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Query: UMLS:C0038362 (
stomatitis
)
8,852
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The
phosphoprotein
(P) of vesicular
stomatitis
virus (VSV) is a subunit of the RNA polymerase (L) that transcribes the negative strand genome RNA into mRNAs both in vitro and in vivo. We have recently shown that the P protein of VSV, New Jersey serotype (PNJ), expressed in E. coli, is biologically inactive unless phosphorylated at specific serine residues by cellular casein kinase II (CKII). In the present work, we are studying the role of phosphorylation in the activation of the P protein of Indiana serotype (PIND), which is highly nonhomologous in amino acid sequence yet structurally similar to its New Jersey counterpart. Despite the fact that E. coli-expressed PIND required phosphorylation by CKII for activation, the phosphorylation negative P protein mutants generated by altering the phosphate acceptors S and T to alanine, surprisingly, showed transcription activity similar to wild-type in vitro. Alteration of S and T residues to phenylalanine, similarly, supported substantial transcription activity (approx. 60% of wild-type), whereas substitution with arginine residue abrogated transcription (approx. 5% of wild-type). In contrast, the same mutants, when expressed in eucaryotic cells, exhibited greatly reduced transcription activity in vitro. This disparate display of transcription phenotype by the PIND mutants expressed in bacteria and eucaryotic cells suggests that these mutants are unique in assuming different secondary structure or conformation when synthesized in two different cellular milieu. The findings that, unless phosphorylated by CKII, the bacterially expressed unphosphorylated (P0) form of PIND, as well as the phosphorylation negative mutants expressed in eucaryotic cells, demonstrates transcription negative phenotype indicate that, like PNJ, phosphorylation of PIND is essential for its activity.
...
PMID:Display of disparate transcription phenotype by the phosphorylation negative P protein mutants of vesicular stomatitis virus, Indiana serotype, expressed in E. coli and eucaryotic cells. 936 99
The
phosphoprotein
(P) of vesicular
stomatitis
virus (VSV) serotypes New Jersey [P(NJ)] and Indiana [P(I)] contains a highly conserved carboxy-terminal domain which is required for binding to the cognate N-RNA template as well as to form a soluble complex with the nucleocapsid protein N in vivo. We have shown that the deletion of 11 amino acids from the C terminal end of the P(I) protein abolishes both the template binding and the complex forming activity with the N protein. Within this region, there are conserved basic amino acid residues (R260 and K262) that are potential candidates for such interactions. We have generated mutant P proteins by substitution of these basic amino acid residues with alanine and studied their role in both transcription and replication. We have found that the R260A mutant failed to bind to the N-RNA template, whereas the K262A mutant bound efficiently as the wild-type protein. The R260A mutant, as expected, was unable to support mRNA synthesis in vitro in a transcription reconstitution reaction as well as transcription in vivo of a minigenome using a reverse genetic approach. However, the K262A mutant supported low level of transcription (12%) both in vitro and in vivo, suggesting that direct template binding of P protein through the C-terminal domain is necessary but not sufficient for optimal transcription. Using a two-hybrid system we have also shown that both R260A and K262A mutants interact inefficiently with the L protein, suggesting further that the two point mutants display differential phenotype with respect to binding to the template. In addition, both R260A and K262A mutants were shown to interact efficiently with the N protein in vivo, indicating that these mutants form N-P complexes which are presumably required for replication. This contention is further supported by the demonstration that these mutants support efficient replication of a DI RNA in vivo. Since the transcription defective P mutants can support efficient replication, we propose that the transcriptase and the replicase are composed of two distinct complexes containing (L-P2-3) and L-(N-P), respectively.
...
