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 406 毫秒
1.
Mason-Pfizer monkey virus (M-PMV) represents the prototype type D retrovirus, characterized by the assembly of intracytoplasmic A-type particles within the infected-cell cytoplasm. These immature particles migrate to the plasma membrane, where they are released by budding. The gag gene of M-PMV encodes a novel protein, p12, just 5' of the major capsid protein (CA) p27 on the polyprotein precursor. The function of p12 is not known, but an equivalent protein is found in mouse mammary tumor virus and is absent from the type C retroviruses. In order to determine whether the p12 protein plays a role in the intracytoplasmic assembly of capsids, a series of in-frame deletion mutations were constructed in the p12 coding domain. The mutant gag genes were expressed by a recombinant vaccinia virus-T7 polymerase-based system in CV-1 cells or in the context of the viral genome in COS-1 cells. In both of these high-level expression systems, mutant Gag precursors were competent to assemble but were not infectious. In contrast, when stable transfectant HeLa cell lines were established, assembly of the mutant precursors into capsids was drastically reduced. Instead, the polyprotein precursors remained predominantly soluble in the cytoplasm. These results show that while p12 is not required for the intracytoplasmic assembly of M-PMV capsids, under the conditions of low-level protein biosynthesis seen in virus-infected cells, it may assist in the stable association of polyprotein precursors for capsid assembly. Moreover, the presence of the p12 coding domain is absolutely required for the infectivity of M-PMV virions.  相似文献   

2.
3.
Retroviral proteases are translated as a part of Gag-related polyproteins, and are released and activated during particle release. Mason-Pfizer monkey virus (M-PMV) Gag polyproteins assemble into immature capsids within the cytoplasm of the host cells; however, their processing occurs only after transport to the plasma membrane and subsequent release. Thus, the activity of M-PMV protease is expected to be highly regulated during the replication cycle. It has been proposed that reversible oxidation of protease cysteine residues might be responsible for such regulation. We show that cysteine residues in M-PMV protease can form an intramolecular S-S bridge. The disulfide bridge shifts the monomer/dimer equilibrium in favor of the dimer, and increases the proteolytic activity significantly. To investigate the role of this disulfide bridge in virus maturation and replication, we engineered an M-PMV clone in which both protease cysteine residues were replaced by alanine (M-PMV(PRC7A/C106A)). Surprisingly, the cysteine residues were dispensable for Gag polyprotein processing within the virus, indicating that even low levels of protease activity are sufficient for polyprotein processing during maturation. However, the long-term infectivity of M-PMV(PRC7A/C106A) was noticeably compromised. These results show clearly that the proposed redox mechanism does not rely solely on the formation of the stabilizing S-S bridge in the protease. Thus, in addition to the protease disulfide bridge, reversible oxidation of cysteine and/or methionine residues in other domains of the Gag polyprotein or in related cellular proteins must be involved in the regulation of maturation.  相似文献   

4.
Murine intracisternal A-type particles (IAPs) are endogenous retroviruses showing sequence homologies to B/D- and avian C-type retroviruses and a gene expression strategy similar to that of D-type retroviruses. These viruses form immature particles in the endoplasmic reticulum and do not release extracellular virions, but are competent for retrotransposition within the virus-producing cell. It had been assumed that lack of polyprotein processing and maturation is due to a defect in the viral proteinase (PR), but recent experiments have shown that polyprotein processing occurs when assembly of the mouse IAP MIA14 is artificially directed to the plasma membrane. We have expressed and purified recombinant MIA14 PR and show that it undergoes N- and C-terminal autoprocessing at defined sites. Using peptide cleavage and inhibition assays and in vitro cleavage of recombinant HIV-1 and MIA14 Gag polyproteins, we show that MIA14 PR is a catalytically competent enzyme comparable in its efficiency to PRs from type D exogenous retroviruses. MIA14 PR is related to the PR of Mason-Pfizer monkey virus both functionally and with respect to its expression strategy, and is distinct from HIV-1 PR with respect to substrate specificity and catalytic efficiency. These findings reveal a functional and possibly evolutionary relationship between MIA14 and D-type retroviruses and imply that a functional PR may be relevant for intracellular retrotransposition even in the case of an endogenous retrovirus that does not produce extracellular virus.  相似文献   

