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 15 毫秒
1.
Daniel Barajas 《Virology》2010,397(2):358-368
Post-translational modifications of viral replication proteins could be widespread phenomena during the replication of plus-stranded RNA viruses. In this article, we identify two lysines in the tombusvirus p33 replication co-factor involved in ubiquitination and show that the same lysines are also important for the p33 to interact with the host Vps23p ESCRT-I factor. We find that the interaction of p33 with Vps23p is also affected by a “late-domain”-like sequence in p33. The combined mutations of the two lysines and the late-domain-like sequences in p33 reduced replication of a replicon RNA of Tomato bushy stunt virus in yeast model host, in plant protoplasts, and plant leaves, suggesting that p33-Vps23p ESCRT protein interaction affects tombusvirus replication. Using ubiquitin-mimicking p33 chimeras, we demonstrate that high level of p33 ubiquitination is inhibitory for TBSV replication. These findings argue that optimal level of p33 ubiquitination plays a regulatory role during tombusvirus infections.  相似文献   

2.
Shapka N  Stork J  Nagy PD 《Virology》2005,343(1):65-78
Replication of the nonsegmented, plus-stranded RNA genome of Cucumber necrosis tombusvirus (CNV) requires two essential overlapping viral-coded replication proteins, the p33 replication co-factor and the p92 RNA-dependent RNA polymerase. In this paper, we demonstrate that p33 is phosphorylated in vivo and in vitro by a membrane-bound plant kinase. Phosphorylation of p33 was also demonstrated in vitro by using purified protein kinase C. The related p28 replication protein of Turnip crinkle virus was also found to be phosphorylated in vivo, suggesting that posttranslational modification of replication proteins is a general feature among members of the large Tombusviridae family. Based on in vitro studies with purified recombinant p33, we show evidence for phosphorylation of threonine and serine residues adjacent to the essential RNA-binding site in p33. Phosphorylation-mimicking aspartic acid mutations rendered p33 nonfunctional in plant protoplasts and in yeast, a model host. Comparable mutations within the prereadthrough portion of p92 did not abolish replication. The nonphosphorylation-mimicking alanine mutants of CNV were able to replicate in plant protoplasts and in yeast, albeit with reduced efficiency when compared to the wild type. These alanine mutants also showed altered subgenomic RNA synthesis and a reduction in the ratio between plus- and minus-strand RNAs produced during CNV infection. These findings suggest that phosphorylation of threonine/serine residues adjacent to the essential RNA-binding site in the auxiliary p33 protein likely plays a role in viral RNA replication and subgenomic RNA synthesis during tombusvirus infections.  相似文献   

3.
Cheng CP  Jaag HM  Jonczyk M  Serviene E  Nagy PD 《Virology》2007,368(2):238-248
Rapid RNA virus evolution is a major problem due to the devastating diseases caused by human, animal and plant-pathogenic RNA viruses. A previous genome-wide screen for host factors affecting recombination in Tomato bushy stunt tombusvirus (TBSV), a small monopartite plant virus, identified Xrn1p 5'-3' exoribonuclease of yeast, a model host, whose absence led to increased appearance of recombinants [Serviene, E., Shapka, N., Cheng, C.P., Panavas, T., Phuangrat, B., Baker, J., Nagy, P.D., (2005). Genome-wide screen identifies host genes affecting viral RNA recombination. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 102 (30), 10545-10550]. In this paper, we tested if over-expression of Xrn1p in yeast or expression of the analogous Xrn4p cytoplasmic 5'-3' exoribonuclease, which has similar function in RNA degradation in Arabidopsis as Xrn1p in yeast, in Nicotiana benthamiana could affect the accumulation of tombusvirus RNA. We show that over-expression of Xrn1p led to almost complete degradation of TBSV RNA replicons in yeast, suggesting that Xrn1p is involved in TBSV degradation. Infection of N. benthamiana expressing AtXrn4p with Cucumber necrosis tombusvirus (CNV) led to enhanced viral RNA degradation, suggesting that the yeast and the plant cytoplasmic 5'-3' exoribonuclease play similar roles. We also observed rapid emergence of novel CNV genomic RNA variants formed via deletions of 5' terminal sequences in N. benthamiana expressing AtXrn4p. Three of the newly emerging 5' truncated CNV variants were infectious in N. benthamiana protoplasts, whereas one CNV variant caused novel symptoms and moved systemically in N. benthamiana plants. Altogether, this paper establishes that a single plant gene can contribute to the emergence of novel viral variants.  相似文献   