PMID:Basic amino acid residues at the carboxy-terminal eleven amino acid region of the phosphoprotein (P) are required for transcription but not for replication of vesicular stomatitis virus genome RNA. 937 14
An RNA-dependent RNA polymerase is packaged within the virions of purified vesicular
stomatitis
virus, a nonsegmented negative-strand RNA virus, which carries out transcription of the genome RNA into mRNAs both in vitro and in vivo. The RNA polymerase is composed of two virally encoded polypeptides: a large protein L (240 kDa) and a
phosphoprotein
P (29 kDa). Recently, we obtained biologically active L protein from insect cells following infection by a recombinant baculovirus expressing L gene. During purification of the L protein from Sf21 cells, we obtained in addition to an active L fraction an inactive fraction that required uninfected insect cell extract to restore its activity. The cellular factors have now been purified, characterized, and shown to be beta and gamma subunits of the protein synthesis elongation factor EF-1. We also demonstrate that the alpha subunit of EF-1 remains tightly bound to the L protein in the inactive fraction and betagamma subunits associate with the L(alpha) complex. Further purification of L(alpha) from the inactive fraction revealed that the complex is partially active and is significantly stimulated by the addition of betagamma subunits purified from Sf21 cells. A putative inhibitor(s) appears to co-elute in the inactive fraction that blocked the L(alpha) activity. The purified virions also package all three subunits of EF-1. These findings have a striking similarity with Qbeta RNA phage, which also associates with the bacterial homologue of EF-1 for its replicase function, implicating a possible evolutionary relationship between these host proteins and the RNA-dependent RNA polymerase of RNA viruses.
...
PMID:RNA polymerase of vesicular stomatitis virus specifically associates with translation elongation factor-1 alphabetagamma for its activity. 946 35
One of the major structural differences between rabies virus and vesicular
stomatitis
virus (VSV) is that the nucleoprotein (N) is the major
phosphoprotein
and the nominal
phosphoprotein
(P) is less phosphorylated in rabies virus, whereas P is the major
phosphoprotein
and N is not phosphorylated in VSV. We investigated the function of phosphorylation of rabies virus N after dephosphorylation of N with alkaline phosphatase or after changing the phosphorylated serine at position 389 to alanine by site-directed mutagenesis. The unphosphorylated N, in comparison to the phosphorylated N, was studied for its abilities to encapsidate rabies virus leader RNA and to support transcription and replication of a rabies virus minigenome. We found that unphosphorylated N binds more strongly to leader RNA than the phosphorylated N; however, the rates of transcription and replication of the rabies virus minigenome were significantly lower with the unphosphorylated N than with the phosphorylated N. This indicates that the phosphorylation of rabies virus N plays an important role in the regulation of rabies virus transcription and replication, probably via modulation of leader RNA encapsidation.
...
PMID:Phosphorylation of rabies virus nucleoprotein regulates viral RNA transcription and replication by modulating leader RNA encapsidation. 988 76
The nonsegmented negative-strand RNA viruses (order Mononegavirales) include many important human pathogens. The order of their genes, which is highly conserved, is the major determinant of the relative levels of gene expression, since genes that are close to the single promoter site at the 3' end of the viral genome are transcribed at higher levels than those that occupy more distal positions. We manipulated an infectious cDNA clone of the prototypic vesicular
stomatitis
virus (VSV) to rearrange three of the five viral genes, using an approach which left the viral nucleotide sequence otherwise unaltered. The central three genes in the gene order, which encode the
phosphoprotein
P, the matrix protein M, and the glycoprotein G, were rearranged into all six possible orders. Viable viruses were recovered from each of the rearranged cDNAs. The recovered viruses were examined for their levels of gene expression, growth potential in cell culture, and virulence in mice. Gene rearrangement changed the expression levels of the encoded proteins in concordance with their distance from the 3' promoter. Some of the viruses with rearranged genomes replicated as well or slightly better than wild-type virus in cultured cells, while others showed decreased replication. All of the viruses were lethal for mice, although the time to symptoms and death following inoculation varied. These data show that despite the highly conserved gene order of the Mononegavirales, gene rearrangement is not lethal or necessarily even detrimental to the virus. These findings suggest that the conservation of the gene order observed among the Mononegavirales may result from immobilization of the ancestral gene order due to the lack of a mechanism for homologous recombination in this group of viruses. As a consequence, gene rearrangement should be irreversible and provide an approach for constructing viruses with novel phenotypes.
