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1.
Sen A  Sen N  Mackow ER 《Journal of virology》2007,81(21):11758-11767
The rotavirus NSP5 protein directs the formation of viroplasm-like structures (VLS) and is required for viroplasm formation within infected cells. In this report, we have defined signals within the C-terminal 21 amino acids of NSP5 that are required for VLS formation and that direct the insolubility and hyperphosphorylation of NSP5. Deleting C-terminal residues of NSP5 dramatically increased the solubility of N-terminally tagged NSP5 and prevented NSP5 hyperphosphorylation. Computer modeling and analysis of the NSP5 C terminus revealed the presence of an amphipathic alpha-helix spanning 21 C-terminal residues that is conserved among rotaviruses. Proline-scanning mutagenesis of the predicted helix revealed that single-amino-acid substitutions abolish NSP5 insolubility and hyperphosphorylation. Helix-disrupting NSP5 mutations also abolished localization of green fluorescent protein (GFP)-NSP5 fusions into VLS and directly correlate VLS formation with NSP5 insolubility. All mutations introduced into the hydrophobic face of the predicted NSP5 alpha-helix disrupted VLS formation, NSP5 insolubility, and the accumulation of hyperphosphorylated NSP5 isoforms. Some NSP5 mutants were highly soluble but still were hyperphosphorylated, indicating that NSP5 insolubility was not required for hyperphosphorylation. Expression of GFP containing the last 68 residues of NSP5 at its C terminus resulted in the formation of punctate VLS within cells. Interestingly, GFP-NSP5-C68 was diffusely dispersed in the cytoplasm when calcium was depleted from the medium, and after calcium resupplementation GFP-NSP5-C68 rapidly accumulated into punctate VLS. A potential calcium switch, formed by two tandem pseudo-EF-hand motifs (DxDxD), is present just upstream of the predicted alpha-helix. Mutagenesis of either DxDxD motif abolished the regulatory effect of calcium on VLS formation and resulted in the constitutive assembly of GFP-NSP5-C68 into punctate VLS. These results reveal specific residues within the NSP5 C-terminal domain that direct NSP5 hyperphosphorylation, insolubility, and VLS formation in addition to defining residues that constitute a calcium-dependent trigger of VLS formation. These studies identify functional determinants within the C terminus of NSP5 that regulate VLS formation and provide a target for inhibiting NSP5-directed VLS functions during rotavirus replication.  相似文献   

2.
Mohan KV  Muller J  Som I  Atreya CD 《Journal of virology》2003,77(22):12184-12192
Molecular events and the interdependence of the two rotavirus nonstructural proteins, NSP5 and NSP2, in producing viroplasm-like structures (VLS) were previously evaluated by using transient cellular coexpression of the genes for the two proteins, and VLS domains as well as the NSP2-binding region of NSP5 were mapped in the context of NSP2. Review of the previous studies led us to postulate that NSP2 binding of NSP5 may block the N terminus of NSP5 or render it inaccessible and that any similar N-terminal blockage may render NSP5 alone capable of producing VLS independent of NSP2. This possibility was addressed in this report by using two forms of NSP5-green fluorescent protein (GFP) chimeras wherein GFP is fused at either the N or the C terminus of NSP5 (GFP-NSP5 and NSP5-GFP) and evaluating their VLS-forming capability (by light and electron microscopy) and phosphorylation and multimerization potential independent of NSP2. Our results demonstrate that NSP5 alone can form VLS when the N terminus is blocked by fusion with a nonrotavirus protein (GFP-NSP5) but the C terminus is unmodified. Only GFP-NSP5 was able to undergo hyperphosphorylation and multimerization with the native form of NSP5, emphasizing the importance of an unmodified C terminus for these events. Deletion analysis of NSP5 mapped the essential signals for VLS formation to the C terminus and clearly suggested that hyperphosphorylation of NSP5 is not required for VLS formation. The present study emphasizes in general that when fusion proteins are used for functional studies, constructs that represent fusions at both the N and the C termini of the protein should be evaluated.  相似文献   

