Previous Article | Next Article 
Journal of Virology, December 2000, p. 10892-10902, Vol. 74, No. 23
0022-538X/00/$04.00+0
Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Phosphorylation Status of the Parvovirus Minute
Virus of Mice Particle: Mapping and Biological Relevance of the Major
Phosphorylation Sites
Beatriz
Maroto,
Juan C.
Ramírez,
and
José M.
Almendral*
Centro de Biología Molecular
"Severo Ochoa" (Consejo Superior de Investigaciones
Científicas
Universidad Autónoma de Madrid), 28049 Cantoblanco, Madrid, Spain
Received 22 May 2000/Accepted 10 August 2000
 |
ABSTRACT |
The core of the VP-1 and VP-2 proteins forming the T=1 icosahedral
capsid of the prototype strain of the parvovirus minute virus of mice
(MVMp) share amino acids sequence and a common three-dimensional structure; however, the roles of these polypeptides in the virus infection cycle differ. To gain insights into this paradox, the nature,
distribution, and biological significance of MVMp particle phosphorylation was investigated. The VP-1 and VP-2 proteins isolated from purified empty capsids and from virions containing DNA harbored phosphoserine and phosphothreonine amino acids, which in
two-dimensional tryptic analysis resulted in complex patterns
reproducibly composed by more than 15 unevenly phosphorylated peptides.
Whereas secondary protease digestions and comigration of most weak
peptides in the fingerprints revealed common phosphorylation sites in
the VP-1 and VP-2 subunits assembled in capsids, the major tryptic
phosphopeptides were remarkably characteristic of either polypeptide.
The VP-2-specific peptide named B, containing the bulk of the
32P label of the MVMp particle in the form of
phosphoserine, was mapped to the structurally unordered N-terminal
domain of this polypeptide. Mutations in any or all four serine
residues present in peptide B showed that the VP-2 N-terminal domain is
phosphorylated at multiple sites, even though none of them was
essential for capsid assembly or virus formation. Chromatographic
analysis of purified wild-type (wt) and mutant peptide B digested with
a panel of specific proteases allowed us to identify the VP-2 residues Ser-2, Ser-6, and Ser-10 as the main phosphate acceptors for MVMp capsid during the natural viral infection. Phosphorylation at VP-2
N-terminal serines was not necessary for the externalization of this
domain outside of the capsid shell in particles containing DNA.
However, the plaque-forming capacity and plaque size of VP-2 N-terminal
phosphorylation mutants were severely reduced, with the evolutionarily
conserved Ser-2 determining most of the phenotypic effect. In addition,
the phosphorylated amino acids were not required for infection
initiation or for nuclear translocation of the expressed structural
proteins, and thus a role at a late stage of MVMp life cycle is
proposed. This study illustrates the complexity of posttranslational modification of icosahedral viral capsids and underscores
phosphorylation as a versatile mechanism to modulate the biological
functions of their protein subunits.
 |
INTRODUCTION |
The functions of viral capsids
include making contact with cellular receptors on the target cells of
the host, intracellular trafficking of the nucleic acid inward to the
replication site and outward to the cellular surface, and preservation
of vital functions in the environment. Large viruses may code for
polypeptides with specific functions for each of these steps, but small
viruses must use determinants of a few amino acids to accomplish these life cycle needs. The 20-nm-diameter nonenveloped capsid of the Parvoviridae family (60) offers a well-defined
model for fine mapping and structural understanding of such a diversity
of functions in an icosahedral virus. The structure of parvovirus
capsid has been resolved to atomic resolution for the canine parvovirus
(CPV) (69), the feline panleukopenia virus (1),
strain i of minute virus of mice (MVMi) (3), and an insect
parvovirus (Galleria mellonella densovirus) (61)
and to lower resolution for the human B19 parvovirus (2) and
the Aleutian mink disease parvovirus (43). The parvovirus
capsid is formed from 60 protein subunits (15, 59) assembled
with a T=1 icosahedral symmetry (14, 35). Each subunit fold
results in a core composed of an eight-stranded antiparallel
-barrel
motif (52) and four large loops forming the features of the
capsid surface, like a cylindrical channel at each fivefold icosahedral
axis surrounded by a canyon-like depression, a dimple-like depression
at each twofold axis, and (except for B19) a spike-like protrusion
along each of the threefold axes. Some major functions have been mapped
in the parvovirus capsid, such as the immunogenicity of the spike
(9, 63), determinants of tropism at the intracellular level
at the top and shoulder of the spike for CPV and MVM (5, 8, 15,
27, 49), domains for primary receptor binding in the depression at the threefold axis of B19 (17), and nuclear transport of capsid protein oligomers at a
-strand of MVM (41).
Our understanding of structure-function relationships in viral
particles is complicated by the possibility that relevant determinants of capsid functions may not been resolved in the X-ray structure determination averaging procedure (53) if they are displaced in mobile loops of the capsid surface (30), conform
transiently, or do so in a low proportion of the capsid subunits. The
posttranslational incorporation of phosphate radicals into structural
proteins may result in this type of loose determinants in viral
capsids. Phosphates play important roles in many viral systems
(reviewed in reference 38), and the phosphorylation
of structural components can regulate multiple steps of viral
multiplication (46, 75), such as maturation (28,
34), nuclear transport (23, 40), encapsidation
(32), or stimulation of cellular growth (6).
Icosahedral viruses like adenovirus (70) and papillomavirus
(22, 58) harbor phosphorylated structural proteins, although
the characteristics and roles of these phosphorylations have not been
explored in depth. More information is available for polyomavirus
(11, 26, 39), in which some phosphorylation sites have been
mapped that play a function in viral assembly (4, 25).
The parvovirus MVM is an interesting model system for determining the
functional roles of posttranslational modification of proteins in
icosahedral viruses, given our previous report of phosphorylated VP
protein isoforms resolved by high-resolution two dimensional (2D)
electrophoresis (55) and the apparent lack of a
structure-function correlation between its capsid proteins. Indeed, the
MVM capsid is composed of VP-1 (83-kDa) and VP-2 (64-kDa) proteins
(64), which have identical amino acid sequences, with VP-1
including VP-2 plus a 143-amino-acid N-terminal domain (67, 68), and a common three-dimensional crystal structure of the core
of 547 amino acids (3) but which play different biological roles during the infectious cycle. VP-2 is necessary for capsid formation and encapsidation of the viral genome (72, 74), it
determines the tropic properties of the capsid (34), and it
drives capsid protein oligomers into the nucleus (42), but VP-1 is specifically required for infectivity of virus progeny (72). Moreover, the topology of these polypeptides is not
exactly the same in the virions. MVMp DNA-containing virions harbor
variable amounts of a third structural polypeptide, VP-3, derived from the cleavage of the VP-2 N-terminal domain during the process of
internalization in the infected cell (19, 47, 55). The VP-2
cleavage may be partially mimicked in vitro by digestion of
DNA-containing particles with trypsin and to a lesser extent with
chymotrypsin (48, 67), but VP-1 is fully resistant. The differential accessibility to proteases of VP-2 in DNA-containing but
not in empty particles implies that viral DNA encapsidation must alter
the capsid structure to expose the VP-2-processing site
(18). However, it remains unclear why the VP-1 region
corresponding to the VP-2 N-terminal domain is not externalized in the
virions or which role VP-2 cleavage plays in the virus infectious cycle (47, 71).
This report addresses the nature and biological significance of MVMp
capsid phosphorylation in vivo. The VP-2 and VP-1 subunits are shown to
harbor complex and specific patterns of Ser and Thr phosphorylation
when assembled in capsids. A biochemical and genetic analysis was
undertaken to map and characterize the most highly phosphorylated
peptide of VP-2, the major protein component of the MVMp capsid. We
show that three proximate serine residues of the unordered VP-2
N-terminal sequence form the main phosphorylated domain of the MVMp
particle, and although they are not required for the externalization
and maturation cleavage of this domain, these phosphorylated residues
are important to a productive viral life cycle.
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Cell lines and virus.
The A9 mouse fibroblast and the NB324K
simian virus 40-transformed human newborn kidney cell lines described
as hosts for the MVMp strain (66) were maintained in
Dulbecco modified Eagle medium (DMEM) supplemented with 5%
heat-inactivated fetal calf serum (FCS) (Gibco BRL). Virus stocks of
the prototype parvovirus MVMp (20) were prepared in the A9
cell line from infections at low multiplicity, purified by density
gradient centrifugation as previously described (56), and
stored at
70°C.
Metabolic radiolabeling of virions and capsids.
For the
production of mature labeled MVM capsids and virions, NB324K cells were
seeded at a density of 10,000 cells/cm2 in 90-mm-diameter
dishes and cultured overnight in DMEM supplemented with 5% FCS. The
cells were infected at a multiplicity of infection of 10 PFU/cell and
labeled from 4 to 48 h postinfection (p.i.) in 3 ml of either
methionine-free DMEM supplemented with 10% normal medium, 10%
dialyzed FCS, and 300 µCi of [35S]methionine (Amersham
SJ5050) or starved for 4 h in phosphate-free DMEM plus 10%
dialyzed FCS and labeled in the same medium with 0.5 mCi of
carrier-free [32P]orthophosphate per ml (Amersham PBS13).
For immature-virus production, the labeling was carried out for 10 to
16 h p.i. in medium lacking methionine but containing 10%
dialyzed FCS, and 200 µCi of [35S]methionine per ml. At
the end of the labeling periods, the cells were harvested and processed
for purification of MVM particles as described below.
Purification of labeled MVMp particles.
