共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
The alphavirus-like mRNA capping enzyme of Bamboo mosaic virus (BaMV) exhibits an AdoMet-dependent guanylyltransferase activity by which the methyl group of AdoMet is transferred to GTP, leading to the formation of m(7)GTP, and the m(7)GMP moiety is next transferred to the 5' end of ppRNA via a covalent enzyme-m(7)GMP intermediate. The function of the conserved H68 of the BaMV capping enzyme in the intermediate formation was analyzed by mutagenesis in this study. The nature of the bond linking the enzyme and m(7)GMP was changed in the H68C mutant protein, strongly suggesting that H68 covalently binds to m(7)GMP in the intermediate. 相似文献
2.
Critical residues of Semliki Forest virus RNA capping enzyme involved in methyltransferase and guanylyltransferase-like activities. 总被引:2,自引:1,他引:2 下载免费PDF全文
The Semliki Forest virus (SFV) replicase protein nsP1 has methyltransferase (MT) and guanylyltransferase-like (GT) activities, which are involved in the capping of viral mRNAs. MT catalyzes the transfer of the methyl group from S-adenosylmethionine (AdoMet) to position 7 of GTP, and this reaction is followed by GT-catalyzed formation of the covalent complex m7GMP-nsP1. These reactions are virus specific and thus potential targets for inhibitors of virus replication. We have mutated residues of SFV nsP1, which are conserved in related proteins of the large alphavirus-like superfamily. Mutations of D64, D90, R93, C135, C142, and Y249 to alanine destroyed or greatly reduced the MT activity of nsP1. All MT-negative mutants lost also the GT activity, confirming that methylation of GTP is an essential prerequisite for the synthesis of the covalent guanylate complex. Mutation of H38 prevented the GT reaction without destroying MT activity. Conservation of residues essential for both reactions in the alphavirus-like superfamily implies that they use a capping mechanism similar to that for the alphaviruses. Residues D64 and D90 were necessary for AdoMet binding, as measured by UV cross-linking. Secondary structure predictions of nsP1 and other proteins of the superfamily place these residues in positions corresponding to AdoMet-binding sites of cellular methyltransferases, suggesting that they all may be structurally related. 相似文献
3.
Putative RNA capping activities encoded by brome mosaic virus: methylation and covalent binding of guanylate by replicase protein 1a 下载免费PDF全文
Brome mosaic virus (BMV) RNA replication is directed by two virus-encoded proteins, 1a and 2a. The amino-terminal half of 1a is a distant homolog of alphavirus nonstructural protein nsP1, which has been implicated in capping viral RNAs. In this study, we examined the enzymatic activities of BMV 1a expressed in yeast, where the protein is fully functional in RNA replication. 1a methylated GTP, dGTP, and the cap analogs GpppG and GpppA, using S-adenosylmethionine (AdoMet) as the methyl donor. Product analysis by nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy showed that 1a methylation was specific for guanine position 7. Additionally, 1a interacted with GTP to form a covalent 1a-m(7)GMP complex. This reaction was specific for GTP, required AdoMet, and was accompanied by transfer of (3)H-methyl from AdoMet to the covalent 1a-guanylate complex. The covalent complex could be immunoprecipitated by 1a antibodies. The 1a-m(7)GMP complex was inhibited in catalyzing further methyltransferase reactions. Mutation of conserved amino acids in the N-terminal half of 1a reduced both methyltransferase and covalent complex formation activities to very low or undetectable levels. Covalent 1a-guanylate complex formation took place in similar, AdoMet-dependent fashion in extracts of BMV-infected barley protoplasts. These results show that BMV 1a has activities similar to those of alphavirus nsP1, demonstrating conservation of these putative capping functions across a wide span of sequence divergence within the alphavirus-like superfamily. Conservation of this unusual combination of functions also supports the inference that the superfamily caps viral RNAs by an unusual pathway proceeding via a m(7)GMP intermediate. 相似文献
4.