3.
Phosphoprotein NSP5 is a component of replication intermediates that catalyze the synthesis of the segmented double-stranded RNA (dsRNA) rotavirus genome. To study the role of the protein in viral replication, His-tagged NSP5 was expressed in bacteria and purified by affinity chromatography. In vitro phosphorylation assays showed that NSP5 alone contains minimal autokinase activity but undergoes hyperphosphorylation when combined with the NTPase and helix-destabilizing protein NSP2. Hence, NSP2 mediates the hyperphosphorylation of NSP5 in the absence of other viral or cellular proteins. RNA-binding assays demonstrated that NSP5 has unique nonspecific RNA-binding activity, recognizing single-stranded RNA and dsRNA with similar affinities. The possible functions of the RNA-binding activities of NSP5 are to cooperate with NSP2 in the destabilization of RNA secondary structures and in the packaging of RNA and/or to prevent the interferon-induced dsRNA-dependent activation of the protein kinase PKR.  相似文献   

4.
The rotavirus nonstructural protein NSP5, a product of the smallest genomic RNA segment, is a phosphoprotein containing O-linked N-acetylglucosamine. We investigated the phosphorylation of NSP5 in monkey MA104 cells infected with simian rotavirus SA11. Immunoprecipitated NSP5 was analyzed with respect to phosphorylation and protein kinase activity. After metabolic labeling of NSP5 with 32Pi, only serine residues were phosphorylated. Separation of tryptic peptides revealed four to six strongly labeled products and several weakly labeled products. Phosphorylation at multiple sites was also shown by two-dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE), where several isoforms of NSP5 with different pIs were identified. Analysis by PAGE of protein reacting with an NSP5-specific antiserum showed major forms at 26 to 28 and 35 kDa. Moreover, there were polypeptides migrating between 28 and 35 kDa. Treatment of the immunoprecipitated material with protein phosphatase 2A shifted the mobilities of the 28- to 35-kDa polypeptides to the 26-kDa position, suggesting that the slower electrophoretic mobility was caused by phosphorylation. Radioactive labeling showed that the 26-kDa form contained additional phosphate groups that were not removed by protein phosphatase 2A. The immunoprecipitated NSP5 possessed protein kinase activity. Incubation with [gamma-32P]ATP resulted in 32P labeling of 28- to 35-kDa NSP5. The distribution of 32P radioactivity between the components of the complex was similar to the phosphorylation in vivo. Assays of the protein kinase activity of a glutathione S-transferase-NSP5 fusion polypeptide expressed in Escherichia coli demonstrated autophosphorylation, suggesting that NSP5 was the active component in the material isolated from infected cells.  相似文献   

5.
Rotavirus NSP5 is a nonstructural protein that localizes in cytoplasmic viroplasms of infected cells. NSP5 interacts with NSP2 and undergoes a complex posttranslational hyperphosphorylation, generating species with reduced polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis mobility. This process has been suggested to be due in part to autophosphorylation. We developed an in vitro phosphorylation assay using as a substrate an in vitro-translated NSP5 deletion mutant that was phosphorylated by extracts from MA104 cells transfected with NSP5 mutants but not by extracts from mock-transfected cells. The phosphorylated products obtained showed shifts in mobility similar to what occurs in vivo. From these and other experiments we concluded that NSP5 activates a cellular kinase(s) for its own phosphorylation. Three NSP5 regions were found to be essential for kinase(s) activation. Glutathione S-transferase-NSP5 mutants were produced in Escherichia coli and used to determine phosphoacceptor sites. These were mapped to four serines (Ser(153), Ser(155), Ser(163), and Ser(165)) within an acidic region with homology to casein kinase II (CKII) phosphorylation sites. CKII was able to phosphorylate NSP5 in vitro. NSP5 and its mutants fused to enhanced green fluorescent protein were used in transfection experiments followed by virus infection and allowed the determination of the domains essential for viroplasm localization in the context of virus infection.  相似文献   