Wild-type and mutant
virions and capsids labeled with 35S and 32P
were purified as previously described (55) with some
modifications. Plates containing virus showing cytopathic effect,
normally 3 to 4 days p.i., were harvested by direct scraping of the
cells into the medium supplemented with protease inhibitors (1 mM
phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride, 10 µg of aprotinin per ml, 10 µg of
pepstatin per ml, 10 µg of leupeptin per ml) and phosphatase
inhibitors (5 mM NaF, 20 mM
-glycerophosphate), sodium dodecyl
sulfate (SDS) was added to 0.2%, and debris was removed by low-speed
centrifugation in a Sorvall SS34 rotor (10,000 × g for
15 min at 4°C). For the analysis of immature virions, cell monolayers
were washed three times with phosphate-buffered saline at 16 h
p.i., and scraped in 50 mM Tris (pH 8.0)-1 mM EDTA-inhibitors as
above-0.2% SDS, and DNA was sheared by flushing through a 25-gauge
needle. The respective homogenates were centrifuged for 18 h at
16,000 rpm and 15°C in a Beckman SW40 rotor (30,000 × g) through 2 volumes of a 20% sucrose cushion in 50 mM Tris
(pH 8.0)-0.1 M NaCl-1 mM EDTA-0.2% SDS. The pellets were
resuspended in 1.0 ml per 90-mm dish containing 20 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8),
1 mM EDTA, 0.2% sarcosyl, and the protease and phosphatase inhibitors
as above, and clumps were disaggregated by gentle sonication and
flushing through a 25-gauge needle. The suspensions were brought to 10 ml of 20 mM Tris (pH 8.0)-1 mM EDTA-0.2% Sarcosyl, adjusted to a
density of 1.38 g/ml in CsCl by refractometry, and centrifuged to
equilibrium for 42 h at 48,000 rpm and 15°C in a Beckman Ty65 rotor (150,000 × g). Gradients were fractionated and
tested for hemagglutination activity with mouse erythrocytes, and the
label distribution was determined by scintillation counting. Fractions containing labeled particles with a density corresponding to empty MVM
capsids (1.32 g/ml) and to DNA-containing virions (1.39 to 1.41 g/ml)
were pooled, extensively dialyzed, and concentrated by
ultracentrifugation when required.
Analysis of phosphoamino acids.
Purified
32P-labeled MVMp particles were subjected to
SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (10% polyacrylamide) (PAGE) and the separated proteins were electroblotted onto polyvinylidene difluoride membranes (Immobilon-P; Millipore, Bedford, Mass.). The
membranes were exposed for autoradiography, and the identified VP
proteins were excised from the membranes with the aid of the film
signals. The strip of membrane was rinsed several times with deionized
water, and acid hydrolysis was performed in 6 N HCl for 2 h at
110°C in vials purged with nitrogen (31). These conditions were found optimal for release of phosphoamino acids from the proteins
with minimal removal of free inorganic phosphate (Pi) from
phosphoamino acids. Samples were frozen, lyophilized in a Speed-Vac
concentrator (Savant, Hicksville, N.Y.), and resuspended in 5 µl of
pH 1.9 buffer (0.58 M formic acid, 1.36 M glacial acetic acid)
containing 0.3 µg each of phosphoamino acid standards (Sigma). Samples were applied to 20- by 20-cm thin-layer chromatography (TLC)
plates (Merck, Darmstadt, Germany) and electrophoresed in pH 1.9 buffer
for 90 min at 1.5 kV (Multiphor; Pharmacia-LKB) with cooling at 10°C.
Second-dimension electrophoresis was for 30 min at 1.5 kV in pH 3.5 buffer (0.5% pyridine, 0.87 M glacial acetic acid). The dry plates
were exposed for autoradiography to X-ray films at
70°C with an
intensifying screen, and the phosphoamino acids markers were visualized
by spraying with 0.25% ninhydrin solution in acetone.
2D phosphopeptide analysis.
Proteins resolved by SDS-PAGE
(10% polyacrylamide gels) were transferred onto a nitrocellulose
membrane (0.45 µm pore size, BA85; Schleicher & Schuell) with an
electrophoretic transfer system in 40 mM glycine-50 mM Tris
base-0.02% SDS-20% methanol for 60 min at 100 V, and the positions
of the VP proteins were identified by autoradiography with X-ray films.
Protein bands were excised from the membranes, and the pieces of
membrane were soaked for 30 min at 37°C in 0.5%
polyvinylpyrrolidone-360 (Sigma) in 100 mM acetic acid and extensively
washed with deionized water. Following a previously described method
(12), samples were digested with 10 µg of
N-tosyl-L-phenylalanine chloromethyl ketone
(TPCK)-trypsin (sequencing grade; Boehringer) in 50 µl of 50 mM
NH4HCO3 (pH 8.0) for 5 h at 37°C, and
then an additional dose was added and incubation was continued
overnight at the same temperature. The tryptic peptides were oxidized
with performic acid for 60 min on ice, diluted in deionized water,
concentrated in a centrifugal vacuum concentrator, cleaned by repeated
lyophilization, resuspended in 5 µl of buffer (pH 1.9), and applied
to 20- by 20-cm TLC plates. Two-dimensional analysis was carried out by
electrophoresis in buffer (pH 1.9) at 1.0 kV for 30 min under cooling
at 10°C for the first dimension and by ascending chromatography
orthogonal to the first dimension in 38% n-butanol-25%
pyridine-7.5% acetic acid for the second dimension. The plates were
exposed to X-ray films in the presence of an intensifying screen at
70°C or to a radioanalytic imaging system (Fujix BAS 1000; Fuji).
For secondary protease digestions of isolated phosphopeptide B, the
exact position of the peptide was localized in the
32P-fingerprint with the aid of the film and the peptide
was scraped off the plates and dissolved in 20 µl of pH 1.9 buffer.
The matrix was washed several times with this buffer and water and
centrifuged, and the supernatants were collected and lyophilized. Equal
amounts of purified peptide B were resuspended in the appropriate
protease buffers as follows:
-chymotrypsin (Boehringer), 50 mM
NH4HCO3 (pH 8); thermolysin (Sigma), 50 mM
NH4HCO3 (pH 8)-1 mM CaCl2; endoproteinase Glu-C (V8; Boehringer), 50 mM sodium phosphate buffer
(pH 7.8); and proteinase K (Merck), 50 mM Tris (pH 8)-10 mM NaCl-10
mM EDTA. Samples were incubated overnight with 10 µg of each protease
at 37°C, except for thermolysin, which was incubated at 55°C. The
digestion products were lyophilized, applied to TLC plates, and
electrophoresed in one dimension in pH 1.9 buffer at 1 kV for 30 min.
The dried plates were exposed for autoradiography in a phosphorimager
as above.
Construction and growth of site-directed MVMp mutants.
Mutations were created by oligonucleotide-directed mutagenesis by the
procedure of Kunkel (36), using the M13mp18 phage vector.
Mutations were transferred to the MVMp genome by exchanging the
HindIII-HindIII (nucleotides 2795 to
2858) of the wt infectious plasmid pMM984 (44) for the
mutated fragment. The introduced amino acid changes numbered from the
start of VP-2, the nomenclature of the virus mutants (in parentheses),
and the mutated nucleotide positions in the MVM genome (7),
respectively, were as follows: amino acid Ser-2 to Gly (S2G),
nucleotide AGT (nt 2798) to GGT (nt 2800); Ser-6 to Gly (S6G),
nucleotide AGC (nt 2810) to GGC (nt 2812); Ser-10 to Gly (S10G),
nucleotide AGC (nt 2821) to GGC (nt 2823); Ser-16 to Gly (S16G),
nucleotide TCA (nt 2839) to GGA (nt 2841); Ser-2 and Ser-6 to Gly (S2,
6G), nucleotide AGT AGC to GGT GGC; Ser-2, Ser-6, Ser-10, and Ser-16 to
Gly (4S/G), nucleotides AGT AGC AGC TCA to GGT GGC GGC GGA.
Oligonucleotides used for mutagenesis were: CCATGGGTGATGGCACC
for the S2G mutant, GATGGCACCGGCCAACC for the S6G
mutant, CCTGACGGCGGAAACGC for the S10G mutant, and CCACGGAGCTGCAAGAG for the S16G mutant. To introduce two or
multiple mutations, the required oligonucleotides were used in
combination. Mutations were verified in the double-stranded plasmid DNA
preparations to be used for cell transfection by sequencing by the
dideoxynucleotide-mediated chain termination method incorporating
[35S]dATP with T7 DNA polymerase (Pharmacia).
Oligonucleotides were purchased from Isogen Bioscience BV (Maarssen, Holland).
To obtain mutant viruses for protein labeling of MVMp particles and for
phenotypic characterization, the corresponding plasmid
amplified in the
JC8111 bacterial strain that preserves the viral
hairpins necessary for
replication (
10) (and is enriched in
supercoiled forms by
chromatography [Qiagen]) was transfected
in growing NB324K cells by
electroporation. Usually 6 × 10
6 cells were
electroporated with 20 µg of plasmid as previously
described
(
41), seeded at low density, and cultured for 48 h
postelectroporation. Cell monolayers were washed and scraped in
phosphate-buffered saline, the intracellular virus was released
by
three cycles of freezing-thawing and low-speed centrifugation,
and
virus titers were estimated by a plaque assay on NB324K cells.
Viral
stocks were prepared by infecting 8 × 10
6 NB324K
cells at low multiplicity of infection (0.01 PFU/cell)
and culturing
them just until the appearance of an incipient cytopathic
effect
(usually 72 h p.i.) to minimize the emergence of secondary
mutations. Viruses devoid of empty capsids were then purified
by
centrifugation through a sucrose cushion and CsCl equilibrium
centrifugation as described above and stored at

70°C. Finally,
the
introduced point mutations were confirmed in the viral preparation
by
PCR amplification of a region of the MVM genome expanding the
VP-2
N-terminal region and sequenced by the dideoxynucleotide
chain
termination
method.
Trypsin digestion of MVMp particles.
For digestion of
purified wt capsid and DNA-containing virions labeled with either
[35S]Met-[35S]Cys or
[32P]orthophosphate as outlined in Fig. 3B, about 0.1 µg of purified particles was incubated with 2 µg of trypsin
(sequencing grade; Boehringer) in 50 µl of 50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.8)-5
mM EDTA for 2 h at 37°C. In the quantitative analysis of VP-2
externalization in wt and mutant viruses (see Fig. 7C), 0.01 µg of
35S-labeled DNA-containing particles harvested and purified
at 16 h p.i. was digested under the same conditions with the
indicated low doses of trypsin for 30 min at 37°C.
