian cells. In vitro and in vivo experiments show that nucleic acid is also required for particle assembly. However, several studies have demonstrated that chimeric proteins in which the nucleocapsid domain of Gag is replaced by a leucine zipper motif can also assemble efficiently in mammalian cells. We have now analyzed assembly by chimeric proteins in which nucleocapsid of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) Gag is replaced by either a dimerizing or a trimerizing zipper. Both proteins assemble well in human 293T cells; the released particles lack detectable RNA. The proteins can coassemble into particles together with full-length, wild-type Gag. We purified these proteins from bacterial lysates. These recombinant “Gag-Zipper” proteins are oligomeric in solution and do not assemble unless cofactors are added; either nucleic acid or inositol phosphates (IPs) can promote particle assembly. When mixed with one equivalent of IPs (which do not support assembly of wild-type Gag), the “dimerizing” Gag-Zipper protein misassembles into very small particles, while the “trimerizing” protein assembles correctly. However, addition of both IPs and nucleic acid leads to correct assembly of all three proteins; the “dimerizing” Gag-Zipper protein also assembles correctly if inositol hexakisphosphate is supplemented with other polyanions. We suggest that correct assembly requires both oligomeric association at the C terminus of Gag and neutralization of positive charges near its N terminus.Expression of a single retroviral protein, Gag, in mammalian cells is sufficient for assembly of virus-like particles (VLPs). RNA seems to play an essential role, however, in both the assembly and structure of VLPs. Thus, retrovirus particles always contain RNA; in the absence of genomic RNA, cellular mRNAs replace it in the virus particle (46). RNase treatment of immature murine leukemia virus disrupts the particles (37). Finally, nucleic acid is required for assembly in defined in vitro assembly systems (8, 9).The contribution of nucleic acid to the assembly and structure of retrovirus particles is not yet understood. As one approach to further understanding the role that nucleic acid binding plays in the assembly process, Zhang et al. (59) replaced the principal nucleic acid-binding domain of the HIV-1 Gag protein, nucleocapsid (NC), with a leucine zipper domain. This chimeric protein was able to assemble efficiently in mammalian cells as evidenced through immunoblotting of released VLPs. This observation was extended by Johnson et al. (28), who used Gag-leucine zipper (dimerizing) chimeras of Rous sarcoma virus and studied the morphologies of the resulting particles. The particles assembled from the chimeric proteins were similar, although not identical, to those formed by wild-type (WT) Gag. The fact that NC could be functionally replaced (with respect to particle assembly) with the dimerizing leucine zipper motif led these investigators to propose that the function of nucleic acid in assembly is to promote dimerization. Additional support for this hypothesis comes from the fact that the minimum length of nucleic acid needed to promote assembly is roughly enough to accommodate two molecules of Gag (30, 31).Further studies in which the NC domain of HIV-1 Gag has been replaced by leucine zipper motifs have been presented by Accola et al. (1). Interestingly, they found that a Gag-Zipper (Gag-Z) chimera containing a trimeric zipper motif also assembles efficiently. However, these VLPs, as well as those formed by a chimera containing a dimeric zipper motif, were not characterized morphologically.In the present work, we have extended the analysis of the assembly properties of these HIV-1 Gag-Z chimeras. This study includes the first analysis of recombinant Gag-Z proteins in vitro, as well as detailed characterization of the VLPs formed in mammalian cells. The in vitro assembly results suggest that Gag oligomerization alone is not sufficient to induce particle formation. We raise the possibility here that normal HIV-1 assembly requires neutralization of positive charges in matrix (MA) in addition to nucleic acid-induced oligomerization at the C terminus of the protein.  相似文献   

16.
Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 Gag protein is cotranslationally myristoylated at the N terminus and targeted to the plasma membrane, where virus particle assembly occurs. Particle assembly requires the ordered multimerization of Gag proteins, yet there is little direct evidence of intermediates of the reaction or of the domains that lead to each stage of the oligomerization process. In this study, following the expression in insect cells of C-terminally truncated Gag proteins and their purification, both the multimeric nature of each Gag protein and the ability to form Gag virus-like particles (VLP) were analyzed. Our results show that (i) the matrix (MA) domain forms a trimer and contributes to a similar level of oligomerization of the assembly-competent Gag; (ii) the p2 domain, located at the capsid/nucleocapsid junction, is essential for a higher order of multimerization (>1,000 kDa); (iii) the latter multimerization is accompanied by a change in Gag assembly morphology from tubes to spheres and results in VLP production; and (iv) N-terminal myristoylation is not required for either of the multimerization stages but plays a key role in conversion of these multimers to Gag VLP. We suggest that the Gag trimer and the > 1,000-kDa multimer are intermediates in the assembly reaction and form before Gag targeting to the plasma membrane. Our data identify a minimum of three stages for VLP development and suggest that each stage involves a separate domain, MA, p2, or N-terminal myristoylation, each of which contributes to HIV particle assembly.  相似文献   