6.
Analysis of Rotavirus Nonstructural Protein NSP5 Phosphorylation   总被引:3,自引:2,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
The rotavirus nonstructural phosphoprotein NSP5 is encoded by a gene in RNA segment 11. Immunofluorescence analysis of fixed cells showed that NSP5 polypeptides remained confined to viroplasms even at a late stage when provirions migrated from these structures. When NSP5 was expressed in COS-7 cells in the absence of other viral proteins, it was uniformly distributed in the cytoplasm. Under these conditions, the 26-kDa polypeptide predominated. In the presence of the protein phosphatase inhibitor okadaic acid, the highly phosphorylated 28- and 32- to 35-kDa polypeptides were formed. Also, the fully phosphorylated protein had a homogeneous cytoplasmic distribution in transfected cells. In rotavirus SA11-infected cells, NSP5 synthesis was detectable at 2 h postinfection. However, the newly formed 26-kDa NSP5 was not converted to the 28- to 35-kDa forms until approximately 2 h later. Also, the protein kinase activity of isolated NSP5 was not detectable until the 28- and 30- to 35-kDa NSP5 forms had been formed. NSP5 immunoprecipitated from extracts of transfected COS-7 cells was active in autophosphorylation in vitro, demonstrating that other viral proteins were not required for this function. Treatment of NSP5-expressing cells with staurosporine, a broad-range protein kinase inhibitor, had only a limited negative effect on the phosphorylation of the viral polypeptide. Staurosporine did not inhibit autophosphorylation of NSP5 in vitro. Together, the data support the idea that NSP5 has an autophosphorylation activity that is positively regulated by addition of phosphate residues at some positions.  相似文献   

7.
Rotavirus is a major cause of infantile gastroenteritis with a multifactorial pathogenesis. As with many other pathogens, rotavirus infection and replication leads to rearrangement of the cytoskeleton with disorganization of cytoskeletal elements such as actin and cytokeratin through a calcium-dependent process that has not been fully characterized. The rotavirus enterotoxin NSP4, shown previously to elevate intracellular calcium levels when added exogenously as well as when expressed intracellularly, is a key player in intracellular calcium regulation during rotavirus infection. Here, we investigated the role NSP4 may play in actin rearrangement. Expression of NSP4 fused to enhanced green fluorescent protein (NSP4-EGFP), but not expression of EGFP alone, caused stabilization of long cellular projections in fully confluent HEK 293 cells. Cells expressing NSP4-EGFP for 24 h were also resistant to cell rounding induced by cytochalasin D. Quantification of filamentous actin (F-actin) content by using rhodamine-conjugated phalloidin and flow cytometry showed an elevated F-actin content in NSP4-EGFP-expressing and rotavirus-infected cells in comparison with that in nonexpressing and noninfected cells. Normalization of intracellular calcium levels prevented alterations of F-actin content. Observed changes in F-actin amounts correlated with the increased activation of the actin-remodeling protein cofilin. These calcium-dependent actin rearrangements induced by intracellular NSP4 expression may contribute to rotavirus pathogenesis by interfering with cellular processes dependent on subcortical actin remodeling, including ion transport and viral release.  相似文献   

8.
The rotavirus nonstructural protein NSP1 is the least conserved protein in the rotavirus genome, and its function in the replication cycle is not known. We employed NSP1 as bait in the yeast two-hybrid interaction trap to identify candidate cellular partners of NSP1 that may provide clues to its function. Interferon regulatory factor 3 (IRF-3) was identified as an NSP1 interactor. NSP1 synthesized in rotavirus-infected cells bound IRF-3 in a glutathione S-transferase pull-down assay, indicating that the interaction was not unique to the two-hybrid system. NSP1 of murine rotavirus strain EW also interacted with IRF-3. NSP1 deletion and point mutants were constructed to map domains important in the interaction between NSP1 and IRF-3. The data suggest that a binding domain resides in the C terminus of NSP1 and that the N-terminal conserved zinc finger is important but not sufficient to mediate binding to IRF-3. We predict that a role for NSP1 in rotavirus-infected cells is to inhibit activation of IRF-3 and diminish the cellular interferon response.  相似文献   