Phenotypic analyses of virus phosphorylation mutants.
The
number of particles in the purified virion samples to be used for
specific infectivity studies was estimated by measuring the total
amount of VP proteins by SDS-PAGE (10% polyacrylamide) with Coomassie
blue staining, using a solution of bovine serum albumin as standard,
and considering a molecular weight of 5.5 × 106 for
the MVMp particle (60). Values were further validated in a
hemagglutination assay with mouse erythrocytes performed in parallel
using serial twofold dilutions. The infectivity titers of the diverse
virus preparations were determined by plaque assays in the NB324K cell
line (27). In the test of infection initiation (see Fig. 8C
and D), monolayers of NB324K cells were inoculated with a normalized
number of virions, neutralizing antibody was added at 6 h p.i. to
block reinfections, and the number of infected cells was determined by
indirect immunofluorescence (IF) with a rabbit MVM capsid antiserum as
described previously (41).
 |
RESULTS |
The VP-1 and VP-2 structural proteins of the parvovirus MVMp are
phosphorylated in serine and threonine residues in vivo.
The
extension of phosphorylation of the MVMp structural proteins assembled
in capsids and virions produced in permissive NB324K cells was compared
in 32P-labeled particles purified from infected cultures.
The VP-1 and VP-2 proteins were significantly phosphorylated in both
types of particles (Fig. 1A). The degree
of phospho-label in these protein subunits, measured as the
35S/32P ratio of the bands in the gels, was
estimated proportional to their relative abundance in the MVMp
particles, although a clear VP-1 signal in the virion samples required
overexposure of the gels. In contrast, the VP-3 protein, which is a
highly abundant polypeptide in mature virions recovered at late times
p.i. (Fig. 1A, left), was barely detected in the autoradiograms of the
phosphorylation experiments (Fig. 1A, right). A similar uneven
distribution of the phosphate substituent in the structural proteins of
MVMp particles was previously observed in the infection of A9
fibroblast cells (55).

View larger version (76K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
FIG. 1.
Phosphorylation of the MVMp structural proteins
assembled in particles. (A) SDS-PAGE of MVMp empty capsids (lanes C)
and DNA-full virions (lanes V) purified from infected NB324K cells
labeled with [35S]Met-[35S]Cys or
[32P]orthophosphate. Gels were fixed and exposed to
autoradiography for 48 h (35S) or blotted to
nitrocellulose and the filter was exposed 48 h at 70°C with an
intensifying screen (32P). The positions of the MVMp
structural proteins are indicated to the left, and their approximate
molecular weights (MW) are given to the right in kilodaltons (B)
Phosphoamino acid composition of the VP-1 and VP-2 proteins of MVMp
capsid. Shown are autoradiograms of thin-layer 2D electrophoresis of
phosphoamino acid analysis of labeled VP-1 and VP-2. The regions
circled by dashed lines indicate the positions where the phosphoamino
acid markers migrated. S, phosphoserine; T, phosphothreonine; Y,
phosphotyrosine. 1D, first dimension; 2D, second dimension.
|
|
The nature of the phospho-substituent in MVMp structural proteins was
determined by performing 2D phosphoamino acid analysis
with
gel-isolated radiolabeled VP-1 and VP-2 proteins of purified
capsids.
The
32P-labeled amino acids from both VP-1 and VP-2 capsid
proteins
comigrated with authentic phosphoserine and phosphothreonine
standards
(Fig.
1B). The label was mainly in phosphoserine and was
severalfold
lower in phosphothreonine (Fig.
1B). There was no trace of
phosphotyrosine
and no significant amount of inorganic free phosphate
(P
i) under
the adopted conditions of acid hydrolysis (see
Materials and Methods).
Therefore, the phospho-substituent in the
capsid proteins of MVMp
is found as conventional phosphoamino acids,
i.e., serine and
threonine the main phosphate
acceptors.
The VP-1 and VP-2 subunits of the MVMp capsid show complex and
different patterns of phosphorylation.
An estimation of the number
and distribution of the phosphorylated serine and threonine residues
along the amino acid sequences of the MVMp capsid subunits was
investigated by 2D TLC of the phosphopeptides resulting from single and
combined protease digestions of radiolabeled VP-1 and VP-2 proteins.
The VP-2 tryptic map was resolved as a highly reproducible pattern of
15 unevenly phosphorylated peptides (Fig.
2, panel T, top left) that were
designated A to O. The B peptide harbored more than 10 times the amount
of label of any of the others, whereas four peptides (A, C, I, and J)
showed intermediate phosphorylation levels and the rest were weakly
phosphorylated. Unevenly labeled phosphopeptides may result from the
clustering of phosphorylated residues as well as from different degrees
of phosphate incorporation at precise amino acid positions. To gain some insight into the characteristics of the uneven phosphate distribution in VP-2 the tryptic phosphopeptides were subjected to
secondary digestion with other proteases. The digestion of VP-2 tryptic
peptides with protease V8 gave rise to four new phosphopeptides (V1 to
V4) and the loss of most of the label in peptide I (Fig. 2, panel T+V8,
middle left). Since the rest of the pattern remained unchanged, peptide
I should contain at least three phosphorylated residues alternating
with V8 protease cleavage sites. This evidence raised to 18 the minimal
number of phosphorylated residues in the VP-2 subunits forming the MVMp
capsids. In contrast, most VP-2 tryptic phosphopeptides, including
major ones (A, B, and I), were susceptible to chymotrypsin digestion
(Fig. 2, panel T+QT, bottom left), although peptide C and some minor
ones (peptides F, G, H, J, K, L, O) seemed not to contain cleavage
sites for this protease. The digestion with chymotrypsin gave rise to
the appearance of some reproducible phosphopeptides (Q1 to Q4).

View larger version (75K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
FIG. 2.
2D phosphopeptide maps of parvovirus MVMp capsid
proteins. VP-1 and VP-2 proteins isolated from purified
32P-labeled MVMp capsids were digested with proteases and
subjected to two-dimensional TLC analysis. Shown are the phosphopeptide
maps from trypsin (T), trypsin-plus-endoproteinase-V8 (T+V8), and
trypsin-plus-chymotrypsin (T+QT) digestions. The primary VP-2 tryptic
peptides are alphabetically designated in the autoradiograms according
to their 2D migration (left to right starting from the bottom of the
plates), and this nomenclature is maintained for the peptides shared
with VP-1 (D to O). Specific VP-1 peptides were designated P to S. Peptides arising from subsequent digestions were identified by
comparative analysis of superimposed films and are designated by the
initial letter of the secondary protease used (V, V8; Q, chymotrypsin)
followed by an arbitrary number. Plates were exposed to autoradiography
with an intensifying screen for 4 to 7 days at 70°C. Only the areas
of the plates where the phosphopeptides migrated are shown. 1D, first
dimension; 2D, second dimension; o, origin. The resolution is indicated
by the scale bar.
|
|
The VP-1 tryptic map showed an overall resemblance to that of VP-2,
since the 2D migration of the D to O peptides was conserved
(Fig.
2,
top right), illustrating that the entire VP-2 amino acid
sequence is
included in VP-1. However, some clear differences
were manifested
between the two fingerprints: (i) the three major
VP-2 phosphopeptides
(A, B and C) were absent in VP-1, (ii) peptide
D became a major peptide
in VP-1, and (iii) four new phosphopeptides
(designated P to S) were
specific for the VP-1 tryptic map. These
conclusions were further
supported by the digestions of the VP-1
tryptic phosphopeptides by
additional proteases. First, as in
VP-2, only the VP-1 I peptide was
cleaved to the V1 to V4 peptides
by the V8 protease (Fig.
2, middle
right), and the D, E, I, M,
and N peptides, but not the F, G, H, J, K,
L, and O peptides,
were cut with chymotrypsin (Fig.
2, bottom right).
Second, the
VP-1-specific phosphopeptides behaved differently from the
A and
B major VP-2 peptides, since only the Q peptide, but not the P,
R, and S peptides, was digested with chymotrypsin. This difference
may
account for the fact that the leftward-moving Q1 peptide arising
in the
trypsin-plus-chymotrypsin digestion of VP-2 was not present
in the
corresponding VP-1 fingerprint (Fig.
2, bottom panels).
In summary,
this analysis demonstrated that the VP-2 and VP-1
protein subunits
forming the MVMp capsid harbor at least 18 phosphorylation
sites. It is
noteworthy that the major ones are distinct and specific
for either
type of capsid subunit yet most weakly phosphorylated
sites are shared
by both
polypeptides.
The major phosphorylation domain of the MVMp particle localizes
within the VP-2 N-terminal sequence externalized in DNA-containing
virions.
Our study next focused on the tryptic peptide B of VP-2,
the main phosphopeptide of the major protein component of the MVMp capsid. With the aim of localizing peptide B in the VP-2 sequence, the
tryptic maps of VP-2 and VP-3 subunits isolated from
[35S]Met-[35S]Cys-labeled purified virions
were compared. VP-3 is derived from VP-2 by a cleavage that removes
about 20 amino acids of its N-terminal sequence (48, 67);
therefore, comparison of the fingerprints of these polypeptides could
allow the identification of the tryptic peptides belonging to the VP-2
N terminus. In our TLC system of analysis, the 2D tryptic maps of
[35S]Met-[35S]Cys-labeled VP-2 and VP-3
were undistinguishable except for one single peptide resolved in VP-2
but clearly missing in the VP-3 fingerprint (Fig.
3A). Interestingly, this
35S-peptide migrated in the TLC plates at a position
matching that of phosphopeptide B in the VP-2 fingerprint (Fig. 2).
This result suggested that phosphopeptide B lies in the amino-terminal
domain of VP-2 processed during virus maturation in culture.

View larger version (85K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
FIG. 3.
