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71.
In this report the basis for the structural architecture of the envelope of hantaviruses, family Bunyaviridae, is systematically studied by the interactions of two glycoproteins N and C (Gn and Gc, respectively) and their respective disulfide bridge-mediated homo- and heteromeric oligomerizations. In virion extracts Gn and Gc associated in both homo- and hetero-oligomers which were, at least partially, thiol bridge mediated. Due to strong homo-oligomerization, the hetero-oligomers of Gn and Gc are likely to be mediated by homo-oligomeric subunits. A reversible pH-induced disappearance of a neutralizing epitope in Gc and dissociation of the Gn-Gc complex at pH values below 6.2 provide proteochemical evidence for the fusogenicity of Gc. Incomplete inactivation of virions at acidic pH indicates that additional factors are required for hantavirus fusion, as in the case of pestiviruses of the Flaviviridae. Based on similarities to class II fusion proteins, a structure model was created of hantavirus Gc using the Semliki Forest virus E1 protein as a template. In total, 10 binding regions for Gn were found by peptide scanning, of which five represent homotypic (GnI to GnV) and five represent heterotypic (GcI to GcV) interaction sites that we assign as intra- and interspike connections, respectively. In conclusion, the glycoprotein associations were compiled to a model wherein the surface of hantaviruses is formed of homotetrameric Gn complexes interconnected with Gc homodimers. This organization would create the grid-like surface pattern described earlier for hantaviruses in negatively stained electron microscopy specimens.Hantaviruses, a genus in the family Bunyaviridae, are rodent- and insectivore-borne zoonotic viruses that are seemingly apathogenic to the carrier rodents (39, 57). A number of hantaviruses are human pathogens that in areas of endemicity are responsible for two diseases: hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome in Eurasia and hantavirus cardiopulmonary syndrome in the Americas (49, 57, 61). Hantaviruses are enveloped viruses and have a trisegmented, single-stranded, negative-sense RNA genome that encodes an RNA-dependent RNA polymerase, two glycoproteins, and a nucleocapsid protein (22, 34, 49, 60). During assembly, the four proteins and the RNA genome are packed into a round or a pleomorphic particle enveloped with a lipid bilayer. The interactions among the structural components of hantavirus have not been described in sufficient detail to construct the basic architecture of the virus particle or to understand the mechanisms of its assembly and entry.The envelope glycoproteins are expressed as a precursor polypeptide, which is cotranslationally cleaved after a conserved pentapeptide WAASA into an N- and C-terminal portion prior to maturation of the envelope glycoproteins proteins N and C (Gn and Gc, respectively) (27). In the family Bunyaviridae the transport of newly synthesized glycoproteins from endoplasmic reticulum to the Golgi apparatus requires the presence of both Gn and Gc (36, 37, 50, 53). Recombinant coexpression of the hantavirus glycoproteins is sufficient to achieve proper folding and the expected cellular localization at the Golgi even when the glycoproteins are not expressed from a common precursor (6, 36, 50). This suggests that the expression of the precursor is not a prerequisite for interactions between Gn and Gc during maturation in which the formation of a Gn-Gc complex results in exposure of a conformational Golgi apparatus-targeting signal, present only in the heterodimeric Gn-Gc complex (6, 50).Entry of enveloped viruses via recognition of the cell surface receptors and subsequent fusion of the virus and cell membranes are accomplished by viral glycoproteins which often appear in homo- and/or heteromeric complexes. For example, the E1 and E2 of Semliki Forest virus (SFV) form a trimer of heterodimers (45), and the E protein of tick-borne encephalitis virus (TBEV) forms a homodimer (41) while the hemagglutinin of influenza A virus (67) and the S protein of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus associate in homotrimers (4, 5). The mature glycoproteins extracted from virions of Uukuniemi phlebovirus exist as homodimers (44), whereas glycoprotein complex formations of many other members of the Bunyaviridae have not been defined. The viral fusion proteins can be classified into class I, class II, and class III (25). Between classes I and II, a distinguishing property is the orientation of a fusion protein