5.
Cleavage of vimentin by different retroviral proteases   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
Proteases (PRs) of retroviruses cleave viral polyproteins into their mature structural proteins and replication enzymes. Besides this essential role in the replication cycle of retroviruses, PRs also cleave a variety of host cell proteins. We have analyzed the in vitro cleavage of mouse vimentin by proteases of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) and type 2 (HIV-2), bovine leukemia virus (BLV), Mason-Pfizer monkey virus (M-PMV), myeloblastosis-associated virus (MAV), and two active-site mutants of MAV PR. Retroviral proteases display significant differences in specificity requirements. Here, we show a comparison of substrate specificities of several retroviral proteases on vimentin as a substrate. Vimentin was cleaved by all the proteases at different sites and with different rates. The results show that the physiologically important cellular protein vimentin can be degraded by different retroviral proteases.  相似文献   

6.
Mason-Pfizer monkey virus (M-PMV) belongs to the family of betaretroviruses characterized by the assembly of immature particles within cytoplasm of infected cells in contrast to other retroviruses (e.g. HIV, RSV) that assemble their immature particles at a plasma membrane. Simultaneously with or shortly after budding a virus-encoded protease is activated and the Gag polyprotein is cleaved into three major structural proteins: matrix (MA), capsid (CA), and nucleocapsid (NC) protein. Mature retroviral CA proteins consist of two independently folded structural domains: N-terminal domain (NTD) and C-terminal dimerization domain (CTD), separated by a flexible linker. As a first step toward the solution structure elucidation, we present nearly complete backbone and side-chain 1H, 15N and 13C resonance assignment of the M-PMV NTD CA.  相似文献   

7.
The assembly of Mason-Pfizer monkey virus Gag polyproteins into immature capsids and their cleavage by the encoded protease are temporally and spatially separated processes, making the virus a particularly useful model for investigation of protease activation. Here we present a high resolution NMR structure of a fully folded monomer of a 12 kDa M-PMV protease (wt 12 PR) and of a Cys7Ala/Asp26Asn/Cys106Ala mutant (12 PR(D26N/C7A/C106A)). The overall structures of both wt 12 PR and 12 PR(D26N/C7A/C106A) follow the conservative structural motif of other retroviral proteases. The most prominent difference from the canonical fold of retroviral proteases is the absence of the interfacial beta-sheet, which leads to the loss of the principal force stabilizing the dimer of M-PMV PR. The monomer-dimer equilibrium can be shifted in favor of the dimer by adding a substrate or an inhibitor, partially compensating for the missing role of the beta-sheet. We also show that cysteines C7 and C106 play a crucial role in stabilizing the dimer and consequently increasing the proteolytic activity of M-PMV PR. This is consistent with the role of reversible oxidative modification of the cysteine residues in the regulation of the maturation of assembled M-PMV capsids in the cytoplasm.  相似文献   

8.
The major capsid (CA) protein of retroviruses possesses a stretch of 20 amino acids, called the major homology region (MHR), which is evolutionarily conserved and invariant in location within the primary sequence of the protein. The function of this region was investigated by examining the effect of random single-amino-acid substitutions within the central 13 positions of the MHR on the life cycle of Mason-Pfizer monkey virus (M-PMV), an immunosuppressive D-type retrovirus. When these mutants were subcloned into an M-PMV proviral vector and expressed in COS cells, one of two major phenotypes was observed. The first group, containing three mutants bearing drastic amino acid substitutions, was unable to assemble capsids in the cytoplasm of the host cell. The second and more common group of mutants was able to assemble and release virions, but these either displayed greatly reduced levels of infectivity or were completely noninfectious. Included within this second group were two mutants with unusual phenotypes; mutant D158Y exhibited a novel cleavage site for the viral protease that resulted in cleavage of the major capsid protein, p27 (CA), within the MHR, whereas mutant F156L appeared to have lost a major site for antibody recognition within the mature CA protein. The results of this mutagenic analysis suggest that changes in the MHR sequence can interfere with the assembly of viral capsids and block an early stage of the infection cycle of M-PMV.  相似文献   

9.
The human immunodeficiency virus type 1 initially assembles and buds as an immature particle that is organized by the viral Gag polyprotein. Gag is then proteolyzed to produce the smaller capsid protein CA, which forms the central conical capsid that surrounds the RNA genome in the mature, infectious virus. To define CA surfaces that function at different stages of the viral life cycle, a total of 48 different alanine-scanning surface mutations in CA were tested for their effects on Gag protein expression, processing, particle production and morphology, capsid assembly, and infectivity. The 27 detrimental mutations fall into three classes: 13 mutations significantly diminished or altered particle production, 9 mutations failed to assemble normal capsids, and 5 mutations supported normal viral assembly but were nevertheless reduced more than 20-fold in infectivity. The locations of the assembly-defective mutations implicate three different CA surfaces in immature particle assembly: one surface encompasses helices 4 to 6 in the CA N-terminal domain (NTD), a second surrounds the crystallographically defined CA dimer interface in the C-terminal domain (CTD), and a third surrounds the loop preceding helix 8 at the base of the CTD. Mature capsid formation required a distinct surface encompassing helices 1 to 3 in the NTD, in good agreement with a recent structural model for the viral capsid. Finally, the identification of replication-defective mutants with normal viral assembly phenotypes indicates that CA also performs important nonstructural functions at early stages of the viral life cycle.  相似文献   