Analysis of phosphopeptide B localization in VP-2. (A)
2D tryptic maps of
[35S]Met-[35S]Cys-labeled VP-2 and VP-3
proteins isolated from purified MVMp virions. The dried TLC plates were
exposed for autoradiography in a Fujix Bas 1000 phosphorimager (Fuji)
for 5 days. The arrow indicates the absence in VP-3 fingerprint of VP-2
peptide B. 1D, first dimension; 2D, second dimension; o, origin. (B) In
vitro trypsin digestion of MVMp particles. Purified 35S-
and 32P-labeled MVMp empty capsids and DNA-containing
viruses were digested (+) with an excess of trypsin for 2 h at
37°C or not digested ( ), and the samples were resolved by SDS-PAGE
(10% polyacrylamide) and blotted to nitrocellulose membranes, and the
filters were exposed for autoradiography in a phosphorimager for 2 days. The positions of the three MVMp structural proteins are
indicated.
|
|
The VP-2 N-terminal sequence is externalized outside the protein shell
in DNA-containing virions, which allows its in vitro
cleavage with
trypsin (
64,
68,
71). We used this test to
further study
whether phosphopeptide B was the VP-2 N-terminal
domain. As expected,
only in DNA-containing virions could a high
proportion of the
35S-labeled VP-2 subunits be cleaved with trypsin to VP-3
(Fig.
3B). Accordingly, the
32P label incorporated in the
VP-1 and VP-2 subunits of purified
empty capsid was fully resistant to
high doses of trypsin at 37°C,
since no loss of
32P
signal was found even after prolonged incubation times (Fig.
3B, left).
In the purified DNA-containing virions, the
32P label
was found mainly in the VP-2 polypeptide as well, but
here the
trypsin digestion removed most of it (Fig.
3B, right).
In addition, the
otherwise barely detected VP-3 became a major
phosphoprotein of the
digested virions. However, the
32P signal present in VP-3
upon digestion did not account for the
major loss from VP-2, and thus
most of the VP-2 phospholabel must
reside in the peptide cleaved off by
trypsin. Taken together,
these results mapped the highly phosphorylated
peptide B to the
amino-terminal domain of VP-2.
The three distal serine residues of the VP-2 N terminus are
phosphorylated in the MVMp particle.
The prominent phosphorylation
of the VP-2 N-terminal domain prompted us to investigate the nature and
localization of the phosphate substituent in peptide B. For this
purpose, peptide B extracted from TLC plates of the
32P-labeled VP-2 tryptic fingerprint (Fig. 2) was subjected
to phosphoamino acid analysis. As shown in Fig.
4A, phosphoserine was the only type of
phosphoamino acid found in peptide B. Besides this finding, additional
phosphorylations of the VP-2 N terminus distinct from conventional
phosphoamino acids were considered. Peptide B digested into its amino
acids with proteinase K was quantitatively analyzed by thin-layer
electrophoresis to find the proportion of the phospholabel corresponding to phosphoserine. The phospholabel from peptide B
digestion migrated as phosphoserine (Fig. 4B), indicating that the
nature of peptide B phosphorylation was exclusively amino acidic and
ruling out any significant contribution of other type of
phospho-substituent in this region of VP-2.

View larger version (99K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
FIG. 4.
The VP-2 N-terminal domain is phosphorylated exclusively
in serine residues. (A) Phosphoamino acid analysis of peptide B. Autoradiography of acid hydrolysis of peptide B subjected to
one-dimensional thin-layer electrophoresis is shown. The positions
where markers migrated are encircled by dotted lines. T+Y,
phosphothreonine plus phosphotyrosine; S, phosphoserine. (B)
Quantitative analysis of the proportion of the peptide B phospho-label
corresponding to phosphoamino acids. ND, undigested peptide B; D,
peptide B digested to amino acids with proteinase K. Markers and
electrophoretic conditions were as in panel A. Both type of analyses
were performed with approximate 200 cpm of pure phosphopeptide B, and
the plates were exposed for autoradiography in a phosphorimager (Fuji)
for seven days. o, origin.
|
|
Initial attempts to fractionate the VP-2 phosphopeptides by
reverse-phase high-performance liquid chromatography were judged
unsatisfactory due to the presence of weakly phosphorylated peptides
demonstrable in overexposed TLC fingerprints of the fractions.
Thus,
the mapping of the phosphorylated serine residues in peptide
B was next
attempted by a method that combined chemical and genetic
analysis. The
four serines contained within the VP-2 N-terminal
tryptic peptide at
amino acid positions 2, 6, 10, and 16 of the
MVMp genome (
7)
were changed to glycines in an infectious MVMp
plasmid (
44).
Viruses with point mutations at the respective
serines (designated S2G,
S6G, S10G, and S16G), as well as a multiple-mutant
virus harboring all
four serine residues changed to glycine (4S/G),
could be recovered in
sufficient amount from transfected permissive
NB324K cells and were
purified on CsCl gradients (see Materials
and Methods). These viruses
were subsequently used for infection,
and radiolabeled empty capsids
were prepared to determine the
phosphorylation pattern of the mutant
VP-2 subunits by 2D tryptic
phosphopeptide analysis. The 4S/G mutant
capsid lacked
32P-labeled peptide B but contained the rest
of the phosphopeptides
characteristic of VP-2 (Fig.
5, bottom), in agreement with the
exclusive phosphoserine content of peptide B described above.
Unexpectedly, however, the S2G and S10G mutants (Fig.
5), as well
as
any of the other single mutants (data not shown), harbored
similar VP-2
phosphorylation patterns, with peptide B represented
at high levels.
This study revealed that several serine residues
may act as phosphate
acceptors in this region of VP-2.

View larger version (52K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
FIG. 5.
Several serine residues are phosphorylated in the VP-2
N-terminal domain. The figure shows VP-2 tryptic maps of
32P-labeled MVMp capsids purified from the infection of
NB324K cells with the indicated virus mutants. Note the absence of
phosphopeptide B in the autoradiogram of the multiple mutant 4S/G
(arrowhead) and its comparable signal in the single-site mutants shown
(S2G and S10G). Plates were exposed in a phosphorimager (Fuji) for 4 days. 1D and 2D, first (electrophoresis) and second (chromatography)
dimensions, respectively; o, origin.
|
|
Localization of the several phosphoserine residues at the VP-2 N
terminus was investigated by digesting purified phosphopeptide
B from
wt and single-mutant viruses with a panel of sequence-specific
proteases and resolving the digestion products by one-dimensional
thin-layer electrophoresis (Fig.
6). The
amino acid sequence of
the tryptic peptide B contains two potential
cleavage sites for

-chymotrypsin, two for endoproteinase V8, and one
for thermolysin
(Fig.
6, bottom left). Chymotrypsin cut wt peptide B to
give one
single leftward-moving phosphopeptide with a relative mobility
lower than that of the undigested sample, and thermolysin produced
a
single rightward-moving phosphopeptide (Fig.
6, top left). The
latter
result indicated that phosphorylation of wt peptide B must
occur either
at Ser 16 or in the group formed by Ser2, Ser6, and
Ser10.
Interestingly, the thermolysin peptide remained uncut after
chymotrypsin incubation, indicating that phosphorylation protected
at
least one of the two chymotrypsin recognition sites against
the
cleavage. Indeed, the occurrence of a protection phenomenon
was
strengthened by the full resistance of wt peptide B to a high
dose of
V8 protease, which further suggested that phosphorylations
at positions
near the two V8 cleavage sites at positions D3 and
D9 (Fig.
6, left)
were likely. The S16G mutant peptide showed
a pattern of susceptibility
to proteases identical to that of
the wt (Fig.
6, bottom right), ruling
out Ser16 as a phosphorylation
site in the wt VP-2 protein.
Furthermore, this mutant peptide
showed that chymotrypsin cleaved only
at position H15 and not
at position Q7, and thus the latter site must
be protected against
this protease by some proximate phosphate
radicals. The maintenance
of the same pattern of protease
susceptibility in the S10G mutant
phosphopeptide as well (Fig.
6) did
indicate that either Ser2
or Ser6, or both, must be phosphorylated in
the wt VP-2. In contrast
to this behavior, the S2G mutant peptide could
easily be digested
with V8 (Fig.
6, central panel), pointing to Ser2 as
a phosphorylated
residue normally protected against V8 activity in the
wt peptide
B. Moreover, the fact that two phosphopeptides were clearly
resolved
in the V8 digestion of this mutant allowed the identification
of Ser6 and Ser10 as the two other phosphorylated positions in
the wt
peptide. This conclusion was fully supported by the analysis
of the S6G
mutant peptide, in which the release of protection
against V8 activity
validated Ser6 as a phosphorylation site,
and the production of two V8
phosphopeptides here also indicated
that two more positions, namely,
Ser2 and Ser10, must also be
phosphorylated. Collectively, this
analysis allowed us to assign
Ser2, Ser6, and Ser10 as the
preferentially phosphorylated amino
acid positions in the VP-2 protein
subunits forming the MVMp capsid.

View larger version (84K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
FIG. 6.
Mapping the phosphorylated serine residues within the
VP-2 N-terminal domain. Peptide B isolated from VP-2 phosphopeptide
maps of wt and mutant capsids (Fig. 2 and 5) were incubated with the
indicated proteases, and the digestion products were resolved by
one-dimensional thin-layer electrophoresis. Samples were applied at the
center of the TLC plates. Arrowheads in the panels point to mutant
phosphopeptides not seen in the corresponding protease digestions of wt
peptide B. Abbreviations: ND, undigested peptide B; Q,
-chymotrypsin; TM, thermolysin; V8, endoproteinase Glu-C. The amino
acid sequence of wt tryptic peptide B is shown at the bottom left with
the phosphoserine residues determined in this work encircled in bold
and the protease cleavage sites indicated by arrows. Black arrows:
protease recognition sites refractory to cleavage; grey arrows,
cleavage sites accessible to proteases. The single-letter code for the
amino acids is as follows: A, Ala; D, Asp; E, Glu; G, Gly; H, His; M,
Met; N, Asn; P, Pro; Q, Gln; R, Arg; S, Ser; T, Thr; V, Val.
|
|
VP-2 maturation cleavage in the absence of N-terminal
phosphorylation.
