Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0038362 (stomatitis)
8,852 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Full-length cDNA copies of mRNAs coding for the matrix (M) proteins of vesicular stomatitis virus and its mutant tsO23(III) were cloned in pBSM13- (BlueScribe). The authenticity of these clones was demonstrated by restriction enzyme mapping, DNA sequencing, and in vitro transcription and translation to identify the two M proteins by Western immunoblotting with epitope-specific monoclonal antibodies. Site-directed mutants were constructed by primer extension of synthetic oligodeoxynucleotides with one or two nucleotide changes to alter the glycine at amino acid 21 of the wild-type (wt) M gene to glutamic acid, alanine, or proline. Similarly, a revertant was created in the M gene of mutant tsO23 by a Glu-21----Gly substitution. A series of wt- and mutant-M-gene chimeras was also constructed to create mutant and revertant clones with Leu----Phe and His----Tyr alterations at amino acids 111 and 227, respectively. We then moved the wt and tsO23 M genes and their site-specific mutants and chimeras cloned in pBSM13- into the eucaryotic expression vector pTF7 directed by the T7 bacteriophage RNA polymerase of the vaccinia virus recombinant vTF1-6,2. Western blot analysis of the M proteins transiently expressed in CV-1 cells by plasmids carrying M genes altered at amino acid 21 revealed that the critical antigenic determinant (epitope 1) is expressed only by the Gly-21 M protein and not by Glu-21, Ala-21, or Pro-21 M proteins. Of particular interest is an apparent conformational change, evidenced by slightly but significantly retarded electrophoretic migration, in plasmid-expressed M proteins with amino acids substituted for glycine at position 21. The glutamic acid at position 21 of tsO23 is not responsible for its temperature-sensitive phenotype, because a tsO23 revertant plasmid with glycine substituted at position 21 fails to rescue tsO23 virus in cells infected at the restrictive temperature; conversely, plasmids expressing wt M protein with substitutions of glutamic acid, alanine, or proline at position 21 are just as effective in marker rescue of tsO23 as is the Gly-21 wt M protein. Marker rescue experiments with wt- and mutant-M-gene chimeras support the hypothesis of K. Morita, R. Vanderoef, and J. Lenard (J. Virol. 61:256-263, 1987) that the temperature-sensitive phenotype of tsO23 is due to a phenylalanine substituted for leucine at amino acid 111, rather than the His-227----Tyr substitution or the Gly-21----Glu substitution, which independently accounts for the loss of epitope 1 in the mutant M protein of tsO23.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Site-specific mutations in vectors that express antigenic and temperature-sensitive phenotypes of the M gene of vesicular stomatitis virus. 245 88

The complete nucleotide sequence of the mRNA of the matrix (M) protein of vesicular stomatitis virus [New Jersey serotype, VSV(NJ)] was derived from a cDNA clone and mRNA. The mRNA is 758 nucleotides long (excluding polyadenylic acid) and encodes a protein of 229 amino acids. The predicted amino acid sequence was compared with that of the corresponding protein of Indiana serotype [VSV(IND)] and a fish rhabdovirus, spring viremia of carp virus (SVCV). An amino acid identity of 62% was found between the M proteins of VSV(NJ) and VSV(IND) while only 24% was present between VSV(NJ) and SVCV. A highly basic NH2-terminal domain followed by a proline-proline-X-tyrosine sequence was present in all the three M polypeptides. Except for the L gene sequence, the complete nucleotide sequence of the four genes of VSV(NJ) are now known. The comparison of the amino acid sequences between the Indiana and New Jersey serotypes demonstrates a high degree of homology between these genes except for the phosphoprotein gene, NS.
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PMID:Complete nucleotide sequence of the matrix protein mRNA of vesicular stomatitis virus (New Jersey serotype). 300 43

The matrix (M) protein of rhabdoviruses has been shown to play a key role in virus assembly and budding; however, the precise mechanism by which M mediates these processes remains unclear. We have associated a highly conserved, proline-rich motif (PPxY or PY motif, where P denotes proline, Y represents tyrosine, and x denotes any amino acid) of rhabdoviral M proteins with a possible role in budding mediated by the M protein. Point mutations that disrupt the PY motif of the M protein of vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) have no obvious effect on membrane localization of M but instead lead to a decrease in the amount of M protein released from cells in a functional budding assay. Interestingly, the PPxY sequence within rhabdoviral M proteins is identical to that of the ligand which interacts with WW domains of cellular proteins. Indeed, results from two in vitro binding assays demonstrate that amino acids 17 through 33 and 29 through 44, which contain the PY motifs of VSV and rabies virus M proteins, respectively, mediate interactions with WW domains of specific cellular proteins. Point mutations that disrupt the consensus PY motif of VSV or rabies virus M protein result in a significant decrease in their ability to interact with the WW domains. These properties of the PY motif of rhabdovirus M proteins are strikingly analogous to those of the late (L) budding domain identified in the gag-specific protein p2b of Rous sarcoma virus. Thus, it is possible that rhabdoviruses may usurp host proteins to facilitate the budding process and that late stages in the budding process of rhabdoviruses and retroviruses may have features in common.
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PMID:A proline-rich motif within the matrix protein of vesicular stomatitis virus and rabies virus interacts with WW domains of cellular proteins: implications for viral budding. 1007 41

Leaf protoplasts of tobacco (Nicotlana tabacum L.) were employed for transfection of chimeric transcriptional gene fusions comprising the 35S promoter from cauliflower mosaic virus, the coding sequence of the G-protein from vesicular stomatitis virus (VSVG) and the transcriptional terminator from the Agrobacterium tumefaciens nopaline-synthetase gene. Transient expression of the chimeric gene was monitored through Northern analysis of total protoplast RNA using a labeled VSV cDNA probe, and through Western-blot analysis of protoplast proteins using a polyclonal and-VSV antiserum. Although a single species of mRNA was detected in the transfected protoplasts, two glycoproteins differing in mass by approx. 9 kDa were detected by the antiserum. Biosynthesis of the VSVG isoforms was not impeded by chemical inhibitors of cell-wall production or of proline hydroxylation. Transfection using mutant forms of the VSVG coding sequence in which either one or both consensus glycosylation sites were removed resulted in the production of progressively smaller VSVG proteins. Those proteins produced from the double mutant had mobilities on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis that were very similar to those produced from the wild-type construct in the presence of tunicamycin. Analysis of protoplast homogenates by differential centrifugation showed that the two VSVG isoforms were exclusively associated with cellular membranes. The larger protein co-localized with the plasma membrane and with the organelles of the endomembrane-secretory pathway leading to the plasma membrane. The smaller protein was associated with membranes of lower isopycnic densities which were not identical to the endoplasmic reticulum. The larger protein displayed greater sensitivity than did the smaller to degradation in vivo by exogenously added protease. Immunofluorescence microscopy demonstrated that the VSVG isoforms were present both within the protoplasts and at the surface of the plasma membrane. The intracellular distribution was either punctate or reticulate. These results are consistent with the progressive and accurate glycosylation of the newly synthesized VSVG polypeptide during its passage through the endomembrane-secretory pathway, the access of the larger isoform to the cell surface, and the conversion of the larger to the small isoform by selective proteolysis.
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PMID:Biosynthesis, processing and targeting of the G-protein of vesicular stomatitis virus in tobacco protoplasts. 2418 28