10.
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   

11.
S Oertle  N Bowles    P F Spahr 《Journal of virology》1992,66(6):3873-3878
Avian retroviruses (with the notable exception of spleen necrosis virus) express their protease (PR) both in their gag and their gag-pol polyprotein precursors, in contrast to other retroviruses, notably, the mammalian retroviruses, in which PR is encoded in the gag-pol polyprotein or in a separate reading frame as a gag-pro product. The consequence is that the avian PR is expressed in stoichiometric rather than catalytic amounts. To investigate the significance of the particular genome organization of the avian retrovirus prototype Rous sarcoma virus, we developed an assay that measures complementation between the gag and the gag-pol polyproteins by expressing them from two different plasmids in transfected cells. By using this assay, we showed that the protease PR from the gag-pol polyprotein is capable of autocatalytic self-cleavage and -activation when coexpressed with a protease-deficient gag protein and that the PR domain has a role in viral particle assembly. Furthermore, this complementation assay can be used to investigate the role of the gag domain in the gag-pol polyprotein by determining whether it can rescue a defect in the gag polyprotein. We report here the results of such an experiment, which studied a mutation in the N terminus of the gag gene.  相似文献   

12.
Mason-Pfizer monkey virus (M-PMV), the prototypical type D retrovirus, assembles immature capsids within the cytoplasm of the cell prior to plasma membrane interaction. Several mutants of M-PMV Gag have been described which display altered transport, assembly, or both. In this report, we describe the use of an in vitro synthesis and assembly system to distinguish between defects in intracellular transport and the process of assembly itself for two previously described gag gene mutants. Matrix domain mutant R55W converts the type D morphogenesis of M-PMV particles into type C and has been hypothesized to alter the transport of Gag, redirecting it to the plasma membrane where assembly subsequently occurs. We show here that R55W can assemble in both the in vitro translation-assembly system and within inclusion bodies in bacteria and thus has retained the capacity to assemble in the cytoplasm. This supports the concept that R55 is located within a domain responsible for the transport of Gag to an intracellular site for assembly. In contrast, deletions within the p12 domain of M-PMV Gag had previously been shown to affect the efficiency of particle formation such that under low-level expression conditions, Gag would fail to assemble. We demonstrate here that the efficiency of assembly in the in vitro system mirrors that seen in cells under expression conditions similar to that of an infection. These results argue that the p12 domain of this D-type retrovirus plays a critical role in the membrane-independent assembly of immature capsids.  相似文献   

13.
Virus assembly represents one of the last steps in the retrovirus life cycle. During this process, Gag polyproteins assemble at specific sites within the cell to form viral capsids and induce membrane extrusion (viral budding) either as assembly progresses (type C virus) or following formation of a complete capsid (type B and type D viruses). Finally, the membrane must undergo a fusion event to pinch off the particle in order to release a complete enveloped virion. Structural elements within the MA region of the Gag polyprotein define the route taken to the plasma membrane and direct the process of virus budding. Results presented here suggest that a distinct region of Gag is necessary for virus release. The pp24 and pp16 proteins of the type D retrovirus Mason-Pfizer monkey virus (M-PMV) are phosphoproteins that are encoded in the gag gene of the virus. The pp16 protein is a C-terminally located cleavage product of pp24 and contains a proline-rich motif (PPPY) that is conserved among the Gag proteins of a wide variety of retroviruses. By performing a functional analysis of this coding region with deletion mutants, we have shown that the pp16 protein is dispensable for capsid assembly but essential for virion release. Moreover, additional experiments indicated that the virus release function of pp16 was abolished by the deletion of only the PPPY motif and could be restored when this motif alone was reinserted into a Gag polyprotein lacking the entire pp16 domain. Single-amino-acid substitutions for any of the residues within this motif confer a similar virion release-defective phenotype. It is unlikely that the function of the proline-rich motif is simply to inhibit premature activation of protease, since the PPPY deletion blocked virion release in the context of a protease-defective provirus. These results demonstrate that in type D retroviruses a PPPY motif plays a key role in a late stage of virus budding that is independent of and occurs prior to virion maturation.  相似文献   