A high proportion of the VP-2 subunits of the
DNA-containing particles, but not the VP-1 subunits, are cleaved at
their N-terminal domain in a process accompanying MVM entry into cells
(19, 47, 55). Since the VP-2-specific phosphopeptide B
localizes at this cleaved domain, we hypothesized that the negative
charges of the three phosphoserine residues would determine an
electrostatic repulsion with the packaged DNA backbone, leading to the
externalization of this domain and thus facilitating its processing. To
explore this idea, the extension of natural VP-2 processing in virions grown in culture and the accessibility of the VP-2 N-terminal sequence
to trypsin cleavage in vitro were compared between wt and mutant
viruses. 35S-labeled virions obtained at 72 h p.i.
from NB324K cultures showing extensive cytopathic effect were purified
and their protein composition was analyzed by SDS-PAGE. The 4S/G
mutant, lacking phosphopeptide B (Fig. 5), showed a relative abundance
of VP-3 similar to the wt virions (Fig.
7B), as did the S6G and S2G mutants with
genetic changes at single serine residues (data not shown). This result indicated that VP-2 could be quantitatively cleaved during virus progression in culture in the absence of phosphorylation at its N-terminal domain. To study whether the VP-2 processing occurring in
vivo could be explained by the externalization of the VP-2 unphosphorylated N-terminal domain, mutant and wt virions were analyzed
for VP-2 susceptibility to trypsin cleavage in vitro (48,
67). To minimize natural VP-2 processing, intracellular wt and
4S/G mutant viruses were harvested at 16 h p.i. and purified. These immature viruses incubated with a series of low doses of trypsin
showed a similar N-terminal accessibility of their VP-2 subunits to
trypsin cleavage, as judged by the comparable VP-2/VP-3 ratio found in
the samples throughout the assay (Fig. 7C). Therefore, these in vivo
and in vitro studies indicated that serine phosphorylation at the VP-2
N-terminal domain is dispensable for its externalization in the MVMp
particles containing the encapsidated virus genome.

View larger version (59K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
FIG. 7.
VP-2 to VP-3 conversion in MVMp virus lacking VP-2
N-terminal phosphorylation. (A) Scheme of VP-2 and VP-3 proteins of
MVMp with the trypsin-sensitive sequence (64, 71) and the
three mapped VP-2 phosphoserine residues highlighted. (B) SDS-PAGE of
35S-labeled structural proteins of wt and 4S/G mutant
virions purified from NB324K cultures at 72 h p.i., showing
extensive processing of the VP-2 subunits. (C) Quantitative analysis of
VP-2 exposure in immature viruses. 35S-labeled virions
(0.01 µg) purified at 16 h p.i. were digested with the indicated
amounts of trypsin (in micrograms) for 30 min at 37°C and analyzed by
SDS-PAGE. The position of the VP-3 protein is indicated. A total of 500 cpm was loaded per sample, and exposure was for 4 days in a Fujix Bas
1000 phosphorimager (Fuji). The amino acid code is as in Fig. 6.
|
|
Serine phosphorylation at the VP-2 N-terminal domain plays an
important role in the MVMp life cycle.
To analyze the biological
function of VP-2 N-terminal phosphorylation in MVMp infection, the
specific infectivities of the phosphorylation mutants and wt viruses
were quantitatively compared in a plaque assay. Monolayers of
permissive NB324K cells were incubated with viral inocula normalized
for the number of virion particles (see Materials and Methods), and the
number and size of the plaques were scored after 6 days. wt virions
formed an average of 20 plaques per 105 inoculated
particles (Fig. 8A). However, this value
was close to half the wt value for the S2G mutant, three-quarters of
the wt value for the S6G and S10G (data not shown) mutants, 1/10 of the
wt value for the S2,6G double mutant, and as little as 1/20 of the wt
value for the 4S/G mutant (Fig. 8A). Correspondingly, the plaque sizes
of the S6G and S10G mutants were similar to those of the wt peptide,
but the S2G and 4S/G mutants showed significantly smaller plaques (Fig.
8B). This reduced plaque-forming capacity indicated a hampered life
cycle in MVMp mutants with altered or lacking VP-2 N-terminal
phosphorylation. To carry out a preliminary investigation of the stage
of the MVMp life cycle at which the functions of these VP-2
phosphorylations were required, the capacity of the mutant virions to
initiate infection was evaluated by determining the synthesis and
subcellular localization of the capsid proteins by indirect IF of the
inoculated cells. In a single round of infection, wt MVMp produced more
than 200 VP-expressing cells per 105 inoculated virions,
and this number was not significantly reduced in the inoculations with
S2G and 4S/G virions (Fig. 8C), the mutants with the most altered
phenotype in the plaque assay (Fig. 8A and B). Moreover, the IF
staining of the infected cells demonstrated an efficient nuclear
targeting of the synthesized wt and mutant capsid polypeptides (Fig.
8D). In agreement with this, these viruses induced similar levels of
capsid protein synthesis as measured by SDS-PAGE analysis of
35S-labeled VP proteins (data not shown). These studies
indicated that VP-2 N-terminal phosphorylation is not required for the
initiation of MVMp infection leading to the synthesis and nuclear
translocation of VP proteins but is required for efficient virus plaque
formation.

View larger version (55K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
FIG. 8.
Phosphorylation of the VP-2 N terminus is required late
in the MVMp infection cycle. (A) Plaque-forming capacity of wt and VP-2
phosphorylation mutants. Monolayers of NB324K cells were inoculated
with serial dilutions of the indicated viruses and the number of
plaques was scored from duplicate plates. Bars represent the mean and
standard error of the mean from three independent experiments. (B)
Plaque morphology of MVMp viruses in NB324K cells. Plates were
developed 6 days after inoculation. Examples of viruses with normal (wt
and S6G) and small (S2G and 4S/G) plaque sizes are shown. (C)
Assessment of the capacity of the mutant viruses to initiate infection.
NB324K cells were inoculated with normalized amounts of purified virus
particles, and the number of positive cells for capsid protein
synthesis was determined by IF at 24 h p.i. The mean numbers of
scored cells and standard errors of the mean from three experiments are
shown. (D) Subcellular localization of the synthesized capsid proteins.
NB324K cells were inoculated with the indicated viruses and stained by
IF at 24 h p.i. with an MVMp capsid antiserum.
|
|
 |
DISCUSSION |
Viral capsids are metastable macromolecular complexes required for
completion of the viral life cycle inside and outside cells. It is
known that capsid functions may be regulated by phosphorylation for
some viruses (32, 34, 40), and that some phosphorylation sites are important for polyomavirus assembly (24, 26, 39), but precise data on the distribution and roles of phosphorylation sites
in the capsid subunits of icosahedral viruses are still very limited.
This report shows for the first time the chemical nature and major
characteristics of capsid phosphorylation of a member of the
Parvoviridae family, MVMp, the prototype strain of the
species member of the genus Parvovirus. We undertook a systematic phosphorylation analysis of the two types of protein subunits (VP-1 and VP-2) of purified MVMp particles radiolabeled during
the infection of susceptible cells, with the aim of increasing our
knowledge of MVMp biology and showing that MVMp is a useful model for
other icosahedral viruses.
Complex and differential phosphorylation of MVMp capsid proteins in
vivo.
The capsid proteins of small DNA viruses seem to harbor
different types of posttranslational modifications. In the
better-characterized polyomavirus system, about six species of VP1, the
major protein component of the capsid, were resolved by 2D gel
electrophoresis (24, 26) but only the three minor more
acidic species were phosphorylated (4, 11). Phosphorylation
alone could not explain the heterogeneity of polyomavirus VP1, since
the acidic species were identical in their phosphorylation state
(11). For the MVMp VP-2 major capsid protein as well, the
six neutral protein subtypes resolved by 2D isoelectric focusing could
not be justified by their apparent degree of phosphorylation
(55). In addition, the large number of phosphopeptides
present in VP-2 (Fig. 2), discussed below, lends further support to the
notion that a posttranslational modification other than conventional
phosphorylation must be incorporated in the VP-2 subunits for the six
protein subtypes to form. Thus, the biochemical basis for the
heterogeneity of the MVMp and polyomavirus major capsid proteins in
gels remains unclear.
In this work, the VP-1 and VP-2 structural proteins of MVMp were found
modified in conventional phosphothreonine and phosphoserine
residues
that are placed at precise sites in these proteins (Fig.
1 and
2).
There were about 15 reproducibly resolved tryptic phosphopeptides
in
the VP fingerprints (Fig.
2), which is half the theoretical
number of
tryptic peptides of the VP-2 sequence that could be
expected to harbor
Ser or Thr residues (
7). This observation
indicates that the
phosphorylated residues must be distributed
along different domains of
the MVMp capsid
subunits.
Several data indicate that the phosphorylation sites in the VP subunits
of the MVMp capsid are occupied at a low stoichiometry.
For example, a
high concentration of [
32P]phosphate in the culture media
during MVMp infection was necessary
to obtain sufficient amounts of
labeled VP proteins, and the incorporated
counts were always much lower
than the ones obtained from the
same sample in the NS-1 phosphoprotein
(our unpublished observations).
Likewise, the phosphate radicals are
not resolved in the MVMp
capsid structure (M. Agbandje-McKenna,
personal communication)
or in the MVMi strain for which an atomic
structure is available
(
3) and in which the VP-2 pattern of
phosphorylation is similar
to MVMp (our unpublished observations). Even
the level of substitution
differed markedly among the phosphorylated
positions, and so the
phosphates in the many reproducible
phosphopeptides giving weak
signals in the 2D fingerprints (Fig.
2)
must be represented at
a very low rate in the MVMp capsid. However,
while an effect triggered
by phosphorylation on the activity of single
or oligomeric proteins
may require substitution in most functional or
regulatory subunits,
MVMp capsid functions could be modulated by
phosphate radicals
incorporated in a few of the 60 VP protein subunits
forming the
capsid. Thus, any of the identified VP phosphopeptides has
potential
utility for our understanding of the MVMp capsid
functions.