9.
Exotoxin Y (ExoY) is a type III secretion system effector found in ~ 90% of the Pseudomonas aeruginosa isolates. Although it is known that ExoY causes inter-endothelial gaps and vascular leak, the mechanisms by which this occurs are poorly understood. Using both a bacteria-delivered and a codon-optimized conditionally expressed ExoY, we report that this toxin is a dual soluble adenylyl and guanylyl cyclase that results in intracellular cAMP and cGMP accumulation. The enzymatic activity of ExoY caused phosphorylation of endothelial Tau serine 214, accumulation of insoluble Tau, inter-endothelial cell gap formation, and increased macromolecular permeability. To discern whether the cAMP or cGMP signal was responsible for Tau phosphorylation and barrier disruption, pulmonary microvascular endothelial cells were engineered for the conditional expression of either wild-type guanylyl cyclase, which synthesizes cGMP, or a mutated guanylyl cyclase, which synthesizes cAMP. Sodium nitroprusside stimulation of the cGMP-generating cyclase resulted in transient Tau serine 214 phosphorylation and gap formation, whereas stimulation of the cAMP-generating cyclase induced a robust increase in Tau serine 214 phosphorylation, gap formation, and macromolecular permeability. These results indicate that the cAMP signal is the dominant stimulus for Tau phosphorylation. Hence, ExoY is a promiscuous cyclase and edema factor that uses cAMP and, to some extent, cGMP to induce the hyperphosphorylation and insolubility of endothelial Tau. Because hyperphosphorylated and insoluble Tau are hallmarks in neurodegenerative tauopathies such as Alzheimer disease, acute Pseudomonas infections cause a pathophysiological sequela in endothelium previously recognized only in chronic neurodegenerative diseases.  相似文献   

10.
Rotaviruses are one of the worldwide leading causes of gastroenteritis in children under 5 yr old. The rotavirus nonstructural NSP5 is a phosphoprotein implicated in viroplasms formation, whereas NSP6 could have a possible regulatory role of NSP5. It has been reported that N- and C-termini of NSP5 are important for amount of protein is required for structural analysis, efficient expression systems are required. His-tag fusion at the C-terminus and glutathione-S-transferase (GST)-fusion at the N-terminus were used as expression systems, and conditions for recombinant proteins expression were obtained. His-tag fusion was not efficient to produce NSP5 (2% of total protein), but NSP6 was expressed in higher amounts (11% of total protein). In contrast, GST-NSP5 and GST-NSP6 proteins correspond to 34 and 31% of the total proteins, respectively. GST-fusions seem to have a protective effect against nonstructural rotavirus protein toxicity in Escherichia coli; however, in both systems, NSP5 and NSP6 recombinant proteins were expressed as inclusion bodies. Conditions for solubilization and purification of recombinant proteins were achieved. This is the first report of expression and purification of NSP5 and NSP6 recombinant proteins in suitable amounts for further structural analysis.  相似文献   

11.
NSP5 (NS26), the product of rotavirus gene 11, is a phosphoprotein whose role in the virus replication cycle is unknown. To gain further insight into its function, we obtained monoclonal antibodies against the baculovirus-expressed protein. By immunoprecipitation and immunoblotting experiments, we showed that (i) NSP5 appears in many different phosphorylated forms in rotavirus-infected cells; (ii) immunoprecipitated NSP5 from rotavirus-infected cells can be phosphorylated in vitro by incubation with ATP; (iii) NSP5, produced either by transient transfection of rotavirus gene 11 or by infection by gene 11 recombinant vaccinia virus or baculovirus, can be phosphorylated in vivo and in vitro; (iv) NSP5 expressed in Escherichia coli is phosphorylated in vitro, and thus NSP5 is a potential protein kinase; and (v) NSP5 forms dimers and interacts with NSP2. The intracellular localization of NSP5 in the course of rotavirus infection and after transient expression in COS7 cells has also been investigated. In rotavirus-infected cells, NSP5 is localized in viroplasms, but it is widespread throughout the cytoplasm of transfected COS7 cells. NSP5 produced by transfected COS7 cells did not acquire the multiphosphorylated forms observed in rotavirus-infected COS7 cells. Thus, there is a tight correlation between the localization of NSP5 in the viroplasms and its protein kinase activity in vivo or in vitro. Our results suggest that cellular or viral cofactors are indispensable to fully phosphorylate NSP5 and to reach its intracellular localization.  相似文献   