5.
van der Woude H Boersma MG Alink GM Vervoort J Rietjens IM 《Chemico-biological interactions》2006,160(3):193-203
This study investigates the pro-oxidant activity of 3′- and 4′-O-methylquercetin, two relevant phase II metabolites of quercetin without a functional catechol moiety, which is generally thought to be important for the pro-oxidant activity of quercetin. Oxidation of 3′- and 4′-O-methylquercetin with horseradish peroxidase in the presence of glutathione yielded two major metabolites for each compound, identified as the 6- and 8-glutathionyl conjugates of 3′- and 4′-O-methylquercetin. Thus, catechol-O-methylation of quercetin does not eliminate its pro-oxidant chemistry. Furthermore, the formation of these A-ring glutathione conjugates of 3′- and 4′-O-methylquercetin indicates that quercetin o-quinone may not be an intermediate in the formation of covalent quercetin adducts with glutathione, protein and/or DNA. In additional studies, it was demonstrated that covalent DNA adduct formation by a mixture of [4-14C]-3′- and 4′-O-methylquercetin in HepG2 cells amounted to only 42% of the level of covalent adducts formed by a similar amount of [4-14C]-quercetin. Altogether, these results reveal the effect of methylation of the catechol moiety of quercetin on its pro-oxidant behavior. Methylation of quercetin does not eliminate but considerably attenuates the cellular implications of the pro-oxidant activity of quercetin, which might add to the mechanisms underlying the apparent lack of in vivo carcinogenicity of this genotoxic compound. The paper also presents a new mechanism for the pro-oxidant chemistry of quercetin, eliminating the requirement for formation of an o-quinone, and explaining why methylation of the catechol moiety does not fully abolish formation of reactive DNA binding metabolites. 相似文献
6.
7.
Helicase and capping enzyme active site mutations in brome mosaic virus protein 1a cause defects in template recruitment, negative-strand RNA synthesis, and viral RNA capping 下载免费PDF全文
Brome mosaic virus (BMV) encodes two RNA replication proteins: 1a, which contains RNA capping and helicase-like domains, and 2a, which is related to polymerases. BMV 1a and 2a can direct virus-specific RNA replication in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, which reproduces the known features of BMV replication in plant cells. We constructed single amino acid point mutations at the predicted capping and helicase active sites of 1a and analyzed their effects on BMV RNA3 replication in yeast. The helicase mutants showed no function in any assays used: they were strongly defective in template recruitment for RNA replication, as measured by 1a-induced stabilization of RNA3, and they synthesized no detectable negative-strand or subgenomic RNA. Capping domain mutants divided into two groups. The first exhibited increased template recruitment but nevertheless allowed only low levels of negative-strand and subgenomic mRNA synthesis. The second was strongly defective in template recruitment, made very low levels of negative strands, and made no detectable subgenomes. To distinguish between RNA synthesis and capping defects, we deleted chromosomal gene XRN1, encoding the major exonuclease that degrades uncapped mRNAs. XRN1 deletion suppressed the second but not the first group of capping mutants, allowing synthesis and accumulation of large amounts of uncapped subgenomic mRNAs, thus providing direct evidence for the importance of the viral RNA capping function. The helicase and capping enzyme mutants showed no complementation. Instead, at high levels of expression, a helicase mutant dominantly interfered with the function of the wild-type protein. These results are discussed in relation to the interconnected functions required for different steps of positive-strand RNA virus replication. 相似文献
8.
Purification and characterization of the messenger ribonucleic acid capping enzyme GTP:RNA guanylyltransferase from wheat germ 总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3
A GTP:RNA guanylyltransferase or capping enzyme has been purified approximately 2000-fold from wheat germ. The enzyme catalyzes the transfer of the GMP residue from GTP to the 5' end of RNA or synthetic polyribonucleotides. Diphosphate-ended polymers were capped more efficiently than molecules with triphosphate ends, and molecules with monophosphate ends were not capped at all. There appears to be little specificity since RNAs with purine or pyrimidine ends served as acceptors. Other features of the wheat germ RNA guanylyltransferase include relatively low Km values for GTP (2.7 microM) and ppA (pA)n (14.2 nM), a divalent cation requirement satisfied by low (0.5 mM) concentrations of MnCl2 or higher (5 mM) concentrations of MgCl2, and a pH optimum around neutrality. 相似文献
9.