in the metastable state. The class I proteins are oriented perpendicular to the viral membrane, and the class II protein is parallel to the viral membrane (7). The class II viral fusion proteins assemble in virions as metastable homo- or heterodimeric complexes which, upon exposure to low pH, fuse the viral and target cellular membranes (7). This process begins with a conformational change in the fusion protein, leading to the revelation of its fusion loop, which binds to the cellular target membrane (7). Additionally, the formation of a homotrimeric fusion protein complex and structural changes that drive the fusion into completion occur (7).Understanding the multimeric status, protein-protein interactions, and pH-dependent conformational changes of glycoproteins is paramount to our understanding of selectivity in cell receptor binding and mechanisms of virus entry. It is unknown whether higher-order oligomeric complexes are found in hantavirus particles. Many neutralizing monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) have been isolated and by MAb escape mutants shown to recognize epitopes in both Gn and Gc, typically localized at discontinuous sites (15). Different neutralization mechanisms for hantavirus MAbs have been elucidated. These range from inhibiting receptor binding to inhibition of virus fusion (2, 23, 28, 30, 65). It is known that hantaviral glycoproteins possess fusogenic activity. Glycoproteins of hantaviruses that cause hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome can induce syncytia when subjected to low pH (32, 35), and infection by Hantaan virus was shown to use low-pH-dependent clathrin-mediated endocytosis (19). Hantavirus Gc is suggested to be a class II fusion protein (13, 55), and the N-linked glycosylation of Gc is essential for cell fusion activity (70); but no clear understanding exists of the fusion mechanism or conformational changes that mediate uncoating of virions after entry.Our study supports the hypothesis that the Gc of hantaviruses is a class II fusion protein. We show the interaction between Gn and Gc to be pH sensitive and dissociation to start at a pH below 6.4. The low-pH-induced Gc dissociation from Gn was reversible, suggesting that the conformational changes in Gc are also reversible. Both glycoproteins were found to form homodimeric and hetero-oligomeric complexes in virion extracts through thiol bridging. Interaction studies further suggested that the protruding part of the spike complex in the hantavirus virion consists of four Gn subunits and that the spike complexes interconnect with homodimeric Gc subunits. Finally, we mapped and compiled the interaction sites of Gn and Gc proteins in a class II fusion protein three-dimensional (3D) model of Gc. The identified Gn-Gn, Gn-Gc, and Gc-Gc interaction sites may play an important role in glycoprotein folding and maturation, spike assembly, virus fusion, and neutralization of infection.  相似文献   
72.
Antibodies provide a sensitive indicator of proteins displayed by bacteria during sepsis. Because signals produced by infection are naturally amplified during the antibody response, host immunity can be used to identify biomarkers for proteins that are present at levels currently below detectable limits. We developed a microarray comprising ∼70% of the 4066 proteins contained within the Yersinia pestis proteome to identify antibody biomarkers distinguishing plague from infections caused by other bacterial pathogens that may initially present similar clinical symptoms. We first examined rabbit antibodies produced against proteomes extracted from Y. pestis, Burkholderia mallei, Burkholderia cepecia, Burkholderia pseudomallei, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Salmonella typhimurium, Shigella flexneri, and Escherichia coli, all pathogenic Gram-negative bacteria. These antibodies enabled detection of shared cross-reactive proteins, fingerprint proteins common for two or more bacteria, and signature proteins specific to each pathogen. Recognition by rabbit and non-human primate antibodies involved less than 100 of the thousands of proteins present within the Y. pestis proteome. Further antigen binding patterns were revealed that could distinguish plague from anthrax, caused by the Gram-positive bacterium Bacillus anthracis, using sera from acutely infected or convalescent primates. Thus, our results demonstrate potential biomarkers that are either specific to one strain or common to several species of pathogenic bacteria.Plague is a disease of historical epidemics that remains an important public