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J. Virol., Jan 1995, 341-347, Vol 69, No. 1
AR Welch, EC Villarreal and W Gibson
The herpesvirus maturational proteinase, assemblin, is made as a precursor
that undergoes at least two autoproteolytic cleavages--one in a sequence
toward its carboxyl end, called the maturational (M) site, and one in a
sequence toward its midpoint, called the release (R) site. The M- and
R-site sequences are both well conserved among the herpesvirus proteinase
homologs, suggesting that the proteinase of one herpesvirus might be able
to cleave the substrates of another. To test this possibility, we cloned
and expressed in human cells the long (i.e., full-length open reading frame
of proteinase gene) and short (i.e., proteolytic domain, assemblin) forms
of the proteinase from human and simian cytomegalovirus (HCMV and SCMV,
respectively) and from herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1), as well as the
genes for their respective assembly protein precursor substrates. Data from
cotransfections of these proteinase genes with appropriate homologous and
heterologous substrates showed that although the SCMV and HCMV enzymes
cleaved the M-sites of the assembly protein substrates of all three viruses
and an SCMV R-site substrate, the HSV-1 proteinase cleaved only its own
substrate. This finding demonstrates that the substrate specificity
properties of the HSV-1 enzyme differ from those of the two CMV enzymes.
Copyright © 1995, American Society for Microbiology
Cytomegalovirus protein substrates are not cleaved by the herpes simplex virus type 1 proteinase
Department of Pharmacology and Molecular Sciences, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland 21205.
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