A major result derived from this study was the finding that the two
types of protein subunits occupying equivalent positions
in the T=1
MVMp capsid show distinct patterns of phosphorylation.
Phosphopeptides
D to O resolved in the 2D fingerprints were present
in the VP-1 and
VP-2 proteins (Fig.
2), and thus they should map
in the common sequence
of both polypeptides. However, the major
phosphopeptides were specific
for either type of protein subunit:
peptides P to S were exclusively
present in VP-1, and peptides
A to C were found only in VP-2. Except
for phosphopeptide B, corresponding
to the exposed VP-2 N-terminal
domain (see below), the phosphorylation
sites were inaccessible to
trypsin cleavage (Fig.
3B) and must
be localized in the ordered regions
of the MVM capsid subunits,
namely, the

-barrel and the large loops
(
3,
69), although
some of the P to S peptides may lie in the
unordered VP-1 specific
region. This differential phosphorylation of
the VP subunits may
contribute to a metastable state of the capsid
necessary for the
conformational transitions observed during cell entry
in other
virus systems (
21) or may determine some of the
specific functions
played by these polypeptides in the MVMp life cycle,
like VP-1
controlled exposure (
19) and requirement for the
infectivity
of the particles (
63) or that of VP-2 for capsid
formation and
tropism (
34,
63) as well as for the nuclear
transport of capsid
protein oligomers (
33). The specificity
in some of the residues
acting as phosphate acceptors for each type of
capsid protein
subunit is a newly recognized characteristic of
icosahedral viruses
that may become of wide biological
interest.
The major phosphorylated domain of the MVMp particle.
VP-2 is
the major protein component of MVM, constituting an estimated 50 of the
60 protein subunits of the T=1 capsid. The most prominent
phosphopeptide of VP-2 was peptide B; thus, this portion of VP-2
harbors the bulk of the phospho-label of the MVMp capsid and of
immature virions. A comparison of 35S-tryptic maps of MVMp
structural polypeptides allowed us to localize peptide B to the VP-2
N-terminal domain, accounting for the important loss of
32P-label detected in virions during VP-2 to VP-3
processing in vitro and in vivo. Since the label of peptide B was due
exclusively to phosphoserine, viruses mutated on every serine residue
of peptide B were constructed, grown, and purified. The conservation of
peptide B as the major phosphopeptide in 32P-labeled empty
capsids of the four point mutants (Fig. 5) indicated the presence of
multiple phosphoserine residues in this VP-2 domain. Mapping the
positions of these residues was complicated by the masking of
chymotrypsin and V8 proteases cleavage sites by neighboring phosphate
radicals. Some mutations released phosphorylation, exposing the
cleavage sites, which demonstrated the protection phenomenon itself and
eventually allowed the assignment of positions 2, 6, and 10 as the
three phosphorylated serines in the wt protein subunits (Fig. 6). Only
the V8 recognition site at position D3 seemed incapable of being
cleaved, given the identical electrophoretic mobility of the two V8
phosphopeptides of the S2G and S6G mutant peptides. This site may be
blocked by a nearby nonphosphorylated N-terminal modification similar
to the one that prevented chemical sequencing of the amino terminus of
VP-2 in a highly related parvovirus (48).
The major phosphorylated domain of the MVMp capsid is placed at a
region of VP-2 not resolved in the MVM or CPV crystal structures
(
3,
69) due to its unordered or flexible disposition on the
viral surface. This domain, capable of inducing the synthesis
of
neutralizing antibodies (
37), is cleaved in a high
proportion
of the VP-2 subunits of DNA-containing virions during
internalization
in the cells (
19,
47,
55). It has been
postulated that the
virion channel is the site of externalization of
the N terminus
of VP-2 subunits at fivefold axes, enabling cleavage to
form VP-3
(
69). Since this cleavage does not occur in empty
capsids neither
in VP-1 subunits, we postulated that a charge repulsion
between
the three phosphoserines of peptide B in VP-2 and the
encapsidated
DNA could determine the specific externalization of the
VP-2 N-terminal
domain in full virions. This hypothesis was evaluated
by using
virions mutated at the serine residues grown in vivo, as well
as analyzed in vitro. Virions lacking phosphopeptide B (mutant
4S/G)
grown in culture carried normal proportion of VP-3 subunits
(Fig.
7B),
and VP-2 subunits of virions recovered early in the
infection could be
cleaved to VP-3 with trypsin in vitro similarly
to the wt VP-2 subunits
(Fig.
7C). Thus, phosphorylation is not
important for externalization
of the VP-2 N-terminal domain, which
is consistent with the recent
observation that heat can externalize
this domain in empty native and
virus-like particles (
29), suggesting
that physical steric
forces, rather than the involvent of electrostatic
charges, are
responsible for VP-2 extrusion during viral DNA
encapsidation.
Biological role of VP-2 N-terminal phosphorylation.
Viruses
mutated at the VP-2 N-terminal phosphorylation sites grew more slowly
than the wt virus, although they could be recovered and purified in
sufficient amounts for chemical analysis and phenotypic characterization. The inoculation of monolayers of permissive cells
with normalized amounts of virion particles showed a number of cells
expressing MVM capsid proteins comparable between the wt and the S2G
and 4S/G mutants (Fig. 8C). Therefore, the VP-2 N-terminal phosphates
are not essential for the early steps of the MVMp infectious cycle,
namely, receptor interaction, internalization, and nuclear targeting of
the incoming particle. Moreover, the synthesis of capsid proteins
occurred to normal levels, and the VP proteins translocated to the
nucleus of the infected cells (Fig. 8D). The nuclear transport of many
karyophilic viral structural complexes is either up- or down-regulated
by phosphate radicals that generally act on their nuclear localization
sequence (23, 33, 40, 73). In contrast to common linear
nuclear localization sequences, the nuclear transport of synthesized
VP-2 subunits required the configuration of a
-strand motif
(41) which is sensitive to changes that affect the
configuration of the polypeptide, such as distorting point mutations or
distant deletions. The efficient nuclear targeting of the 4S/G mutant
proteins suggests that the phosphorylation of the VP-2 N terminus does
not contribute to the proper folding of the polypeptide chain, which is
in agreement with the final unordered disposition of this domain
outside the capsid shell (3, 69).
Even when involved neither in capsid protein processing nor in the
initiation of the infection, an impairment of VP-2 N-terminal
phosphorylation severely affected the MVMp life cycle. VP-2
phosphorylation
mutants can initiate infection but do not spread
efficiently to
neighboring cells, since their plaque-forming capacity
per immunofluorescence-positive
infected cell was 10 to 20 times lower
than that of the wt (Fig.
8) and the plaques were smaller. Steps likely
to be affected by
VP-2 N-terminal phosphorylation include processes
occurring late
in the MVM life cycle, such as assembly, genome
encapsidation,
and virus egress from the cells. In fact, this region of
VP-2
seems to play multiple roles in the MVM life cycle, since virions
mutated near the VP-2 cleavage region also showed a deficient
plaque
formation phenotype, mainly because several early infection
steps were
affected (
71). It could even be that phosphates simply
play
a passive role in these processes. Indeed, the phosphate
radicals
efficiently protect the VP-2 N terminus against different
proteases in
vitro, since phosphorylation at the three serine
residues 2, 6, and 10 is necessary for full protection (Fig.
6).
Phosphorylation could be
required in vivo to protect the true
function of the VP-2 N-terminal
sequence excluded from the viral
capsid shell under different
intracellular
environments.
Among the three phosphorylated residues of the MVMp VP-2 N terminus,
only serine 2 is completely conserved within the genus
of the
autonomous parvoviruses (
16). It is worth noting that
phosphorylation at this position was the most important for MVMp
plaque
formation, even though the other two phosphorylated positions
seem to
cooperate for infectivity (Fig.
8A and B). The availability
of
phosphorylable residues in the VP-2 N terminus may influence
the
interaction of parvoviruses with their hosts. Interestingly,
the VP-2
capsid protein of the immunosuppressive strain of MVM
(MVMi), a virus
displaying different tropism and pathogenicity
(
13,
50,
56,
57), is also phosphorylated in Ser and Thr
residues and its
phosphopeptide map is undistinguishable from
that of MVMp (our
unpublished observations), but serine at position
6 is not conserved in
this virus (
7). Alternative capsid phosphorylations
by
Ser/Thr kinases in different cellular types may underlie the
dependence
of parvovirus multiplication on cellular physiology
(
18,
59,
62,
65) and neoplastic transformation (
45,
54).
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
We are indebted to Peter Tattersall for kindly providing pMM984,
the infectious clone of MVMp.
This work was supported by grant SAF 98-0019 from the Comisión
Interministerial de Ciencia y Tecnología (CICYT), grant
07B/0014/1998 from the Comunidad Autónoma de Madrid (CAM), and an
institutional grant from Fundación Ramón Areces to the
Centro de Biología Molecular "Severo Ochoa." B.M. was
supported by a predoctoral fellowship from the CAM.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Centro de
Biología Molecular "Severo Ochoa" (CSIC-UAM), Universidad
Autónoma de Madrid, 28049 Cantoblanco, Madrid, Spain. Phone:
34-91-3978048. Fax: 34-91-3978087. E-mail:
JMAlmendral{at}cbm.uam.es.
Present address: Centro Nacional de Biotecnología (CSIC),
28049 Cantoblanco, Madrid, Spain.
 |
REFERENCES |
| 1.
|
Agbandje, M.,
R. McKenna,
M. G. Rossmann,
M. L. Strassheim, and C. R. Parrish.
1993.
Structure determination of feline panleukopenia virus empty particles.
Proteins
16:155-171[CrossRef][Medline].
|
| 2.
|
Agbandje, M.,
S. Kajigaya,
R. McKenna,
N. S. Young, and M. G. Rossmann.
1994.
The structure of human parvovirus B19 at 8 Å resolution.
Virology
203:106-115[CrossRef][Medline].
|
| 3.
|
Agbandje-McKenna, M.,
A. L. Llamas-Sainz,
F. Wang,
P. Tattersall, and M. G. Rossmann.
1998.