17.
The Gag polyprotein is the major structural protein found in all classes of retroviruses. Interactions between Gag molecules control key events at several stages in the cycle of infection. In particular, the capsid (CA) domain of Gag mediates many of the protein-protein interactions that drive retrovirus assembly, maturation and disassembly. Moreover, in murine leukaemia virus (MLV), sequence variation in CA confers N and B tropism that determines susceptibility to the intracellular restriction factors Fv1n and Fv1b. We have determined the structure of the N-terminal domain (NtD) of CA from B-tropic MLV. A comparison of this structure with that of the NtD of CA from N-tropic MLV reveals that although the crystals belong to different space groups, CA monomers are packed with the same P6 hexagonal arrangement. Moreover, interhexamer crystal contacts between residues located at the periphery of the discs are conserved, indicating that switching of tropism does not result in large differences in the backbone conformation, nor does it alter the quaternary arrangement of the disc. We have also examined crystals of the N-tropic MLV CA containing both N- and C-terminal domains. In this case, the NtD hexamer is still present; however, the interhexamer spacing is increased and the conserved interhexamer contacts are absent. Investigation into the effects of mutation of residues that mediate interhexamer contacts reveals that amino acid substitutions at these positions cause severe defects in viral assembly, budding and Gag processing. Based on our crystal structures and mutational analysis, we propose that in MLV, interactions between the NtDs of CA are required for packing of Gag molecules in the early part of immature particle assembly. Moreover, we present a model where proteolytic cleavage at maturation results in migration of CA C-terminal domains into interstitial spaces between NtD hexamers. As a result, NtD-mediated interhexamer contacts present in the immature particle are displaced and the less densely packed lattice with increased hexamer-hexamer spacing characteristic of the viral core is produced.  相似文献   

18.
Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) type 1 particles assemble at the plasma membrane of cells in a manner similar to that of the type C oncoretroviruses. The Pr55(Gag) molecule directs the assembly process and is sufficient for particle assembly in the absence of all other viral gene products. The I domain is an assembly domain that has been previously localized to the nucleocapsid (NC) region of Gag. In this study we utilized a series of Gag-green fluorescent protein (GFP) fusion proteins to precisely identify sequences that constitute the N-terminal I domain of Pr55(Gag). The minimal sequence required for the I domain was localized to the extreme N terminus of NC. Two basic residues (arginine 380 and arginine 384) within the initial seven residues of NC were found to be critical for the function of the N-terminal I domain. The presence of positive charge alone in these two positions, however, was not sufficient to mediate the formation of dense Gag particles. The I domain was required for the formation of detergent-resistant complexes of Gag protein, and confocal microscopy demonstrated that the I domain was also required for the formation of punctate foci of Gag proteins at the plasma membrane. Electron microscopic analysis of cells expressing Gag-GFP fusion constructs with an intact I domain revealed numerous retrovirus-like particles (RVLPs) budding from the plasma membrane, while I domain-deficient constructs failed to generate visible RVLPs. These results provide evidence that Gag-Gag interactions mediated by the I domain play a central role in the assembly of HIV particles.  相似文献   

19.
The p12 region of the Moloney murine leukemia virus (M-MuLV) Gag protein contains a PPPY motif important for efficient virion assembly and release. To probe the function of the PPPY motif, a series of insertions of homologous and heterologous motifs from other retroviruses were introduced at various positions in a mutant gag gene lacking the PPPY motif. The assembly defects of the PPPY deletion mutant could be rescued by insertion of a wild-type PPPY motif and flanking sequences at several ectopic positions in the Gag protein. The late assembly domain (L-domain) of Rous sarcoma virus (RSV) or human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) could also fully or partially restore M-MuLV assembly when introduced into matrix, p12, or nucleocapsid domains of the mutant M-MuLV Gag protein lacking the PPPY motif. Strikingly, mutant viruses carrying the RSV or the HIV-1 L-domain at the original location of the deleted PPPY motif were replication competent in rodent cells. These data suggest that the PPPY motif of M-MuLV acts in a partially position-independent manner and is functionally interchangeable with L-domains of other retroviruses. Electron microscopy studies revealed that deletion of the entire p12 region resulted in the formation of tube-like rather than spherical particles. Remarkably, the PPPY deletion mutant formed chain structures composed of multiple viral particles linked on the cell surface. Many of the mutants with heterologous L-domains released virions with wild-type morphology.  相似文献   

20.
The matrix domain (MA) of the simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) is encoded by the amino-terminal region of the Gag polyprotein precursor and is the component of the viral capsid that lines the inner surface of the virus envelope. To define domains of the SIV MA protein that are involved in virus morphogenesis, deletion and substitution mutations were introduced in this protein in the context of a gag-protease construct and expressed in the vaccinia virus vector system. The MA mutants were characterized with respect to synthesis and processing of the Gag precursor, assembly and release of virus-like particles, and incorporation of the envelope (Env) glycoprotein into particles. We have identified two regions of the SIV MA which are critical for particle formation. Both domains are located in a central hydrophobic alpha-helix of the SIV MA, according to data on the structure of this protein. In addition, we have characterized a domain whose mutation impairs the incorporation of SIV Env glycoproteins with long transmembrane cytoplasmic tails into particles. Interestingly, these mutant particles retained the ability to associate with SIV Env proteins with short cytoplasmic tails.  相似文献   

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