Roussel X Béchade G Kriznik A Van Dorsselaer A Sanglier-Cianferani S Branlant G Rahuel-Clermont S 《The Journal of biological chemistry》2008,283(33):22371-22382
The typical 2-Cys peroxiredoxins are thiol-peroxidases involved in the physiology of hydrogen peroxide not only as a toxic but also as a signaling molecule. Coordination of these functions depends on the sulfinylation of the catalytic Cys, a modification reversed by ATP-dependent sulfiredoxin, which specifically reduces the sulfinic acid group of overoxidized 2-Cys peroxiredoxins into a sulfenic acid. Sulfiredoxin was originally proposed to operate by covalent catalysis, with formation of a peroxiredoxin-sulfiredoxin intermediate linked by a thiosulfinate bond between the catalytic Cys of both partners, a hypothesis rejected by a study of the human enzyme. To settle the argument, we investigated the catalytic mechanism of Saccharomyces cerevisiae sulfiredoxin, by the characterization of the nature and kinetics of formation of the protein species formed between sulfiredoxin and its substrate in the presence of ATP, using mutants of the non-essential Cys residues of both proteins. We observed the formation of a dithiothreitol-reducible peroxiredoxin-sulfiredoxin species using SDS-PAGE and Western blot analysis, and its mass was shown to correspond to a thiosulfinate complex by high resolution mass spectrometry coupled to liquid chromatography. We next measured indirectly and directly a rate constant of formation of the thiosulfinate species of approximately 2 min(-1), for both wild-type and mutant sulfiredoxins, at least equal to the steady-state rate constant of the reaction, with a stoichiometry of 1:1 relative to peroxiredoxin. Taken altogether, our results strongly argue in favor of the formation of a covalent thiosulfinate peroxiredoxin-sulfiredoxin species as an intermediate on the catalytic pathway. 相似文献
10.
Plasmid vectors capable of expressing the large and small subunits of the vaccinia virus mRNA capping enzyme were constructed and used to transform Escherichia coli. Conditions for the induction of the dimeric enzyme or the individual subunits in a soluble form were identified, and the capping enzyme was purified to near homogeneity. Proteolysis of the capping enzyme in bacteria yields a 60-kDa product shown previously to possess the mRNA triphosphatase and guanyltransferase activities (Shuman, S. (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265, 11960-11966) was isolated and shown by amino acid sequence analysis to be derived from the NH2 terminus of D1R. The individual subunits lacked methyltransferase activity when assayed alone. However, mixing the D1R and D12L subunits permitted reconstitution of the methyltransferase activity, and this appearance in activity accompanied the association of the subunits. In contrast, mixing the D12L subunit with the D1R-60K proteolytic fragment failed to yield methyltransferase activity or result in a physical association of the two proteins. These results demonstrate that the methyltransferase active site requires the presence of the D12L subunit with the carboxyl-terminal portion of the D1R subunit. Furthermore, since the mRNA triphosphatase and guanyltransferase active sites reside in the NH2-terminal domain of the D1R subunit, and the methyltransferase activity is found in the carboxyl-terminal portion of this subunit and D12L, there must be at least two separate active sites in this enzyme. 相似文献
11.
A spectroscopic study of the binding of m7GTP and m7GpppG to human protein synthesis initiation factor 4E 总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4
The binding of analogues of the 7-methylguanosine-containing cap, m7GTP and m7GpppG, to eIF-4E from human erythrocytes as a function of pH, temperature, and ionic strength is described. From the pH-dependent binding of m7GTP and m7GpppG to eIF-4E, a new model describing the nature of the cap.eIF-4E interaction is proposed. The thermodynamic values and ionic strength dependence of binding are consistent with a binding site which is primarily hydrophobic. Fluorescence and circular dichroism data indicate that tryptophan residues may be involved in base-stacking interactions with the cap in a somewhat buried environment. The model presented here confirms the earlier proposal [Rhoads et al. (1983) Biochemistry 22, 6084-6088] that the enolate tautomer of the cap is preferred for interaction and further proposes that the interaction is with a protonated amino acid residue, such as histidine, while stacking with an aromatic amino acid, such as tryptophan. 相似文献
12.
The movement protein of cowpea mosaic virus binds GTP and single-stranded nucleic acid in vitro 下载免费PDF全文
Carvalho CM Pouwels J van Lent JW Bisseling T Goldbach RW Wellink J 《Journal of virology》2004,78(3):1591-1594
The movement protein (MP) of Cowpea mosaic virus forms tubules in plasmodesmata to enable the transport of mature virions. Here it is shown that the MP is capable of specifically binding riboguanosine triphosphate and that mutational analysis suggests that GTP binding plays a role in the targeted transport of the MP. Furthermore, the MP is capable of binding both single-stranded RNA and single-stranded DNA in a non-sequence-specific manner, and the GTP- and RNA-binding sites do not overlap. 相似文献
13.