4.
Na H  White KA 《Virology》2006,345(2):305-316
Tombusviridae is a large positive-strand RNA virus family. Tomato bushy stunt virus (TBSV), the type virus of this family, has a genome ending with AGCCC(-OH), termed the 3'-complementary silencer sequence (3'CSS). The 3'CSS is able to base pair with a complementary internally-located sequence, 5'GGGCU, called the replication silencer element (RSE). In TBSV, previous compensatory mutational analysis of the RSE-3'CSS interaction showed it to be functionally important for viral RNA synthesis both in vitro and in vivo. However, these investigations also revealed that the RSE and 3'CSS are very sensitive to nucleotide changes, even when base pairing potential between the two elements is maintained. Consequently, an alternative investigative approach was used in this study where the wild-type sequences of these elements were preserved and their surrounding contexts were modified. Results from these analyses, using a TBSV DI RNA, revealed important new structural requirements necessary for the RSE and 3'CSS to operate in vivo. Collectively, the data suggest that accessibility of the elements and their proximity to adjoining stem structures are important functional parameters. Based on these findings, a working structural model for the TBSV RSE-3'CSS interaction is proposed that involves coaxial stacking of adjacent helices at either end of the RSE-3'CSS interaction. Components of this structural model are extendable to potential RSE-3'CSS interactions that were identified throughout Tombusviridae by comparative sequence analysis. This survey also revealed a significant level of diversity and modularity with respect to RSEs, 3'CSSs and their structural contexts and, moreover, suggests that RSE-3'CSS interactions are prevalent in Tombusviridae and related viruses.  相似文献   

5.
Nagy PD  Wang RY  Pogany J  Hafren A  Makinen K 《Virology》2011,411(2):374-382
Many plus-strand (+)RNA viruses co-opt protein chaperones from the host cell to assist the synthesis, localization and folding of abundant viral proteins, to regulate viral replication via activation of replication proteins and to interfere with host antiviral responses. The most frequently subverted host chaperones are heat shock protein 70 (Hsp70), Hsp90 and the J-domain co-chaperones. The various roles of these host chaperones in RNA virus replication are presented to illustrate the astonishing repertoire of host chaperone functions that are subverted by RNA viruses. This review also discusses the emerging roles of cyclophilins, which are peptidyl-prolyl isomerases with chaperone functions, in replication of selected (+)RNA viruses.  相似文献   

6.
Panavas T  Stork J  Nagy PD 《Virology》2006,352(1):110-120
Plus-stranded RNA viruses replicate efficiently in infected hosts producing numerous copies of the viral RNA. One of the long-standing mysteries in RNA virus replication is the occurrence and possible role of the double-stranded (ds)RNA formed between minus- and plus-strands. Using the partially purified Cucumber necrosis virus (CNV) replicase from plants and the recombinant RNA-dependent RNA polymerase (RdRp) of Turnip crinkle virus (TCV), in this paper, we demonstrate that both CNV replicase and the related TCV RdRp can utilize dsRNA templates to produce viral plus-stranded RNA in vitro. Sequence and structure of the dsRNA around the plus-strand initiation site had a significant effect on initiation, suggesting that initiation on dsRNA templates is a rate-limiting step. In contrast, the CNV replicase could efficiently synthesize plus-strand RNA on partial dsRNAs that had the plus-strand initiation promoter "exposed", suggesting that the polymerase activity of CNV replicase is strong enough to unwind extended dsRNA regions in the template during RNA synthesis. Based on the in vitro data, we propose that dsRNA forms might have functional roles during tombus- and carmovirus replication and the AU-rich nature of the terminus could be important for opening the dsRNA structure around the plus-strand initiation promoter for tombus- and carmoviruses and possibly many other positive-strand RNA viruses.  相似文献   