14.
Retrovirus assembly involves a complex series of events in which a large number of proteins must be targeted to a point on the plasma membrane where immature viruses bud from the cell. Gag polyproteins of most retroviruses assemble an immature capsid on the cytoplasmic side of the plasma membrane during the budding process (C-type assembly), but a few assemble immature capsids deep in the cytoplasm and are then transported to the plasma membrane (B- or D-type assembly), where they are enveloped. With both assembly phenotypes, Gag polyproteins must be transported to the site of viral budding in either a relatively unassembled form (C type) or a completely assembled form (B and D types). The molecular nature of this transport process and the host cell factors that are involved have remained obscure. During the development of a recombinant baculovirus/insect cell system for the expression of both C-type and D-type Gag polyproteins, we discovered an insect cell line (High Five) with two distinct defects that resulted in the reduced release of virus-like particles. The first of these was a pronounced defect in the transport of D-type but not C-type Gag polyproteins to the plasma membrane. High Five cells expressing wild-type Mason-Pfizer monkey virus (M-PMV) Gag precursors accumulate assembled immature capsids in large cytoplasmic aggregates similar to a transport-defective mutant (MA-A18V). In contrast, a larger fraction of the Gag molecules encoded by the M-PMV C-type morphogenesis mutant (MA-R55W) and those of human immunodeficiency virus were transported to the plasma membrane for assembly and budding of virions. When pulse-labeled Gag precursors from High Five cells were fractionated on velocity gradients, they sedimented more rapidly, indicating that they are sequestered in a higher-molecular-mass complex. Compared to Sf9 insect cells, the High Five cells also demonstrate a defect in the release of C-type virus particles. These findings support the hypothesis that host cell factors are important in the process of Gag transport and in the release of enveloped viral particles.  相似文献   

15.
Processing of the GagPol polyprotein precursor of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) is a critical step in viral assembly and replication. The HIV-1 protease (PR) is translated as part of GagPol and is both necessary and sufficient for precursor processing. The PR is active only as a dimer; enzyme activation is initiated when the PR domains in two GagPol precursors dimerize. The precise mechanism by which the PR becomes activated and the subsequent initial steps in precursor processing are not well understood. However, it is clear that processing is initiated by the PR domain that is embedded within the precursor itself. We have examined the earliest events in precursor processing using an in vitro assay in which full-length GagPol is cleaved by its embedded PR. We demonstrate that the embedded, immature PR is as much as 10,000-fold less sensitive to inhibition by an active-site PR inhibitor than is the mature, free enzyme. Further, we find that different concentrations of the active-site inhibitor are required to inhibit the processing of different cleavage sites within GagPol. Finally, our results indicate that the first cleavages carried out by the activated PR within GagPol are intramolecular. Overall, our data support a model of virus assembly in which the first cleavages occur in GagPol upstream of the PR. These intramolecular cleavages produce an extended form of PR that completes the final processing steps accompanying the final stages of particle assembly by an intermolecular mechanism.  相似文献   

16.
In contrast to other retroviruses, Mason-Pfizer monkey virus (M-PMV) assembles immature capsids in the cytoplasm. We have compared the ability of minimal assembly-competent domains from M-PMV and human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) to assemble in vitro into virus-like particles in the presence and absence of nucleic acids. A fusion protein comprised of the capsid and nucleocapsid domains of Gag (CANC) and its N-terminally modified mutant (DeltaProCANC) were used to mimic the assembly of the viral core and immature particles, respectively. In contrast to HIV-1, where CANC assembled efficiently into cylindrical structures, the same domains of M-PMV were assembly incompetent. The addition of RNA or oligonucleotides did not complement this defect. In contrast, the M-PMV DeltaProCANC molecule was able to assemble into spherical particles, while that of HIV-1 formed both spheres and cylinders. For M-PMV, the addition of purified RNA increased the efficiency with which DeltaProCANC formed spherical particles both in terms of the overall amount and the numbers of completed spheres. The amount of RNA incorporated was determined, and for both rRNA and MS2-RNA, quantities similar to that of genomic RNA were encapsidated. Oligonucleotides also stimulated assembly; however, they were incorporated into DeltaProCANC spherical particles in trace amounts that could not serve as a stoichiometric structural component for assembly. Thus, oligonucleotides may, through a transient interaction, induce conformational changes that facilitate assembly, while longer RNAs appear to facilitate the complete assembly of spherical particles.  相似文献   

