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J Virol. 1987 December; 61(12): 3680-3687

Site-specific mutations at a picornavirus VP3/VP1 cleavage site disrupt in vitro processing and assembly of capsid precursors.

G D Parks and A C Palmenberg

Institute for Molecular Virology, University of Wisconsin, Madison 53706.

ABSTRACT

Most proteolytic cleavages within the picornavirus polyproteins are carried out by viral protease 3C. For encephalomyocarditis virus, the protease 3C-catalyzed processing occurs between Gln-Gly or Gln-Ser amino acid pairs which are flanked by proline residues, but the sequence-specific constraints on recognition and cleavage by the enzyme are not completely understood. To examine alternative cleavage site sequences, we constructed a cDNA plasmid which expresses the viral L-P1-2A capsid precursor in vitro and introduced site-specific mutations into the Gln-Gly pair at the VP3/VP1 junction. The altered protein substrates were tested for cleavage activity in assays with protease 3C. The encephalomyocarditis virus 3C processed Gln-Ala as efficiently as its natural sites but did not cleave Gln-Val, Gln-Glu, Lys-Gly, Lys-Ala, Lys-Val, Lys-Glu, or Pro-Gly combinations. Displacement of the flanking proline residue by an engineered insertion slowed but did not prevent cleavage at this site. Also, a mutant defective in processing at the VP3/VP1 junction was unable to form 14S pentameric assembly intermediates in vitro.


J Virol. 1987 December; 61(12): 3680-3687







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