Functional implications of the structure of the murine parvovirus, minute virus of mice.
Structure
6:1369-1381[Medline].
|
| 4.
|
Anders, D. G., and R. A. Consigli.
1983.
Comparison of non-phosphorylated and phosphorylated species of polyomavirus major capsid protein VP1 and identification of the major phosphorylation region.
J. Virol.
48:206-217[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 5.
|
Antonietti, J.-P.,
R. Sahli,
P. Beard, and B. Hirt.
1988.
Characterization of the cell type-specific determinant in the genome of minute virus of mice.
J. Virol.
62:552-557[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 6.
|
Aoki, H.,
J. Hayashi,
M. Moriyama,
Y. Arakawa, and O. Hino.
1999.
Hepatitis C virus core protein interacts with 14-3-3 protein and activates the kinase Raf-1.
J. Virol.
74:1736-1741[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 7.
|
Astell, C. R.,
E. M. Gardiner, and P. Tattersall.
1986.
DNA sequence of the lymphotropic variant of minute virus of mice, MVM(i), and comparison with the DNA sequence of the fibrotropic prototype strain.
J. Virol.
57:656-669[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 8.
|
Ball-Goodrich, L. J., and P. Tattersall.
1992.
Two amino acid substitutions within the capsid are coordinately required for acquisition of fibrotropism by the lymphotropic strain of minute virus of mice.
J. Virol.
66:3415-3423[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 9.
|
Bloom, M. E.,
D. A. Martin,
L. L. Oie,
M. E. Huhtanen,
F. Costello,
J. B. Wolfinbarger,
S. F. Hayes, and M. Agbandje-Mckenna.
1997.
Expression of Aleutian mink disease parvovirus capsid proteins in defined segments: localization of immunoreactive sites and neutralizing epitopes to specific regions.
J. Virol.
71:705-714[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 10.
|
Boissy, R., and C. R. Astell.
1985.
An Escherichia coli recBC sbc BrecF host permits the deletion-resistant propagation of plasmid clones containing the 5'-terminal palindrome of minute virus of mice.
Gene
35:179-185[CrossRef][Medline].
|
| 11.
|
Bolen, J. B.,
D. G. Anders,
J. Trempy, and R. A. Consigli.
1981.
Differences in the subpopulations of the structural proteins of polyoma virions and capsids: biological functions of the multiple VP-1 species.
J. Virol.
37:80-91[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 12.
|
Boyle, W. J.,
P. van der Geer, and T. Hunter.
1991.
Phosphopeptide mapping and phosphoamino acid analysis by two-dimensional separation on thin-layer cellulose plates.
Methods Enzymol.
201:110-149[Medline].
|
| 13.
|
Brownstein, D. G.,
A. L. Smith,
R. O. Jacoby,
E. A. Johnson,
G. Hansen, and P. Tattersall.
1991.
Pathogenesis of infection with a virulent allotropic variant of minute virus of mice and regulation by host genotype.
Lab. Investig.
65:357-363[Medline].
|
| 14.
|
Caspar, D. L., and A. Klug.
1962.
Physical principles in the construction of regular viruses.
Cold Spring Harbor Symp. Quant. Biol.
27:1-24[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 15.
|
Chang, S.-F.,
J.-Y. Sgro, and C. R. Parrish.
1992.
Multiple amino acids in the capsid structure of canine parvovirus coordinately determine the canine host range and specific antigenic and hemagglutination properties.
J. Virol.
66:6858-6867[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 16.
|
Chapman, M. S., and M. G. Rossman.
1993.
Structure, sequence, and function correlations among parvoviruses.
Virology
194:491-508[CrossRef][Medline].
|
| 17.
|
Clipman, P. R.,
M. Agbandje-Mckenna,
S. Kajigaya,
K. E. Brown,
N. S. Young,
T. S. Baker, and M. G. Rossmann.
1996.
Cryo-electron microscopy studies of empty capsids of human parvovirus B19 complexed with its cellular receptor.
Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA
93:7502-7506[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 18.
|
Cotmore, S. F., and P. Tattersall.
1987.
The autonomously replicating parvoviruses of vertebrates.
Adv. Virus Res.
33:91-173[Medline].
|
| 19.
|
Cotmore, S. F.,
A. M. D'Abramo,
C. M. Ticknor, and P. Tattersall.
1999.
Controlled conformational transitions in the MVM virions expose the VP1 N-terminus and viral genome without particle disassembly.
Virology
254:169-181[CrossRef][Medline].
|
| 20.
|
Crawford, L. V.
1966.
A minute virus of mice.
Virology
29:605-612[CrossRef][Medline].
|
| 21.
|
Curry, S.,
M. Chow, and J. M. Hogle.
1996.
The poliovirus 135S particle is infectious.
J. Virol.
70:7125-7131[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 22.
|
Fang, N. X.,
I. H. Frazer,
J. Zhou, and G. J. Fernando.
1999.
Post translational modifications of recombinant human papillomavirus type 6b major capsid protein.
Virus Res.
60:113-121[CrossRef][Medline].
|
| 23.
|
Gallay, P.,
S. Swingler,
J. Song,
F. Bushman, and D. Trono.
1995.
HIV nuclear import is governed by the phosphotyrosine-mediated binding of matrix to the core domain of the integrase.
Cell
83:569-576[CrossRef][Medline].
|
| 24.
|
Garcea, R. L., and T. L. Benjamin.
1983.
Host range transforming gene of polyoma virus plays a role in virus assembly.
Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA
80:3613-3617[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 25.
|
Garcea, R. L.,
D. A. Talmage,
A. Harmatz,
R. Freund, and T. L. Benjamin.
1989.
Separation of host range from transformation functions of the hr-t gene of polyomavirus.
Virology
168:312-319[CrossRef][Medline].
|
| 26.
|
Garcea, R. L.,
K. Ballmer-Hofer, and T. L. Benjamin.
1985.
Virion assembly defect of polyomavirus hr-t mutants: underphosphorylation of major capsid protein VP-1 before viral DNA encapsidation.
J. Virol.
54:311-316[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 27.
|
Gardiner, E. M., and P. Tattersall.
1988.
Mapping of the fibrotropic and lymphotropic host range determinants of the parvovirus minute virus of mice.
J. Virol.
62:2605-2613[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 28.
|
Ghabrial, S. A., and W. M. Havens.
1992.
The Helminthosporium victoriae 190S mycovirus has two forms distinguishable by capsid protein composition and phosphorylation state.
Virology
188:657-665[CrossRef][Medline].
|
| 29.
|
Hernando, E.,
A. L. Llamas-Saiz,
C. Foces-foces,
R. McKenna,
I. Portman,
M. Agbandje-McKenna, and J. M. Almendral.
2000.
Biochemical and physical characterization of parvovirus minute virus of mice virus-like particles.
Virology
267:299-309[CrossRef][Medline].
|
| 30.
|
Hewat, E.,
N. Verdaguer,
I. Fita,
W. Blakemore,
S. Brooks,
A. King,
J. Newman,
E. Domingo,
M. G. Mateu, and D. Stuart.
1997.
Structure of the complex of a Fab fragment of a neutralising antibody with foot-and-mouth disease virus. Positioning of a highly mobile loop.
EMBO J.
16:1492-1500[CrossRef][Medline].
|
| 31.
|
Kamps, M. P.
1991.
Determination of phosphoamino acid composition by acid hydrolysis of protein blotted to immobilon.
Methods Enzymol.
201:21-27[Medline].
|
| 32.
|
Kann, M., and W. H. Gerlich.
1994.
Effect of core protein phosphorylation by protein kinase C on encapsidation of RNA within core particles of hepatitis B virus.
J. Virol.
68:7993-8000[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 33.
|
Kann, M.,
B. Sodeik,
A. Vlachou,
W. H. Gerlich, and A. Helenius.
1999.
Phosphorylation-dependent binding of hepatitis B virus core particles to the nuclear pore complex.
J. Cell Biol.
145:45-55[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 34.
|
Kaptur, P. E.,
B. J. McCreedy, Jr., and D. S. Lyles.
1992.
Sites of in vivo phosphorylation of vesicular stomatitis virus matrix protein.
J. Virol.
66:5384-5392[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 35.
|
Klug, A.
1983.
Architectural design of spherical viruses.
Nature
303:378-379[CrossRef][Medline].
|
| 36.
|
Kunkel, A. K.
1985.
Rapid and efficient site-specific mutagenesis without phenotypic selection.
Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA
82:488-492[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 37.
|
Langeveld, J. P. M.,
J. I. Casal,
C. Vela,
K. Dalsgaard,
S. H. Smale,
W. Puijk, and R. H. Meloen.
1993.
B-cell epitopes of canine parvovirus: distribution on the primary structure and exposure on the viral surface.
J. Virol.
67:765-772[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 38.
|
Leader, D. P., and M. Katan.
1988.
Viral aspects of protein phosphorylation.
J. Gen. Virol.
69:1441-1464[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 39.
|
Li, M., and R. L. Garcea.
1994.
Identification of threonine phosphorylation sites on the polymavirus major capsid protein VP-1: relationship to the activity of middle T antigen.
J. Virol.
68:320-327[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 40.
|
Liao, W., and J.-H. Ou.
1995.
Phosphorylation and nuclear localization of the hepatitis B virus core protein: significance of serine and three repeated SPRRR motifs.
J. Virol.
69:1025-1029[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 41.
|
Lombardo, E.,
J. C. Ramírez,
M. Agbandje-McKenna, and J. M. Almendral.
2000.
A -stranded motif drives capsid protein oligomers of the parvovirus minute virus of mice into the nucleus for viral assembly.
J. Virol.
74:3804-3814[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 42.
|
Maxwell, I. H.,
A. L. Spitzer,
F. Maxwell, and D. J. Pintel.
1995.
The capsid determinant of fibrotropism for the MVMp strain of minute virus of mice functions via VP2 and not VP1.