7.
Tomato bushy stunt virus (TBSV) is an RNA plant virus encoding a protein of approximately 19 kDa (P19) that is involved in various activities important for pathogenicity, including virus transport and suppression of gene silencing. In this study, we provide evidence in vivo and in vitro that P19 specifically interacts with itself to predominantly form dimers, and with a novel host protein, Hin19. Hin19 has a high degree of similarity with a class of RNA-binding proteins of which many are involved in RNA processing. The binding of P19 to itself and to Hin19 both depend on a structurally important central region of P19 that was previously shown critical for its biological function in plants. Our findings provide evidence for a model in which virus spread through suppression of defense-related gene silencing involves the formation of a complex that includes P19 dimers and a newly identified host RNA-binding protein.  相似文献   

8.
Jaag HM  Stork J  Nagy PD 《Virology》2007,368(2):388-404
Previous genome-wide screens identified over 100 host genes whose deletion/down-regulation affected tombusvirus replication and 32 host genes that affected tombusvirus RNA recombination in yeast, a model host for replication of Tomato bushy stunt virus (TBSV). Down-regulation of several of the identified host genes affected the accumulation levels of p33 and p92(pol) replication proteins, raising the possibility that these host factors could be involved in the regulation of the amount of viral replication proteins and, thus, they are indirectly involved in TBSV replication and recombination. To test this model, we developed a tightly regulated expression system for recombinant p33 and p92(pol) replication proteins in yeast. We demonstrate that high accumulation level of p33 facilitated efficient viral RNA replication, while the effect of p33 level on RNA recombination was less pronounced. On the other hand, high level of p92(pol) accumulation promoted TBSV RNA recombination more efficiently than RNA replication. As predicted, Rpb11p, which is part of the polII complex, affected the accumulation levels of p33 and p92(pol) as well as altered RNA replication and recombination. An in vitro assay with the tombusvirus replicase further supported that Rpb11p affects TBSV replication and recombination only indirectly, via regulating p33 and p92(pol) levels. In contrast, the mechanism by which Rpt4p endopeptidase/ATPase and Mps1p threonine/tyrosine kinase affect TBSV recombination is different from that proposed for Rpb11p. We propose a model that the concentration (molecular crowding) of replication proteins within the viral replicase is a factor affecting viral replication and recombination.  相似文献   

9.
Yi Jiang 《Virology》2010,396(1):10-20
Previous genome-wide screens identified > 100 host genes affecting tombusvirus replication using yeast model host. One of those factors was Nsr1p (nucleolin), which is an abundant RNA-binding shuttle protein involved in rRNA maturation and ribosome assembly. We find that overexpression of Nsr1p in yeast or in Nicotiana benthamiana inhibited the accumulation of tombusvirus RNA by ∼10-fold. Regulated overexpression of Nsr1p revealed that Nsr1p should be present at the beginning of viral replication for efficient inhibition, suggesting that Nsr1p inhibits an early step in the replication process. In vitro experiments revealed that Nsr1p binds preferably to the 3′ UTR in the viral RNA. The purified recombinant Nsr1p inhibited the in vitro replication of the viral RNA in a yeast cell-free assay when preincubated with the viral RNA before the assay. These data support the model that Nsr1p/nucleolin inhibits tombusvirus replication by interfering with the recruitment of the viral RNA for replication.  相似文献   

