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J. Virol., 03 1995, 1540-1547, Vol 69, No. 3
DC Ansardi and CD Morrow
The assembly of infectious poliovirus virions requires a proteolytic
cleavage between an asparagine-serine amino acid pair (the maturation
cleavage site) in VP0 after encapsidation of the genomic RNA. In this
study, we have investigated the effects that mutations in the maturation
cleavage site have on P1 polyprotein processing, assembly of subviral
intermediates, and encapsidation of the viral genomic RNA. We have made
mutations in the maturation cleavage site which change the
asparagine-serine amino acid pair to either glutamine-glycine or
threonine-serine. The mutations were created by site-directed mutagenesis
of P1 cDNAs which were recombined into wild-type vaccinia virus to generate
recombinant vaccinia viruses. The P1 polyproteins expressed from the
recombinant vaccinia viruses were analyzed for proteolytic processing and
assembly defects in cells coinfected with a recombinant vaccinia virus
(VV-P3) that expresses the poliovirus 3CD protease. A trans complementation
system using a defective poliovirus genome was utilized to assess the
capacity of the mutant P1 proteins to encapsidate genomic RNA (D. C.
Ansardi, D. C. Porter, and C. D. Morrow, J. Virol. 67:3684-3690, 1993). The
mutant P1 proteins containing the glutamine-glycine amino acid pair
(VP4-QG) and the threonine-serine pair (VP4-TS) were processed by 3CD
provided in trans from VV-P3. The processed capsid proteins VP0, VP3, and
VP1 derived from the mutant precursor VP4-QG were unstable and failed to
assemble into subviral structures in cells coinfected with VV-P3. However,
the capsid proteins derived from VP4-QG did assemble into empty-capsid-like
structures in the presence of the defective poliovirus genome. In contrast,
the capsid proteins derived from processing of the VP4-TS mutant assembled
into subviral intermediates both in the presence and in the absence of the
defective genome RNA. By a sedimentation analysis, we determined that the
capsid proteins derived from the VP4-TS precursor encapsidated the
defective genome RNA. However, the cleavage of VP0 to VP4 and VP2 was
delayed, resulting in the accumulation of provirions. The maturation
cleavage of the VP0 protein containing the VP4-TS mutation was accelerated
by incubation of the provirions at 37 degrees C. The results of these
studies demonstrate that mutations in the maturation cleavage site have
profound effects on the subsequent capability of the capsid proteins to
assemble and provide evidence for the existence of the provirion as an
assembly intermediate.
Copyright © 1995, American Society for Microbiology
Amino acid substitutions in the poliovirus maturation cleavage site affect assembly and result in accumulation of provirions
Department of Microbiology, University of Alabama at Birmingham 35294.
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