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The transmembrane domain of the E5 oncoprotein contains functionally discrete helical faces
Authors:Adduci A J  Schlegel R
Institution:Department of Pathology, Georgetown University School of Medicine, Washington, District of Columbia 20007, USA.
Abstract:The E5 protein of bovine papillomavirus is a 44-amino acid, Golgi-resident, type II transmembrane protein that efficiently transforms immortalized mouse fibroblasts. The transmembrane (TM) domain of E5 is not only critical for biological activity, it also regulates interactions with cellular targets including the platelet derived growth factor receptor (PDGF-R) and the 16-kDa subunit of the vacuolar proton ATPase (V-ATPase). In order to define the specific TM amino acids essential for E5 biological and biochemical activity, we performed scanning alanine mutagenesis on 25 of the 30 potential TM residues and genetically mapped discrete alpha-helical domains which separately regulated the ability of E5 to bind PDGF-R, activate PDGF-R, and to form oligomers. Alanine substitutions at positions 17, 21, and 24 (which lie on the same helical face) greatly inhibited E5 association with the PDGF-R, suggesting that this region comprises the receptor binding site. PDGF-R activation also mapped to a specific but broader domain in E5; mutant proteins with alanines on one helical face (positions 8, 9, 11, 16, 19, 22, and 23) continued to induce PDGF-R tyrosine phosphorylation, whereas mutant proteins with alanines on the opposite helical face (positions 7, 10, 13, 17, 18, 21, 24, and 25) did not, indicating that the latter helical face was critical for mediating receptor transphosphorylation. Interestingly, these "activation-defective" mutants segregated into two classes: 1) those that were unable to form dimers but that could still form higher order oligomers and transform cells, and 2) those that were defective for PDGF-R binding and were transformation-incompetent. These findings suggest that the ability of E5 to dimerize and to bind PDGF-R is important for receptor activation. However, since several transformation-competent E5 mutants were defective for binding and/or activating PDGF-R, it is apparent that E5 must have additional activities to mediate cell transformation. Finally, alanine substitutions also defined two separate helical faces critical for E5/E5 interactions (homodimer formation). Thus, our data identify distinct E5 helical faces that regulate homologous and heterologous intramembrane interactions and define two new classes of biologically active TM mutants.
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