10.
Zhang J  Simon AE 《Virology》2005,333(2):301-315
Efficient replication of plus-strand RNA viruses requires a 3' proximal core promoter and an increasingly diverse inventory of supporting elements such as enhancers, repressors, and 5' terminal sequences. While core promoters have been well characterized, much less is known about structure-functional relationships of these supporting elements. Members of the genus Carmovirus family Tombusviridae contain a hairpin (H5) proximal to the core promoter that functions as a repressor of minus-strand synthesis in vitro through an interaction between its large symmetrical internal loop (LSL) and 3' terminal bases. Turnip crinkle virus satellite RNA satC with the H5 of carmovirus Japanese iris necrosis virus or Cardamine chlorotic fleck virus (CCFV) did not accumulate to detectable levels even though 3' end base-pairing would be maintained. Replacement of portions of the satC H5 with analogous portions from CCFV revealed that the cognate LSL and lower stem were of greater importance for satC accumulation than the upper stem. In vivo selex of the H5 upper stem and terminal GNRA tetraloop revealed considerable plasticity in the upper stem, including the presence of three- to six-base terminal loops, allowed for H5 function. In vivo selex of the lower stem revealed that both a stable stem and specific base pairs contributed to satC fitness. Surprisingly, mutations in H5 had a disproportionate effect on plus-strand accumulation that was unrelated to the stability of the mutant plus-strands. In addition, fitness to accumulate in plants did not always correlate with enhanced ability to accumulate in protoplasts, suggesting that H5 may be multifunctional.  相似文献   

11.
Akira Mine  Masanori Kaido 《Virology》2010,407(2):213-224
Red clover necrotic mosaic virus (RCNMV), a positive-sense RNA virus with a bipartite genome, encodes p27 and p88 replicase proteins that are required for viral RNA replication and suppression of RNA silencing. In this study, we indentified domains in p27 and p88 responsible for their protein-protein interactions using in vitro pull-down assays with the purified recombinant proteins. Coimmunoprecipitation analysis in combination with blue-native polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis using mutated p27 proteins showed that both p27-p27 and p27-p88 interactions are essential for the formation of the 480-kDa complex, which has RCNMV-specific RNA-dependent RNA polymerase activity. Furthermore, we found a good correlation between the accumulated levels of the 480-kDa complex and replication levels and the suppression of RNA silencing activity. Our results indicate that interactions between RCNMV replicase proteins play an essential role in viral RNA replication and in suppressing RNA silencing via the 480-kDa replicase complex assembly.  相似文献   

12.
Hannah M. Jaag 《Virology》2009,386(2):344-352
The cytosolic 5′-to-3′ exoribonuclease Xrn1p plays a major role in recombination and degradation of Tomato bushy stunt tombusvirus (TBSV) replicon (rep)RNA in yeast, a model host (Serviene, E., Shapka, N., Cheng, C.P., Panavas, T., Phuangrat, B., Baker, J., and Nagy, P.D., 2005. Genome-wide screen identifies host genes affecting viral RNA recombination. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 102(30), 10545-10550.). To test if the plant cytosolic 5′-to-3′ exoribonuclease Xrn4p, similar to the yeast Xrn1p, could also affect TBSV recombination, in this paper, we silenced XRN4 in Nicotiana benthamiana, an experimental host. The accumulation of tombusvirus genomic RNA and repRNA increased by 50% and 220%, respectively, in XRN4-silenced N. benthamiana. We also observed up to 125-fold increase in the emergence of new recombinants and partly degraded viral RNAs in the silenced plants. Using a cell-free assay based on a yeast extract, which supports authentic replication and recombination of TBSV, we demonstrate that the purified recombinant Xrn1p efficiently inhibited the accumulation of recombinants and partly degraded viral RNAs. Altogether, the data from a plant host and cell-free system confirm a central role for the plant cytosolic 5′-to-3′ exoribonuclease in TBSV replication, recombination and viral RNA degradation.  相似文献   

13.
14.
Pathak KB  Sasvari Z  Nagy PD 《Virology》2008,379(2):294-305
Replication of Tomato bushy stunt virus (TBSV) RNA takes place on the cytosolic membrane surface of peroxisomes in plants and in yeast, a model host. To identify the host proteins involved in assisting the peroxisomal localization of the tombusvirus p33 replication protein, we tested if p33 could bind directly to yeast proteins involved in peroxisomal transport in vitro. This work has led to the demonstration of Pex19p-p33 interaction via pull-down and co-purification experiments. Pex19p was also detected in the tombusvirus replicase after protein cross-linking, suggesting that Pex19p transiently binds to the replicase as could be expected from a transporter. To validate the importance of Pex19p-p33 interaction in TBSV replication in yeast, we re-targeted Pex19p to the mitochondria, which resulted in the re-distribution of a large fraction of p33 to the mitochondria. The expression of the mitochondrial-targeted Pex19p inhibited TBSV RNA accumulation by 2-4-fold in vivo and reduced the in vitro activity of the tombusvirus replicase by 80%. These data support the model that Pex19p is a cellular transporter for localization of p33 replication protein to the host peroxisomal membranes.  相似文献   