health problem in limited areas of the world (1). Disease transmission usually occurs through transfer of the bacillus Yersinia pestis by the bite of a flea. However, less frequent direct transfer of viable bacteria by respiratory droplets may result in primary pneumonic infection. A transient intracellular infection of phagocytic cells (2) occurs during the earliest stage of bubonic plague followed by rapid extracellular expansion of bacteria in lymph nodes. The prototypical lymphatic infection of bubonic plague may also progress to bacteremic or pneumonic infection with a very high rate of fatality if there is not rapid intervention by antibiotic treatment (3). Among the reported cases occurring annually in the United States, 15% were fatal in 2006 (4). Although only small numbers of human cases occur each year in North America, a more substantial incidence of plague is found in wild animal populations (5) with seroprevalence rates of up to 100% among mammalian carnivores in endemic areas (6). The geographic range of infection within feral populations is presently unknown but may contribute significantly to the reservoir of potential disease transmission to humans.Diagnostic tests and prophylactic vaccines or therapies must rapidly distinguish or protect against the many infectious diseases that present similar initial symptoms. Specific diagnostic tests and vaccines for plague are public health priorities primarily because of the threat from potential acts of terrorism. Because human deaths may occur within 48 h of infection (7), delays in proper diagnosis have led to disease complications and fatalities from plague (8). Yet the identification of bacterial sepsis at the earliest stage of clinical presentation is challenging because of the generalized nature of disease symptoms and the difficulty in culturing infectious agents or isolating sufficient material to identify the infectious agent by amplification of genetic markers. Although host antibody responses provide a sensitive indicator of current or past infection, insufficient numbers of validated biomarkers are available, and extensive antibody cross-reactivity among Gram-negative pathogens (912) complicates the direct analysis of serum.Identification of plague-specific antibody interactions is a daunting task because of the complexity of the bacterial proteome encountered by the host during infection. The chromosome of Y. pestis CO92 encodes ∼3885 proteins, whereas an additional 181 are episomally expressed by pCD1, pMT1, and pPCP1. For comparison, the proteome of Y. pestis KIM1 contains 4202 individual proteins (13), 87% in common with CO92 (14), and the closely related enteric pathogen Yersinia pseudotuberculosis (15, 16) contains ∼4038 proteins (chromosome plus plasmids). Recent technical advances have facilitated the development of microarrays comprising full-length, functional proteins that represent nearly complete proteomes. For example, Zhu et al. (17) reported the development of a proteome microarray containing the full-length, purified expression products of over 93% of the 6280 protein-coding genes of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, and Schmid et al. (18) described the human antibody repertoire for vaccinia virus recognition by using a viral proteome microarray. This approach opens the possibility of examining the entire bacterial proteome to elucidate proteins or protein pathways that are essential to pathogenicity or host immunity. We sought to identify biomarkers that could distinguish plague from diseases caused by other bacterial pathogens by measuring host antibody recognition of individual proteins contained within the Y. pestis proteome. The previously reported genomic sequences of Y. pestis strains KIM (13) and CO92 (14), sharing 95% identity, were used for reference. Approximately 77% of the putative Y. pestis proteome can be classified by known homologies. We successfully expressed and purified the majority (70%) of the 4066 ORFs encoded by the chromosome and plasmids of Y. pestis KIM and arrayed these products onto glass slides coated with nitrocellulose. The Y. pestis ORFs subcloned into expression vectors were fully sequenced to confirm quality and identity before use. Different approaches for studying the antibody repertoire for plague in rabbits and non-human primates were compared. Based on results from experiments using the Y. pestis proteome microarray, we identified new candidates for antibody biomarkers of bacterial infections and patterns of cross-reactivity that may be useful diagnostic tools.  相似文献   
73.
74.