12.
Chicken erythroid ankyrin undergoes a fairly rapid cycle of cytoskeletal association, dissociation, and turnover. In addition, the cytoskeletal association of ankyrin is regulated by phosphorylation. Treatment of erythroid cells with serine and threonine phosphatase inhibitors stimulated the hyperphosphorylation of the 225- and 205-kDa ankyrin isoforms, and dissociated the bulk of these isoforms from cytoskeletal spectrin. In vitro binding studies have shown that this dissociation of ankyrin from spectrin in vivo can be attributed to a reduced ability of hyperphosphorylated ankyrin to bind spectrin. Interestingly, a significant fraction of detergent insoluble ankyrin accumulates in a spectrin-independent pool. At least some of this spectrin-independent pool of ankyrin is complexed with the AE1 anion exchanger, and the solubility properties of this pool are also regulated by phosphorylation. Treatment of cells with serine and threonine phosphatase inhibitors had no effect on ankyrin/AE1 complex formation. However, these inhibitors were sufficient to shift ankyrin/AE1 complexes from the detergent insoluble to the soluble pool. These analyses, which are the first to document the in vivo consequences of ankyrin phosphorylation, indicate that erythroid ankyrin-containing complexes can undergo dynamic rearrangements in response to changes in phosphorylation.  相似文献   

13.
The hepatitis C virus encodes a single polyprotein that is processed by host and viral proteases to yield at least 10 mature viral proteins. The nonstructural (NS) protein 5A is a phosphoprotein, and experimental data indicate that the phosphorylation state of NS5A is important for the outcome of viral RNA replication. We were able to identify kinase inhibitors that specifically inhibit the formation of the hyperphosphorylated form of NS5A (p58) in cells. These kinase inhibitors were used for inhibitor affinity chromatography in order to identify the cellular targets of these compounds. The kinases casein kinase I (CKI), p38 MAPK, CIT (Citron Rho-interacting kinase), GAK, JNK2, PKA, RSK1/2, and RIPK2 were identified in the high affinity binding fractions of two NS5A hyperphosphorylation inhibitors (NS5A-p58-i). Even though these kinases are targets of the NS5A-p58-i, the only kinase showing an effect on NS5A hyperphosphorylation was confirmed to be CKI-alpha. Although this finding does not exclude the possibility that other kinase(s) might be involved in basal or regulatory phosphorylation of NS5A, we show here that NS5A is a direct substrate of CKI-alpha. Moreover, in vitro phosphorylation of NS5A by CKI-alpha resulted for the first time in the production of basal and hyperphosphorylated forms resembling those produced in cells. In vitro kinase reactions performed with NS5A peptides show that Ser-2204 is a preferred substrate residue for CKI-alpha after pre-phosphorylation of Ser-2201.  相似文献   

14.
Bugarcic A  Taylor JA 《Journal of virology》2006,80(24):12343-12349
NSP4, a nonstructural glycoprotein encoded by rotavirus, is involved in the morphogenesis of virus particles in the endoplasmic reticulum of infected cells. NSP4 is also implicated in the pathophysiology of rotavirus-induced diarrhea by acting as an enterotoxin. To mediate enterotoxic effects in vivo, NSP4 must be secreted or released from rotavirus-infected cells in a soluble form; however, previous studies have indicated that NSP4 is a transmembrane glycoprotein localized within endomembrane compartments in infected cells. In this study, we examined the fate of NSP4 synthesized in Caco-2 cells infected with bovine rotavirus. Our studies reveal that NSP4 is actively secreted into the culture medium, preferentially from the infected-cell apical surface. The secretion of NSP4 is dramatically inhibited by brefeldin A and monensin, suggesting that a Golgi-dependent pathway is involved in release of the protein. In agreement with the proposed involvement of the Golgi apparatus during secretion, secreted NSP4 appears to undergo additional posttranslational modification compared to its cell-associated counterpart and is partially resistant to deglycosylation by endoglycosidase H. Our experiments identify a novel, soluble form of NSP4 secreted from virus-infected cells with the potential to carry out the enterotoxigenic role previously attributed to recombinant forms of the protein.  相似文献   

