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Journal of Virology, May 2001, p. 4761-4770, Vol. 75, No. 10
Department of Molecular Biology and Genetics,
Cornell University, Ithaca, New York 14853
Received 23 October 2000/Accepted 19 February 2001
All retrovirus proteases (PRs) are homodimers, and dimerization is
essential for enzymatic function. The dimer is held together largely by
a short four-stranded antiparallel beta sheet composed of the four or
five N-terminal amino acid residues and a similar stretch of residues
from the C terminus. We have found that the enzymatic and structural
properties of Rous sarcoma virus (RSV) PR are exquisitely sensitive to
mutations at the N terminus. Deletion of one or three residues,
addition of one residue, or substitution of alanine for the N-terminal
leucine reduced enzymatic activity on peptide and protein substrates
100- to 1,000-fold. The purified mutant proteins remained monomeric up
to a concentration of about 2 mg/ml, as determined by dynamic light
scattering. At higher concentrations, dimerization was observed, but
the dimer lacked or was deficient in enzymatic activity and thus was
inferred to be structurally distinct from a wild-type dimer. The mutant
protein lacking three N-terminal residues (
0022-538X/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JVI.75.10.4761-4770.2001
Copyright © 2001, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Importance of the N Terminus of Rous Sarcoma Virus
Protease for Structure and Enzymatic Function
LAM), a form of PR
occurring naturally in virions, was examined by nuclear magnetic
resonance spectroscopy and found to be folded at concentrations where
it was monomeric. This result stands in contrast to the report that a
similarly engineered monomeric PR of human immunodeficiency virus type
1 is unstructured. Heteronuclear single quantum coherence spectra of
the mutant at concentrations where either monomers or dimers prevail
were nearly identical. However, these spectra differed from that of the
dimeric wild-type RSV PR. These results imply that the chemical
environment of many of the amide protons differed and thus that the
three-dimensional structure of the
LAM PR mutant is different from
that of the wild-type PR. The structure of this mutant protein may
serve as a model for the structure of the PR domain of the Gag
polyprotein and may thus give clues to the initiation of
proteolytic maturation in retroviruses.
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of
Molecular Biology and Genetics, Biotechnology Building, Cornell
University, Ithaca, NY 14853. Phone: (607) 255-2443. Fax: (607)
255-2428. E-mail: vmv1{at}cornell.edu.
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