Bamboo mosaic virus (BaMV) is a positive-sense RNA virus belonging to the genus Potexvirus. Open reading frame 1 (ORF1) encodes the viral replication protein that consists of a capping enzyme domain, a helicase-like domain (HLD), and an RNA-dependent RNA polymerase domain from the N to C terminus. ORF5 encodes the viral coat protein (CP) required for genome encapsidation and the virus movement in plants. In this study, application of a yeast-two hybrid assay detected an interaction between the viral HLD and CP. However, the interaction did not affect the NTPase activity of the HLD. To identify the critical amino acids of CP interacting with the HLD, a random mutational library of CP was created using error-prone PCR, and the mutations adversely affecting the interaction were screened by a bacterial two-hybrid system. As a result, the mutations A209G and N210S in CP were found to weaken the interaction. To determine the significance of the interaction, the mutations were introduced into a BaMV infectious clone, and the mutational effects on viral replication, movement, and genome encapsidation were investigated. There was no effect on accumulations of BaMV CP and genomic RNAs within protoplasts; however, the virus cell-to-cell movement in plants was restricted. Sequence alignment revealed that A209 of BaMV CP is conserved in many potexviruses. Mutation of the corresponding residue in Foxtail mosaic virus CP also reduced the viral HLD-CP interaction and restricted the virus movement, suggesting that interaction between CP and a widely conserved HLD in the potexviral replication protein is crucial for viral trafficking through plasmodesmata. 相似文献
14.
Piens K Fauré R Sundqvist G Baumann MJ Saura-Valls M Teeri TT Cottaz S Planas A Driguez H Brumer H 《The Journal of biological chemistry》2008,283(32):21864-21872
Xyloglucan endo-transglycosylases (XETs) are key enzymes involved in the restructuring of plant cell walls during morphogenesis. As members of glycoside hydrolase family 16 (GH16), XETs are predicted to employ the canonical retaining mechanism of glycosyl transfer involving a covalent glycosyl-enzyme intermediate. Here, we report the accumulation and direct observation of such intermediates of PttXET16-34 from hybrid aspen by electrospray mass spectrometry in combination with synthetic "blocked" substrates, which function as glycosyl donors but are incapable of acting as glycosyl acceptors. Thus, GalGXXXGGG and GalGXXXGXXXG react with the wild-type enzyme to yield relatively stable, kinetically competent, covalent GalG-enzyme and GalGXXXG-enzyme complexes, respectively (Gal=Galbeta(1-->4), G=Glcbeta(1-->4), and X=Xylalpha(1-->6)Glcbeta(1-->4)). Quantitation of ratios of protein and saccharide species at pseudo-equilibrium allowed us to estimate the free energy change (DeltaG(0)) for the formation of the covalent GalGXXXG-enzyme as 6.3-8.5 kJ/mol (1.5-2.0 kcal/mol). The data indicate that the free energy of the beta(1-->4) glucosidic bond in xyloglucans is preserved in the glycosyl-enzyme intermediate and harnessed for religation of the polysaccharide in vivo. 相似文献
15.
The multifunctional protein CAD catalyzes the first three steps in pyrimidine biosynthesis in mammalian cells, including the synthesis of carbamyl phosphate from bicarbonate, MgATP and glutamine. The Syrian hamster CAD glutaminase (GLNase) domain, a trpG-type amidotransferase, catalyzes glutamine hydrolysis in the absence of MgATP and bicarbonate (Km = 95 microM and kcat = 0.14 s-1). Unlike E. coli carbamyl phosphate synthetase (Wellner, V.P., Anderson, P.M., and Meister, A. (1973) Biochemistry 12, 2061-2066), a stable thioester intermediate did not accumulate when the mammalian enzyme was incubated with glutamine. However, a covalent adduct could be isolated when the protein was denatured in acid. The steady state concentration of the intermediate increased with increasing glutamine concentration to nearly one mole per mole of enzyme with half saturation at 105 microM, close to the Km value for glutamine. The adduct formed at the active site of the glutaminase domain. The rate of breakdown of the intermediate (k4), determined directly, was 0.17 s-1 and the rate of formation (k3) was estimated as 0.52 s-1. In the absence of MgATP and bicarbonate, k4 = kcat indicating that the decomposition of the intermediate is the rate-limiting step. The intermediate was chemically and kinetically competent, and the glutamine dissociation constant (330 microM) and rate constants were consistent with steady state kinetics and accurately predicted the steady state concentration of the intermediate. These studies suggest a mechanism similar to the cysteine proteases such as recently proposed by Mei and Zalkin (Mei, B., and Zalkin, H. (1989) J. Biol. Chem. 264, 16613-16619) who identified a catalytic triad in glutamine phosphoribosyl-5'-pyrophosphate amidotransferase, a purF-type enzyme. MgATP and bicarbonate increased kcat of the glutaminase reaction 14-fold by accelerating both the rate of formation and the rate of breakdown of the intermediate, and prevented the accumulation of the intermediate; however, the Km value for glutamine was not significantly altered. The instability of the thioester intermediate leads to appreciable hydrolysis of glutamine in the absence of the other substrates. However, bicarbonate alone spares glutamine by increasing the Km and Ks of glutamine to 600 and 8960 microM, respectively, thus reducing kcat/Km 3-fold when MgATP is limiting. In the absence of MgATP and bicarbonate, ammonia decreased the rate of hydrolysis and the accumulation of the thioester intermediate indicating that ammonia had direct access to the thioester at the GLNase domain active site.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS) 相似文献
16.