15.
Stork J  Panaviene Z  Nagy PD 《Virology》2005,343(1):79-92
Tombusviruses, which are small plus-strand RNA viruses of plants, require the viral-coded p33 replication co-factor for template selection and recruitment into replication in infected cells. As presented in the accompanying paper [Shapka, N., Stork, J., Nagy, P.D., 2005. Phosphorylation of the p33 replication protein of Cucumber necrosis tombusvirus adjacent to the RNA binding site affects viral RNA replication. J. Virol. 343, 65-78.], p33 can be phosphorylated in vitro at serine and threonine residues adjacent to its arginine-proline-rich RNA binding site. To test the effect of phosphorylation on p33 function, in this paper, we used phosphorylation-mimicking aspartic acid mutants of Cucumber necrosis virus (CNV) p33 and in-vitro-phosphorylated p33 in gel mobility shift experiments. We found that phosphorylation inhibited the ability of p33 to bind to the viral RNA. In contrast, the nonphosphorylation-mimicking alanine mutants of p33 bound to viral RNA as efficiently as the nonphosphorylated wild type p33 did. In vitro assays with purified CNV replicase preparations revealed that phosphorylation-mimicking mutants of p33 did not support the assembly of functional CNV replicase complexes in yeast, a model host. Based on these results, we propose that the primary function of reversible phosphorylation of p33 is to regulate the RNA binding capacity of p33, which could affect the assembly of new viral replicase complexes, recruitment of the viral RNA template into replication and/or release of viral RNA from replication. Thus, phosphorylation of p33 might help in switching the role of the viral RNA from replication to other processes, such as viral RNA encapsidation and cell-to-cell movement in infected hosts.  相似文献   

16.
Uchil PD  Satchidanandam V 《Virology》2003,307(2):358-371
In vitro RNA-dependent RNA polymerase assays revealed that the JEV replication complex (RC) synthesized viral RNA utilizing a semiconservative and asymmetric mechanism. Peak viral replicase activity and levels of viral RNA observed 15-18 h postinfection (h p.i.) preceded maximum viral titers in the culture medium seen 21 h p.i. Among divalent cations, Mg(2+) was essential and exhibited cooperative binding for its two replicase-binding sites. Mn(2+), despite sixfold higher affinity for the replicase, elicited only 70% of the maximum Mg(2+)-dependent activity, and deficit of either cation led to synthesis of incomplete RNA products. We also determined as a first instance for a flavivirus RC, kinetic parameters using cytoplasmic "virus-induced heavy membranes" after depleting endogenous nucleotides. Exhaustive trypsin treatment, which degraded the bulk of NS3 and NS5, had no effect on replicase activity, suggesting that the active flaviviral RC resides behind a membrane barrier and recruits minuscule proportions of the replicase proteins.  相似文献   

17.
To identify host proteins interacting with the membrane-bound replication proteins of tombusviruses, we performed membrane yeast two-hybrid (MYTH) screens based on yeast cDNA libraries. The screens led to the identification of 57 yeast proteins interacting with replication proteins of two tombusviruses. Results from a split ubiquitin assay with 12 full-length yeast proteins and the viral replication proteins suggested that the replication proteins of two tombusviruses interact with a similar set of host proteins. Follow-up experiments with the yeast Cpr1p cyclophilin, which has prolyl isomerase activity that catalyzes cis-trans isomerization of peptidyl-prolyl bonds, confirmed that Cpr1p interacted with the viral p33 replication protein in yeast and in vitro. Replication of Tomato bushy stunt virus replicon RNA increased in cpr1Δ yeast, while over-expression of Cpr1p decreased viral replication. We also show that the Ess1p parvulin prolyl isomerase partly complements Cpr1p function as an inhibitor of tombusvirus replication.  相似文献   