15.
Rotavirus morphogenesis starts in intracellular inclusion bodies called viroplasms. RNA replication and packaging are mediated by several viral proteins, of which VP1, the RNA-dependent RNA polymerase, and VP2, the core scaffolding protein, were shown to be sufficient to provide replicase activity in vitro. In vivo, however, viral replication complexes also contain the nonstructural proteins NSP2 and NSP5, which were shown to be essential for replication, to interact with each other, and to form viroplasm-like structures (VLS) when coexpressed in uninfected cells. In order to gain a better understanding of the intermediates formed during viral replication, this work focused on the interactions of NSP5 with VP1, VP2, and NSP2. We demonstrated a strong interaction of VP1 with NSP5 but only a weak one with NSP2 in cotransfected cells in the absence of other viral proteins or viral RNA. By contrast, we failed to coimmunoprecipitate VP2 with anti-NSP5 antibodies or NSP5 with anti-VP2 antibodies. We constructed a tagged form of VP1, which was found to colocalize in viroplasms and in VLS formed by NSP5 and NSP2. The tagged VP1 was able to replace VP1 structurally by being incorporated into progeny viral particles. When applying anti-tag-VP1 or anti-NSP5 antibodies, coimmunoprecipitation of tagged VP1 with NSP5 was found. Using deletion mutants of NSP5 or different fragments of NSP5 fused to enhanced green fluorescent protein, we identified the 48 C-terminal amino acids as the region essential for interaction with VP1.  相似文献   

16.
Rotavirus replication and virus assembly take place in electrodense spherical structures known as viroplasms whose main components are the viral proteins NSP2 and NSP5. The viroplasms are produced since early times after infection and seem to grow by stepwise addition of viral proteins and by fusion, however, the mechanism of viropIasms formation is unknown. In this study we found that the viroplasms surface colocalized with microtubules, and seem to be caged by a microtubule network. Moreover inhibition of microtubule assembly with nocodazole interfered with viroplasms growth in rotavirus infected cells. We searched for a physical link between viroplasms and microtubules by co-immunoprecipitation assays, and we found that the proteins NSP2 and NSP5 were co-immunoprecipitated with anti-tubulin in rotavirus infected cells and also when they were transiently co-expressed or individually expressed. These results indicate that a functional microtubule network is needed for viroplasm growth presumably due to the association of viroplasms with microtubules via NSP2 and NSP5.  相似文献   

17.
Rotavirus mRNAs are capped but not polyadenylated, and viral proteins are translated by the cellular translation machinery. This is accomplished through the action of the viral nonstructural protein NSP3, which specifically binds the 3' consensus sequence of viral mRNAs and interacts with the eukaryotic translation initiation factor eIF4G I. To further our understanding of the role of NSP3 in rotavirus replication, we looked for other cellular proteins capable of interacting with this viral protein. Using the yeast two-hybrid assay, we identified a novel cellular protein-binding partner for rotavirus NSP3. This 110-kDa cellular protein, named RoXaN (rotavirus X protein associated with NSP3), contains a minimum of three regions predicted to be involved in protein-protein or nucleic acid-protein interactions. A tetratricopeptide repeat region, a protein-protein interaction domain most often found in multiprotein complexes, is present in the amino-terminal region. In the carboxy terminus, at least five zinc finger motifs are observed, further suggesting the capacity of RoXaN to bind other proteins or nucleic acids. Between these two regions exists a paxillin leucine-aspartate repeat (LD) motif which is involved in protein-protein interactions. RoXaN is capable of interacting with NSP3 in vivo and during rotavirus infection. Domains of interaction were mapped and correspond to the dimerization domain of NSP3 (amino acids 163 to 237) and the LD domain of RoXaN (amino acids 244 to 341). The interaction between NSP3 and RoXaN does not impair the interaction between NSP3 and eIF4G I, and a ternary complex made of NSP3, RoXaN, and eIF4G I can be detected in rotavirus-infected cells, implicating RoXaN in translation regulation.  相似文献   