Role of the alfalfa mosaic virus methyltransferase-like domain in negative-strand RNA synthesis 下载免费PDF全文
RNAs 1 and 2 of the tripartite genome of alfalfa mosaic virus (AMV) encode the replicase proteins P1 and P2, respectively. P1 contains a methyltransferase-like domain in its N-terminal half, which has a putative role in capping the viral RNAs. Six residues in this domain that are highly conserved in the methyltransferase domains of alphavirus-like viruses were mutated individually in AMV P1. None of the mutants was infectious to plants. Mutant RNA 1 was coexpressed with wild-type (wt) RNAs 2 and 3 from transferred DNA vectors in Nicotiana benthamiana by agroinfiltration. Mutation of His-100 or Cys-189 in P1 reduced accumulation of negative- and positive-strand RNA in the infiltrated leaves to virtually undetectable levels. Mutation of Asp-154, Arg-157, Cys-182, or Tyr-266 in P1 reduced negative-strand RNA accumulation to levels ranging from 2 to 38% of those for the wt control, whereas positive-strand RNA accumulation by these mutants was 2% or less. The (transiently) expressed replicases of the six mutants were purified from the agroinfiltrated leaves. Polymerase activities of these preparations in vitro ranged from undetectable to wt levels. The data indicate that, in addition to its putative role in RNA capping, the methyltransferase-like domain of P1 has distinct roles in replication-associated functions required for negative-strand RNA synthesis. The defect in negative-strand RNA synthesis of the His-100 and Cys-189 mutants could be complemented in trans by coexpression of wt P1. 相似文献
17.
Characterization of a trifunctional mimivirus mRNA capping enzyme and crystal structure of the RNA triphosphatase domain 总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1
The RNA triphosphatase (RTPase) components of the mRNA capping apparatus are a bellwether of eukaryal taxonomy. Fungal and protozoal RTPases belong to the triphosphate tunnel metalloenzyme (TTM) family, exemplified by yeast Cet1. Several large DNA viruses encode metal-dependent RTPases unrelated to the cysteinyl-phosphatase RTPases of their metazoan host organisms. The origins of DNA virus RTPases are unclear because they are structurally uncharacterized. Mimivirus, a giant virus of amoeba, resembles poxviruses in having a trifunctional capping enzyme composed of a metal-dependent RTPase module fused to guanylyltransferase (GTase) and guanine-N7 methyltransferase domains. The crystal structure of mimivirus RTPase reveals a minimized tunnel fold and an active site strikingly similar to that of Cet1. Unlike homodimeric fungal RTPases, mimivirus RTPase is a monomer. The mimivirus TTM-type RTPase-GTase fusion resembles the capping enzymes of amoebae, providing evidence that the ancestral large DNA virus acquired its capping enzyme from a unicellular host. 相似文献
18.
Yandong Jin Baijie Wang Mingchuan Bao Yujie Li Shengwu Xiao Yuhua Wang Jun Zhang Liangzhen Zhao Hangxiao Zhang Yau-Heiu Hsu Mingjie Li Lianfeng Gu 《植物学报(英文版)》2023,65(6):1369-1382
Bamboo is one of the fastest growing plants among monocotyledonous species and is grown extensively in subtropical regions.Although bamboo has high economic value and produces much biomass quickly,gene functional research is hindered by the low efficiency of genetic transformation in this species.We therefore explored the potential of a bamboo mosaic virus(BaMV)-mediated expression system to investigate genotype-phenotype associations.We determined that the sites between the triple gene block pr... 相似文献
19.
Sunil Kumar 《Archives Of Phytopathology And Plant Protection》2016,49(1-4):59-63
Pepper seed samples were tested for the infection of tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) and tomato mosaic virus (ToMV) by enzyme linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). Out of 26 pepper seed samples tested, 17 were infected with TMV and ToMV in ELISA. About 34.7% of pepper seed samples were found to be healthy. Infections of TMV or ToMV were recorded to be 61.53% and 11.5%, respectively of the total tested seed samples. 相似文献