J Virol. 1990 June; 64(6): 2632-2641
Rotavirus proteins VP7, NS28, and VP4 form oligomeric structures.
D R Maass and
P H Atkinson
Department of Developmental Biology and Cancer, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, New York 10461.
ABSTRACT
Sucrose gradient sedimentation analysis of rotavirus SA11-infected Ma104 cells revealed the presence of oligomers of VP7, the structural glycoprotein, and NS28, the nonstructural glycoprotein. Cross-linking the proteins, either before or after sucrose gradient centrifugation, stabilizes oligomers, which can be analyzed by nonreducing sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) after immunoprecipitation. The major NS28 oligomer was tetrameric, though dimers and higher-order structures were observed as well. VP7 formed predominantly dimers, and again tetramers and higher oligomeric forms were present. Each oligomer of VP7 and NS28 sedimented at the same characteristic rate through the sucrose gradient either in the presence or absence of cross-linking. Monomers could not be cross-linked to form oligomers, demonstrating that cross-linked oligomers were not artifactually derived from monomers. Reversing the cross-linking of immunoprecipitated VP7 on reducing SDS-PAGE resulted in the appearance of only the monomeric form of VP7. Dissociation of the NS28 oligomers resulted in stable dimers as well an monomers. In the faster-sedimenting fractions, a 16S to 20S complex, which contained the rotavirus outer shell proteins VP7 and VP4 cross-linked to NS28, was observed. These complexes were shown not to be associated with any known subviral particle. The association of VP4, NS28, and VP7 may represent sites on the endoplasmic reticulum membrane that participate in the budding of the single-shelled particles into the lumen of the endoplasmic reticulum, where maturation to double-shelled particles occurs.
J Virol. 1990 June; 64(6): 2632-2641
This article has been cited by other articles:
-
Rajasekaran, D., Sastri, N. P., Marathahalli, J. R., Indi, S. S., Pamidimukkala, K., Suguna, K., Rao, C. D.
(2008). The flexible C terminus of the rotavirus non-structural protein NSP4 is an important determinant of its biological properties. J. Gen. Virol.
89: 1485-1496
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Mendiratta, G., Eriksson, P. R., Clark, D. J.
(2007). Cooperative binding of the yeast Spt10p activator to the histone upstream activating sequences is mediated through an N-terminal dimerization domain. Nucleic Acids Res
35: 812-821
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Trask, S. D., Dormitzer, P. R.
(2006). Assembly of Highly Infectious Rotavirus Particles Recoated with Recombinant Outer Capsid Proteins. J. Virol.
80: 11293-11304
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Jagannath, M. R., Kesavulu, M. M., Deepa, R., Sastri, P. N., Kumar, S. S., Suguna, K., Rao, C. D.
(2006). N- and C-Terminal Cooperation in Rotavirus Enterotoxin: Novel Mechanism of Modulation of the Properties of a Multifunctional Protein by a Structurally and Functionally Overlapping Conformational Domain. J. Virol.
80: 412-425
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Silvestri, L. S., Tortorici, M. A., Vasquez-Del Carpio, R., Patton, J. T.
(2005). Rotavirus Glycoprotein NSP4 Is a Modulator of Viral Transcription in the Infected Cell. J. Virol.
79: 15165-15174
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Lopez, T., Camacho, M., Zayas, M., Najera, R., Sanchez, R., Arias, C. F., Lopez, S.
(2005). Silencing the Morphogenesis of Rotavirus. J. Virol.
79: 184-192
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Delmas, O., Durand-Schneider, A.-M., Cohen, J., Colard, O., Trugnan, G.
(2004). Spike Protein VP4 Assembly with Maturing Rotavirus Requires a Postendoplasmic Reticulum Event in Polarized Caco-2 Cells. J. Virol.
78: 10987-10994
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Enouf, V., Chwetzoff, S., Trugnan, G., Cohen, J.
(2003). Interactions of Rotavirus VP4 Spike Protein with the Endosomal Protein Rab5 and the Prenylated Rab Acceptor PRA1. J. Virol.
77: 7041-7047
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Sapin, C., Colard, O., Delmas, O., Tessier, C., Breton, M., Enouf, V., Chwetzoff, S., Ouanich, J., Cohen, J., Wolf, C., Trugnan, G.
(2002). Rafts Promote Assembly and Atypical Targeting of a Nonenveloped Virus, Rotavirus, in Caco-2 Cells. J. Virol.
76: 4591-4602
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Crawford, S. E., Mukherjee, S. K., Estes, M. K., Lawton, J. A., Shaw, A. L., Ramig, R. F., Prasad, B. V. V.
(2001). Trypsin Cleavage Stabilizes the Rotavirus VP4 Spike. J. Virol.
75: 6052-6061
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
O'Brien, J. A., Taylor, J. A., Bellamy, A. R.
(2000). Probing the Structure of Rotavirus NSP4: a Short Sequence at the Extreme C Terminus Mediates Binding to the Inner Capsid Particle. J. Virol.
74: 5388-5394
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Nejmeddine, M., Trugnan, G., Sapin, C., Kohli, E., Svensson, L., Lopez, S., Cohen, J.
(2000). Rotavirus Spike Protein VP4 Is Present at the Plasma Membrane and Is Associated with Microtubules in Infected Cells. J. Virol.
74: 3313-3320
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
Copyright © 1990 by the American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.