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J Virol, March 1998, p. 2213-2223, Vol. 72, No. 3
Amgen Research Institute, Toronto, Ontario,
Canada M5G 2C11;
Department of
Microbiology and Immunology, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec,
Canada H3A 2B42; and
Department of
Medical Biophysics, Ontario Cancer Institute, Princess Margaret
Hospital, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M5G 2M93
Received 6 June 1997/Accepted 21 November 1997
Entomopoxviruses and baculoviruses are pathogens of insects which
replicate in the cytoplasm and nuclei of their host cells, respectively. During the late stages of infection, both groups of
viruses produce occlusion bodies which serve to protect virions from
the external environment. Immunofluorescence and electron microscopy
studies have shown that large bundles of filaments are associated with
these occlusion bodies. Entomopoxviruses produce cytoplasmic fibrils
which appear to be composed of the filament-associated late protein of
entomopoxviruses (FALPE). Baculoviruses, on the other hand, yield
filaments in the nuclei and cytoplasm of the infected cell which are
composed of a protein called p10. Despite significant differences in
their sequences, FALPE and p10 have similar hydrophilicity profiles,
and each has a proline-rich stretch of amino acids at its carboxyl
terminus. Evidence that FALPE and p10 could produce filaments in the
absence of other viral proteins is presented. When FALPE was expressed
in insect cells from a recombinant baculovirus, filaments similar to
those produced by the wild-type Amsacta moorei
entomopoxvirus were observed. In addition, when expression plasmids
containing FALPE or p10 genes were transfected into Vero monkey kidney
cells, filament structures similar to those found in infected insect
cells were produced. The manner in which FALPE and p10 subunits
interact to form polymers was investigated through deletion and
site-specific mutagenesis in conjunction with immunofluorescence
microscopy, yeast two-hybrid protein interaction analysis, and chemical
cross-linking of adjacent molecules. These studies indicated that the
amino termini of FALPE and p10 were essential for subunit interaction.
Although deletion of the carboxy termini did not affect this
interaction, it did inhibit filament formation. In addition,
modification of several potential sites for phosphorylation also
abolished filament assembly. We concluded that although the sequences
of FALPE and p10 were different, the structural and functional
properties of the two polypeptides appeared to be similar.
0022-538X/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Insect Virus Proteins (FALPE and p10)
Self-Associate To Form Filaments in Infected Cells
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Amgen Research
Institute, 620 University Ave., Suite 706, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M5G
2C1. Phone: (416) 204-2280. Fax: (416) 204-2278. E-mail:
crichard{at}amgen.com.
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