WW domain binding protein 1‐like (WBP1L), also known as outcome predictor of acute leukaemia 1 (OPAL1), is a transmembrane adaptor protein, expression of which correlates with ETV6‐RUNX1 (t(12;21)(p13;q22)) translocation and favourable prognosis in childhood leukaemia. It has a broad expression pattern in haematopoietic and in non‐haematopoietic cells. However, its physiological function has been unknown. Here, we show that WBP1L negatively regulates signalling through a critical chemokine receptor CXCR4 in multiple leucocyte subsets and cell lines. We also show that WBP1L interacts with NEDD4‐family ubiquitin ligases and regulates CXCR4 ubiquitination and expression. Moreover, analysis of Wbp1l‐deficient mice revealed alterations in B cell development and enhanced efficiency of bone marrow cell transplantation. Collectively, our data show that WBP1L is a novel regulator of CXCR4 signalling and haematopoiesis.  相似文献   
75.
76.
Dynamin is essential for clathrin-dependent coated vesicle formation. It is required for membrane budding at a late stage during the transition from a fully formed pit to a pinched-off vesicle. Dynamin may also fulfill other roles during earlier stages of vesicle formation. We have screened about 16,000 small molecules and have identified 1, named here dynasore, that interferes in vitro with the GTPase activity of dynamin1, dynamin2, and Drp1, the mitochondrial dynamin, but not of other small GTPases. Dynasore acts as a potent inhibitor of endocytic pathways known to depend on dynamin by rapidly blocking coated vesicle formation within seconds of dynasore addition. Two types of coated pit intermediates accumulate during dynasore treatment, U-shaped, half formed pits and O-shaped, fully formed pits, captured while pinching off. Thus, dynamin acts at two steps during clathrin coat formation; GTP hydrolysis is probably needed at both steps.  相似文献   
77.
78.
79.
Previous results from a genome scan in an F(2) Iberian × Meishan pig intercross showed several chromosome regions associated with litter size traits in this species. In order to identify candidate genes underlying these quantitative trait loci (QTL), we performed an ovary gene expression analysis during the sow's pregnancy. F(2) sows were ranked by their estimated breeding values for prolificacy: six sows with the highest estimated breeding value (EBV) (i.e., high prolificacy) and six sows with the lowest EBV (low prolificacy) were selected. Samples were hybridized using an Affymetrix GeneChip porcine genome array. Statistical analysis with a mixed model approach identified 221 differentially expressed probes, representing 189 genes. These genes were functionally annotated in order to identify genetic pathways overrepresented in this list. Among the functional groups most represented was, in first position, immune system response activation against external stimulus. The second group consisted of integrated genes that regulate maternal homeostasis by complement and coagulation cascades. A third group was involved in lipid and fatty acid enzymes of metabolic processes, which participate in the steroidogenesis pathway. In order to identify powerful candidate genes for prolificacy, the second approach of this study was to merge microarray data with the QTL positional information affecting litter size, previously detected in the same experimental cross. As a result, we have identified 27 differentially expressed genes colocalizing with QTL for litter size traits, which fulfill the biological, positional, and functional criteria.  相似文献   
80.
Pectins are the most complex polysaccharides of the plant cell wall. Based on the number of methylations, acetylations and glycosidic linkages present in their structures, it is estimated that up to 67 transferase activities are involved in pectin biosynthesis. Pectic galactans constitute a major part of pectin in the form of side‐chains of rhamnogalacturonan‐I. In Arabidopsis, galactan synthase 1 (GALS1) catalyzes the addition of galactose units from UDP‐Gal to growing β‐1,4‐galactan chains. However, the mechanisms for obtaining varying degrees of polymerization remain poorly understood. In this study, we show that AtGALS1 is bifunctional, catalyzing both the transfer of galactose from UDP‐α‐d ‐Gal and the transfer of an arabinopyranose from UDP‐β‐l ‐Arap to galactan chains. The two substrates share a similar structure, but UDP‐α‐d ‐Gal is the preferred substrate, with a 10‐fold higher affinity. Transfer of Arap to galactan prevents further addition of galactose residues, resulting in a lower degree of polymerization. We show that this dual activity occurs both in vitro and in vivo. The herein described bifunctionality of AtGALS1 may suggest that plants can produce the incredible structural diversity of polysaccharides without a dedicated glycosyltransferase for each glycosidic linkage.  相似文献   
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