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J. Virol., Dec 1995, 7658-7667, Vol 69, No. 12
AP Poon and B Roizman
alpha trans-inducing factor (alpha TIF, VP16, Vmw65) is an essential
structural protein of herpes simplex virus, being required for virion
assembly. The protein also forms complexes with host proteins and a
response element and transactivates the alpha genes which carry this
element. The protein contains an acidic carboxyl terminus required for
transactivation and a much larger amino-terminal domain required for
promoter recognition. We report the first set of temperature-sensitive (ts)
mutations deliberately introduced into the protein by substitution of the
cysteine codons with those specifying glycine at positions 78, 102, and
176, either singly or in combinations. We report the following results. (i)
All mutated proteins synthesized in vitro formed complexes with the DNA
response element at room temperature. However, the mutant with the triple
substitution and two mutants with substitutions in two of the three
cysteines exhibited a ts phenotype at 33 and 37 degrees C, and one
exhibited a ts phenotype only at 37 degrees C. (ii) Replacement of
wild-type alpha TIF with genes carrying substitutions in any two cysteines
conferred a ts phenotype for replication at 39.5 degrees C. Shift-down
experiments indicated that the 10(4)- to 10(5)-fold reduction in virus
yield at the nonpermissive temperature was due to the disfunction of alpha
TIF late in infection, presumably in virion maturation. (iii) The alpha TIF
expressed in cells infected with mutant viruses exhibited the same ts
phenotype in protein-DNA complex formation as those expressed in vitro from
mutated plasmids. Although the virus carrying the alpha TIF substitutions
at Cys-102 and Cys-176 failed to induce a reporter gene linked to the alpha
4 promoter at 39.5 degrees C, it replicated as well as the parent virus in
cells maintained for the first 10 h of infection at 39.5 degrees C. We
conclude the following. (i) Formation of DNA-protein complexes containing
alpha TIF is a poor prognosticator of alpha TIF function. (ii) The data
presented here and in the literature strongly support the hypothesis that
the secondary structure of the alpha TIF is very sensitive to deletions or
insertions which probably affect the interaction of alpha TIF with both
viral proteins in the virion and cellular proteins during infection. As a
consequence, deletion- insertion mutagenesis may not shed useful
information on the role of transactivating function of alpha TIF in
infection. (iii) Since cysteines may play a role in stabilizing the
secondary structure of proteins, substitutions of cysteines may be a
powerful technique for site-specific construction of ts mutants in
essential viral proteins.
Copyright © 1995, American Society for Microbiology
The phenotype in vitro and in infected cells of herpes simplex virus 1 alpha trans-inducing factor (VP16) carrying temperature-sensitive mutations introduced by substitution of cysteines
Marjorie B. Kovler Viral Oncology Laboratory, University of Chicago, Illinois 60637, USA.
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