18.
Replication of plus-stranded RNA viruses is performed by the viral replicase complex, which, together with the viral RNA, must be targeted to intracellular membranes, where replication takes place in membraneous vesicles/spherules. Tombusviruses code for two overlapping replication proteins, the p33 auxiliary protein and the p92 polymerase. Using replication-competent fluorescent protein-tagged p33 of Cucumber necrosis virus (CNV), we determined that two domains affected p33 targeting to peroxisomal membranes in yeast: an N-proximal hydrophobic trans-membrane sequence and the C-proximal p33:p33/p92 interaction domain. On the contrary, only the deletion of the p33:p33/p92 interaction domain, but not the trans-membrane sequence, altered the intracellular targeting of p92 protein in the presence of wt p33 and DI-72(+) RNA. Moreover, unlike p33, p92 lacking the trans-membrane sequence was still functional in supporting the replication of a replicon RNA in yeast, whereas the p33:p33/p92 interaction domain in both p33 and p92 was essential for replication. In addition, p33 was also shown to facilitate the recruitment of the viral RNA to peroxisomal membranes and that p33 is colocalized with (+) and (-)-stranded viral RNAs. Also, FRET and pull-down analyses confirmed that p33 interacts with other p33 molecules in yeast cells. Based on these data, we propose that p33 facilitates the formation of multimolecular complexes, including p33, p92, viral RNA, and unidentified host factors, which are then targeted to the peroxisomal membranes, the sites of CNV replication.  相似文献   

19.
Panaviene Z  Nagy PD 《Virology》2003,317(2):359-372
RNA recombination, which is thought to occur due to replicase errors during viral replication, is one of the major driving forces of virus evolution. In this article, we show evidence that the replicase proteins of Cucumber necrosis virus, a tombusvirus, are directly involved in RNA recombination in vivo. Mutations within the RNA-binding domains of the replicase proteins affected the frequency of recombination observed with a prototypical defective-interfering (DI) RNA, a model template for recombination studies. Five of the 17 replicase mutants tested showed delay in the formation of recombinants when compared to the wild-type helper virus. Interestingly, two replicase mutants accelerated recombinant formation and, in addition, these mutants also increased the level of subgenomic RNA synthesis (Virology 308 (2003), 191-205). A trans-complementation system was used to demonstrate that mutation in the p33 replicase protein resulted in altered recombination rate. Isolated recombinants were mostly imprecise (nonhomologous), with the recombination sites clustered around a replication enhancer region and a putative cis-acting element, respectively. These RNA elements might facilitate the proposed template switching events by the tombusvirus replicase. Together with data in the article cited above, results presented here firmly establish that the conserved RNA-binding motif of the replicase proteins is involved in RNA replication, subgenomic RNA synthesis, and RNA recombination.  相似文献   

20.
Qin J  Barajas D  Nagy PD 《Virology》2012,426(2):106-119
To identify new genes affecting Tomato bushy stunt virus (TBSV) replication in yeast model host, we are studying protein families, whose members have been identified during previous high throughput screening. In this paper, we have characterized the WW domain-containing protein family from yeast and plants. We find that, in addition to Rsp5 E3 ubiquitin ligase, yeast Wwm1 and Prp40 and three Arabidopsis WW domain-containing proteins are strong inhibitors of TBSV replication. The tombusvirus replicase complex isolated from yeast with down-regulated Wwm1 protein level was more active. Accumulation of viral p92pol was reduced when Wwm1 was over-expressed, suggesting that the stability of p92pol might be reduced, as observed with Rsp5. Moreover, replication of two insect RNA viruses is also inhibited by Wwm1 and Rsp5, suggesting that WW domain-containing proteins might have broad regulatory effects on RNA viruses. Thus, artificial antiviral proteins with WW domains could be useful antiviral strategy.  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