17.
Retrovirus morphogenesis involves assembly of structural Gag polyproteins with subsequent budding from the plasma membrane, followed by proteolytic cleavage by the viral proteinase (PR) and extracellular maturation to the infectious virion. Intracisternal A-type particles (IAPs) are defective retroviruses that assemble and bud at the membranes of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), where they remain as immature particles consisting exclusively of uncleaved polyproteins. To analyze requirements for intracellular polyprotein transport and PR activation, we constructed deletion and substitution mutations in the IAP gag gene, including the putative ER-targeting signal. Mutant polyproteins were transported to various intracellular locations, including the nucleus, the cytoplasm, the ER, and the plasma membrane. Interestingly, assembly of capsid-like particle structures occurred at almost all sites. However, only those polyproteins transported to the plasma membrane were efficiently and specifically cleaved by viral PR, with cleavage occurring predominantly within the virus particle. Thus, at least in the experimental system presented here, retroviral particle assembly can occur at almost any location within the cell, while polyprotein processing and, consequently, virion maturation are confined to a specific cellular site. These results suggest that a factor restricted to the plasma membrane is required to trigger PR activation and maturation of infectious retroviruses.  相似文献   

18.
S Oertle  P F Spahr 《Journal of virology》1990,64(12):5757-5763
Rous sarcoma virus nucleocapsid protein (NC) has been shown by site-directed mutagenesis to be involved in viral RNA packaging and in the subsequent maturation of genomic RNA in the progeny viral particles. To investigate whether NC exerts these activities as a free protein or as a domain of the polyprotein precursor Pr76gag, we have constructed several mutants unable to process Pr76gag and analyzed their properties in a transient-transfection assay of chicken embryo fibroblasts, the natural host of Rous sarcoma virus. A point mutation in the protease (PR) active site completely prevents Pr76gag processing. The full-length Pr76gag polyprotein is still able to package viral RNA, but cannot mature it. A shorter gag precursor polyprotein lacking the C-terminal PR domain, but retaining that of the NC protein, is however, unable even to package viral RNA. This indicates that the NC protein can participate in packaging viral RNA only as part of a full-length Pr76gag and that the PR domain is, indirectly or directly, also involved in RNA packaging. These results also demonstrate that processing of Pr76gag is necessary for viral RNA dimerization.  相似文献   

19.
Mason-Pfizer monkey virus (M-PMV) capsids that have assembled in the cytoplasm must be transported to and associate with the plasma membrane prior to being enveloped by a lipid bilayer during viral release. Structural studies have identified a positive-charge density on the membrane-proximal surface of the matrix (MA) protein component of the Gag polyprotein. To investigate if basic amino acids in MA play a role in intracellular transport and capsid-membrane interactions, mutants were constructed in which lysine and arginine residues (R10, K16, K20, R22, K25, K27, K33, and K39) potentially exposed on the capsid surface were replaced singly and in pairs by alanine. A majority of the charge substitution mutants were released less efficiently than the wild type. Electron microscopy of mutant Gag-expressing cells revealed four distinct phenotypes: K16A and K20A immature capsids accumulated on and budded into intracellular vesicles; R10A, K27A, and R22A capsid transport was arrested at the cellular cortical actin network, while K25A immature capsids were dispersed throughout the cytoplasm and appeared to be defective at an earlier stage of intracellular transport; and the remaining mutant (K33A and K39A) capsids accumulated at the inner surface of the plasma membrane. All mutants that released virions exhibited near-wild-type infectivity in a single-round assay. Thus, basic amino acids in the M-PMV MA define both cellular location and efficiency of virus release.  相似文献   

20.
The carboxy terminus-encoding portion of the gag gene of Mason-Pfizer monkey virus (M-PMV), the prototype immunosuppressive primate type D retrovirus, encodes a 36-amino-acid, proline-rich protein domain that, in the mature virion, becomes the p4 capsid protein. The p4 domain has no known role in M-PMV replication. We found that two mutants with premature termination codons that remove half or all of the p4 domain produced lower levels of stable Gag protein and of self-assembled capsids. Interestingly, yeast two-hybrid screening revealed that p4 specifically interacted with TCP-1gamma, a subunit of the chaperonin TRiC (TCP-1 ring complex). TRiC is a cytosolic chaperonin that is known to be involved in both folding and subunit assembly of a variety of cellular proteins. TCP-1gamma also associated with high specificity with the M-PMV pp24/16-p12 domain and human immunodeficiency virus p6. Moreover, in cells, Gag polyprotein associated with the TRiC chaperonin complex and this association depended on ATP hydrolysis. In the p4 truncation mutants, the Gag-TRiC association was significantly reduced. These results strongly suggest that cytosolic chaperonin TRiC is involved in Gag folding and/or capsid assembly. We propose that TRiC associates transiently with nascent M-PMV Gag molecules to assist in their folding. Consequently, properly folded Gag molecules carry out the intermolecular interactions involved in self-assembly of the immature capsid.  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