...
PMID:Phenotypic consequences of rearranging the P, M, and G genes of vesicular stomatitis virus. 1023 30
The
phosphoprotein
, P, of vesicular
stomatitis
virus (VSV) is a key subunit of the viral RNA-dependent RNA polymerase complex. The protein is phosphorylated at multiple sites in two different domains. We recently showed that specific serine and threonine residues within the amino-terminal acidic domain I of P protein must be phosphorylated for in vivo transcription activity, but not for replication activity, of the polymerase complex. To examine the role of phosphorylation of the carboxy-terminal domain II residues of the P protein in transcription and replication, we have used a panel of mutant P proteins in which the phosphate acceptor sites (Ser-226, Ser-227, and Ser-233) were altered to alanines either individually or in various combinations. Analyses of the mutant proteins for their ability to support replication of a VSV minigenomic RNA suggest that phosphorylation of either Ser-226 or Ser-227 is necessary for optimal replication activity of the protein. The mutant protein (P226/227) in which both of these residues were altered to alanines was only about 8% active in replication compared to the wild-type (wt) protein. Substitution of alanine for Ser-233 did not have any adverse effect on replication activity of the protein. In contrast, all the mutant proteins showed activities similar to that of the wt protein in transcription. These results indicate that phosphorylation of the carboxy-terminal domain II residues of P protein are required for optimal replication activity but not for transcription activity. Furthermore, substitution of glutamic acid residues for Ser-226 and Ser-227 resulted in a protein that was only 14% active in replication but almost fully active in transcription. Taken together, these results, along with our earlier studies, suggest that phosphorylation of residues at two different domains in the P protein regulates its activity in transcription and replication of the VSV genome.
...
PMID:Optimal replication activity of vesicular stomatitis virus RNA polymerase requires phosphorylation of a residue(s) at carboxy-terminal domain II of its accessory subunit, phosphoprotein P. 1036 10
Presented here is an analysis of the molecular evolutionary dynamics of the P gene among 76 representative sequences of the Paramyxoviridae and Rhabdoviridae RNA virus families. In a number of Paramyxoviridae taxa, as well as in vesicular
stomatitis
viruses of the Rhabdoviridae, the P gene encodes multiple proteins from a single genomic RNA sequence. These products include the
phosphoprotein
(P), as well as the C and V proteins. The complexity of the P gene makes it an intriguing locus to study from an evolutionary perspective. Amino acid sequence alignments of the proteins encoded at the P and N loci were used in independent phylogenetic reconstructions of the Paramyxoviridae and Rhabdoviridae families. P-gene-coding capacities were mapped onto the Paramyxoviridae phylogeny, and the most parsimonious path of multiple-coding-capacity evolution was determined. Levels of amino acid variation for Paramyxoviridae and Rhabdoviridae P-gene-encoded products were also analyzed. Proteins encoded in overlapping reading frames from the same nucleotides have different levels of amino acid variation. The nucleotide architecture that underlies the amino acid variation was determined in order to evaluate the role of selection in the evolution of the P gene overlapping reading frames. In every case, the evolution of one of the proteins encoded in the overlapping reading frames has been constrained by negative selection while the other has evolved more rapidly. The integrity of the overlapping reading frame that represents a derived state is generally maintained at the expense of the ancestral reading frame encoded by the same nucleotides. The evolution of such multicoding sequences is likely a response by RNA viruses to selective pressure to maximize genomic information content while maintaining small genome size. The ability to evolve such a complex genomic strategy is intimately related to the dynamics of the viral quasispecies, which allow enhanced exploration of the adaptive landscape.