18.
Rotavirus (RV) replication occurs in cytoplasmic inclusions called viroplasms whose formation requires the interactions of RV proteins NSP2 and NSP5; however, the specific role(s) of NSP2 in viroplasm assembly remains largely unknown. To study viroplasm formation in the context of infection, we characterized two new monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) specific for NSP2. These MAbs show high-affinity binding to NSP2 and differentially recognize distinct pools of NSP2 in RV-infected cells; a previously unrecognized cytoplasmically dispersed NSP2 (dNSP2) is detected by an N-terminal binding MAb, and previously known viroplasmic NSP2 (vNSP2) is detected by a C-terminal binding MAb. Kinetic experiments in RV-infected cells demonstrate that dNSP2 is associated with NSP5 in nascent viroplasms that lack vNSP2. As viroplasms mature, dNSP2 remains in viroplasms, and the amount of diffuse cytoplasmic dNSP2 increases. vNSP2 is detected in increasing amounts later in infection in the maturing viroplasm, suggesting a conversion of dNSP2 into vNSP2. Immunoprecipitation experiments and reciprocal Western blot analysis confirm that there are two different forms of NSP2 that assemble in complexes with NSP5, VP1, VP2, and tubulin. dNSP2 associates with hypophosphorylated NSP5 and acetylated tubulin, which is correlated with stabilized microtubules, while vNSP2 associates with hyperphosphorylated NSP5. Mass spectroscopy analysis of NSP2 complexes immunoprecipitated from RV-infected cell lysates show both forms of NSP2 are phosphorylated, with a greater proportion of vNSP2 being phosphorylated compared to dNSP2. Together, these data suggest that dNSP2 interacts with viral proteins, including hypophosphorylated NSP5, to initiate viroplasm formation, while viroplasm maturation includes phosphorylation of NSP5 and vNSP2.  相似文献   

19.
Rotavirus is a nonenveloped virus with a three-layered capsid. The inner layer, made of VP2, encloses the genomic RNA and two minor proteins, VP1 and VP3, with which it forms the viral core. Core assembly is coupled with RNA viral replication and takes place in definite cellular structures termed viroplasms. Replication and encapsidation mechanisms are still not fully understood, and little information is available about the intermolecular interactions that may exist among the viroplasmic proteins. NSP2 and NSP5 are two nonstructural viroplasmic proteins that have been shown to interact with each other. They have also been found to be associated with precore replication intermediates that are precursors of the viral core. In this study, we show that NSP5 interacts with VP2 in infected cells. This interaction was demonstrated with recombinant proteins expressed from baculovirus recombinants or in bacterial systems. NSP5-VP2 interaction also affects the stability of VP6 bound to VP2 assemblies. The data presented showed evidence, for the first time, of an interaction between VP2 and a nonstructural rotavirus protein. Published data and the interaction demonstrated here suggest a possible role for NSP5 as an adapter between NSP2 and the replication complex VP2-VP1-VP3 in core assembly and RNA encapsidation, modulating the role of NSP2 as a molecular motor involved in the packaging of viral mRNA.  相似文献   

20.
Rotavirus nonstructural protein NSP2, a functional octamer, is critical for the formation of viroplasms, which are exclusive sites for replication and packaging of the segmented double-stranded RNA (dsRNA) rotavirus genome. As a component of replication intermediates, NSP2 is also implicated in various replication-related activities. In addition to sequence-independent single-stranded RNA-binding and helix-destabilizing activities, NSP2 exhibits monomer-associated nucleoside and 5' RNA triphosphatase (NTPase/RTPase) activities that are mediated by a conserved H225 residue within a narrow enzymatic cleft. Lack of a 5' γ-phosphate is a common feature of the negative-strand RNA [(-)RNA] of the packaged dsRNA segments in rotavirus. Strikingly, all (-)RNAs (of group A rotaviruses) have a 5' GG dinucleotide sequence. As the only rotavirus protein with 5' RTPase activity, NSP2 is implicated in the removal of the γ-phosphate from the rotavirus (-)RNA. To understand how NSP2, despite its sequence-independent RNA-binding property, recognizes (-)RNA to hydrolyze the γ-phosphate within the catalytic cleft, we determined a crystal structure of NSP2 in complex with the 5' consensus sequence of minus-strand rotavirus RNA. Our studies show that the 5' GG of the bound oligoribonucleotide interacts extensively with highly conserved residues in the NSP2 enzymatic cleft. Although these residues provide GG-specific interactions, surface plasmon resonance studies suggest that the C-terminal helix and other basic residues outside the enzymatic cleft account for sequence-independent RNA binding of NSP2. A novel observation from our studies, which may have implications in viroplasm formation, is that the C-terminal helix of NSP2 exhibits two distinct conformations and engages in domain-swapping interactions, which result in the formation of NSP2 octamer chains.  相似文献   

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