...
PMID:Molecular evolution of the Paramyxoviridae and Rhabdoviridae multiple-protein-encoding P gene. 1066 8
The structure of the viral RNA (vRNA) inside intact nucleocapsids of vesicular
stomatitis
virus was studied by chemical probing experiments. Most of the Watson-Crick positions of the nucleotide bases of vRNA in intact virus and in nucleoprotein (N)-RNA template were accessible to the chemical probes and the phosphates were protected. This suggests that the nucleoprotein binds to the sugar-phosphate backbone of the RNA and leaves the Watson-Crick positions free for the transcription and replication activities of the viral RNA-dependent RNA polymerase. The same architecture has been proposed for the influenza virus nucleocapsids. However, about 5% of the nucleotide bases were found to be relatively nonreactive towards the chemical probes and some bases were hyperreactive. The pattern of reactivities was the same for RNA inside virus and for RNA in N-RNA template that was purified over a CsCl gradient and which had more than 94% of the polymerase and
phosphoprotein
molecules removed. All reactivities were more or less equal on naked vRNA. This suggests that the variations in reactivity towards the chemical probes are caused by the presence of the nucleoprotein.
...
PMID:Structure of the RNA inside the vesicular stomatitis virus nucleocapsid. 1068 65
In a previous study (Hajnicka, V. et al., Parasitology 116, 533-538, 1998), the infectivity titer of vesicular
stomatitis
virus (VSV) was shown to increase up to 10,000-fold when mouse L cells were treated with tick salivary gland extract (SGE) prior to infection. To examine this effect at the level of viral protein production, radiolabeled VSV-infected cells were analyzed by double-dimensional gel electrophoresis. A pre-treatment of cells with SGE from partially fed ticks in amounts corresponding to 1 or 3 salivary glands increased the level of both viral nucleocapsid (N) protein and
phosphoprotein
(P) in a dose-dependent manner. The effect was more pronounced for N protein and could account for the dramatic increase in infectious virus yield. Promotion of viral infectivity by arthropod saliva may support the arthropode-borne transmission cycle of VSV.
...
PMID:Promotion of vesicular stomatitis virus nucleocapsid protein production by arthopod saliva. 1074 71
The saliva of haematophagous arthropods (e.g. mosquitoes, sandflies and ticks) contains potent immunomodulatory activities that counter their hosts' haemostatic, inflammatory and immune responses to facilitate blood-feeding. Such effects are exploited by arthropod-transmitted pathogens to promote their transmission. We investigated the ability of tick saliva to enhance arthropod-borne virus (arbovirus) transmission by determining its effect on the antiviral action of murine interferon (IFN alpha/beta). Salivary gland extract (SGE) was prepared from partially fed adult female Dermacentor reticulatus ticks that had been feeding on mice for either 3 or 5 days (SGED3 and SGED5, respectively). We demonstrated that SGE inhibits the antiviral effect of IFN as measured by a biological assay using vesicular
stomatitis
virus (VSV), and by two-dimensional electrophoretic analysis of the appearance of selected VSV proteins. The most pronounced effect was observed when mouse L cells were treated with SGE prior to IFN treatment. Following pretreatment with SGE, virus multiplication (which was fully blocked by IFN treatment alone) achieved yields similar to those obtained from infected cells not treated with IFN. Contemporaneous treatment, or treatment with SGE after IFN, was less effective. In parallel with these findings, formation of early viral proteins, N (nucleocapsid protein) and P (
phosphoprotein
), which was blocked by IFN, was detectable following pretreatment with SGE. The ability to inhibit the antiviral action of IFN was higher for SGED3 compared to SGED5. Demonstration that tick SGE can promote virus replication by suppressing the action of IFN helps explain why ticks are such efficient vectors of arboviruses.
...
PMID:Inhibition of the antiviral action of interferon by tick salivary gland extract. 1076 Jan 86
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