J. Virol.
69:5829-5832[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 43.
|
McKenna, R.,
N. H. Olson,
P. R. Chipman,
T. S. Baker,
T. F. Booth,
J. Christensen,
B. Aasted,
J. M. Fox,
M. E. Bloom,
J. B. Wolfinbarger, and M. Agbandje-McKenna.
1999.
Three-dimensional structure of Aleutian mink disease parvovirus: implications for disease pathogenicity.
J. Virol.
73:6882-6891[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 44.
|
Merchlinsky, M. J.,
P. J. Tattersall,
J. J. Leary,
S. F. Cotmore,
E. M. Gardiner, and D. C. Ward.
1983.
Construction of an infectious molecular clone of the autonomous parvovirus minute virus of mice.
J. Virol.
47:227-232[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 45.
|
Mousset, S., and J. Rommelaere.
1982.
Minute virus of mice inhibits cell transformation by simian virus 40.
Nature (London)
300:537-539[CrossRef][Medline].
|
| 46.
|
Mu, J.-J.,
H.-L. Wu,
B.-L. Chiang,
R.-P. Chang,
D.-S. Chen, and P.-J. Chen.
1999.
Characterization of the phosphorylated forms and the phosphorylated residues of hepatitis virus delta antigens.
J. Virol.
73:10540-10545[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 47.
|
Paradiso, P. R.
1981.
Infectious process of the parvovirus H-1: correlation of protein content, particle density, and viral infectivity.
J. Virol.
39:800-807[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 48.
|
Paradiso, P. R.,
K. R. Williams, and R. L. Constantino.
1984.
Mapping of the amino terminus of the H-1 parvovirus major capsid protein.
J. Virol.
52:77-81[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 49.
|
Parrish, C. R.
1991.
Mapping specific functions in the capsid structure of canine parvovirus and feline panleukopenia virus using infectious plasmid clones.
Virology
183:195-205[CrossRef][Medline].
|
| 50.
|
Ramírez, J. C.,
A. Fairén, and J. M. Almendral.
1996.
Parvovirus minute virus of mice strain i multiplication and pathogenesis in the newborn mouse brain is restricted to proliferative areas and to migratory cerebellar young neurons.
J. Virol.
70:8109-8116[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 51.
|
Richards, R.,
P. Linser, and R. W. Armentrout.
1977.
Kinetics of assembly of a parvovirus minute virus of mice, in synchronized rat brain cells.
J. Virol.
22:778-793[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 52.
|
Rossmann, M. G., and J. E. Johnson.
1989.
Icosahedral RNA virus structure.
Annu. Rev. Biochem.
58:533-573[CrossRef][Medline].
|
| 53.
|
Rossmann, M. G.,
R. McKenna,
L. Tong,
D. Xia,
J.-B. Dai,
H. Wu,
H.-K. Choi, and R. E. Lynch.
1992.
Molecular replacement real-space averaging.
J. Appl. Crystallogr.
25:166-180[CrossRef].
|
| 54.
|
Salomé, N.,
B. van Hille,
N. Duponchel,
G. Meneguzzi,
F. Cuzin,
J. Rommelaere, and J. J. Cornelis.
1990.
Sensitization of transformed rat cells to parvovirus MVMp is restricted to specific oncogenes.
Oncogenes
5:123-130.
|
| 55.
|
Santarén, J. F.,
J. C. Ramírez, and J. M. Almendral.
1993.
Protein species of the parvovirus minute virus of mice strain MVMp: involvement of phosphorylated VP-2 subtypes in viral morphogenesis.
J. Virol.
67:5126-5138[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 56.
|
Segovia, J. C.,
A. Real,
J. A. Bueren, and J. M. Almendral.
1991.
In vitro myelosuppressive effects of the parvovirus minute virus of mice (MVMi) on hematopoietic stem and committed progenitor cells.
Blood
77:980-988[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 57.
|
Segovia, J. C.,
J. M. Gallego,
J. A. Bueren, and J. M. Almendral.
1999.
Severe leukopenia and dysregulated erythropoiesis in SCID mice persistently infected by the parvovirus minute virus of mice.
J. Virol.
73:1774-1784[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 58.
|
Shang-Zhong, X., and M. Banks.
1991.
Baculovirus expression of the human papillomavirus type 16 capsid proteins: detection of L1-L2 protein complexes.
J. Gen. Virol.
72:2981-2988[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 59.
|
Siegl, G.
1984.
Biology and pathogenicity of autonomous parvoviruses, p. 297-362.
In
K. I. Berns (ed.), The parvoviruses. Plenum Press, Inc., New York, N.Y.
|
| 60.
|
Siegl, G.,
R. C. Bates,
K. I. Berns,
B. J. Carter,
D. C. Kelly,
E. Kurstak, and P. Tattersall.
1985.
Characteristic and taxonomy of parvoviridae.
Intervirology
23:61-73[Medline].
|
| 61.
|
Simpson, A. A.,
P. R. Chipman,
T. S. Baker,
P. Tijssen, and M. G. Rossmann.
1998.
The structure of an insect parvovirus (Galleria mellonella densovirus) at 3.7 Å resolution.
Structure
6:1355-1367[Medline].
|
| 62.
|
Spalholz, B. A., and P. Tattersall.
1983.
Interaction of minute virus of mice with differentiated cells: strains-dependent target cell specificity is mediated by intracellular factors.
J. Virol.
46:937-943[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 63.
|
Strassheim, M. L.,
A. Gruenberg,
P. Veijalainen,
J.-Y. Sgro, and C. R. Parrish.
1994.
Two dominant neutralizing antigenic determinants of canine parvovirus are found on the threefold spike of the capsid.
Virology
198:175-184[CrossRef][Medline].
|
| 64.
|
Tattersall, P.
1978.
Parvovirus protein structure and virion maturation, p. 53-72.
In
D. C. Ward, and P. Tattersall (ed.), Replication of mammalian parvovirus. Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, Cold Spring Harbor, N.Y.
|
| 65.
|
Tattersall, P.
1978.
Susceptibility to minute virus of mice as a function of host cell differentiation, p. 131-149.
In
D. C. Ward, and P. Tattersall (ed.), Replication of mammalian parvovirus. Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, Cold Spring Harbor, N.Y.
|
| 66.
|
Tattersall, P., and J. Bratton.
1983.
Reciprocal productive and restrictive virus-cell interaction of immunosuppressive and prototype strains of minute virus of mice.
J. Virol.
46:944-955[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 67.
|
Tattersall, P.,
A. J. Shatkin, and D. C. Ward.
1977.
Sequence homology between the structural polypeptides of minute virus of mice.
J. Mol. Biol.
111:375-394[CrossRef][Medline].
|
| 68.
|
Tattersall, P.,
P. J. Cawte,
A. J. Shatkin, and D. C. Ward.
1976.
Three structural polypeptides coded for by minute virus of mice, a parvovirus.
J. Virol.
20:273-289[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 69.
|
Tsao, J.,
M. S. Chapman,
M. Agbandje,
W. Keller,
K. Smith,
H. Wu,
M. Luo,
T. J. Smith,
M. G. Rossmann,
R. W. Compans, and C. R. Parrish.
1991.
The three-dimensional structure of canine parvovirus and its functional implications.
Science
251:1456-1464[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 70.
|
Tsuzuki, J., and R. B. Luftig.
1983.
The Adenovirus type 5 capsid protein IIIa is phosphorylated during an early stage of infection of HeLa cells.
Virology
129:529-533[CrossRef][Medline].
|
| 71.
|
Tullis, G. E.,
L. R. Burger, and D. J. Pintel.
1992.
The trypsin-sensitive RVER domain in the capsid proteins of minute virus of mice is required for efficient cell binding and viral infection but not for proteolytic processing in vivo.
Virology
191:846-857[CrossRef][Medline].
|
| 72.
|
Tullis, G. E.,
L. R. Burger, and D. J. Pintel.
1993.
The minor capsid protein VP1 of the autonomous parvovirus minute virus of mice is dispensable for encapsidation of progeny single-stranded DNA but is required for infectivity.
J. Virol.
67:131-141[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 73.
|
Whittaker, G. I.,
I. Kemler, and A. Helenius.
1995.
Hyperphosphorylation of mutant influenza virus matrix protein, M1, causes its retention in the nucleus.
J. Virol.
71:1850-1856[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 74.
|
Willwand, K., and B. Hirt.
1993.
The major capsid protein VP2 of minute virus of mice (MVM) can form particles which bind to the 3'-terminal hairpin of MVM replicative-form DNA and package single-stranded viral progeny DNA.
J. Virol.
67:5660-5663[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
| 75.
|
Yu, M., and J. Summers.
1994.
Multiple functions of capsid protein phosphorylation in duck hepatitis B virus multiplication.
J. Virol.
68:4341-4348[Abstract/Free Full Text].
|
Journal of Virology, December 2000, p. 10892-10902, Vol. 74, No. 23
0022-538X/00/$04.00+0
Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
This article has been cited by other articles:
-
Riolobos, L., Valle, N., Hernando, E., Maroto, B., Kann, M., Almendral, J. M.
(2010). Viral Oncolysis That Targets Raf-1 Signaling Control of Nuclear Transport. J. Virol.
84: 2090-2099
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Nuesch, J. P. F., Bar, S., Lachmann, S., Rommelaere, J.
(2009). Ezrin-Radixin-Moesin Family Proteins Are Involved in Parvovirus Replication and Spreading. J. Virol.
83: 5854-5863
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Law, L. J., Ilkow, C. S., Tzeng, W.-P., Rawluk, M., Stuart, D. T., Frey, T. K., Hobman, T. C.
(2006). Analyses of Phosphorylation Events in the Rubella Virus Capsid Protein: Role in Early Replication Events. J. Virol.
80: 6917-6925
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Nuesch, J. P. F., Rommelaere, J.
(2006). NS1 Interaction with CKII{alpha}: Novel Protein Complex Mediating Parvovirus-Induced Cytotoxicity. J. Virol.
80: 4729-4739
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Lopez-Bueno, A., Rubio, M.-P., Bryant, N., McKenna, R., Agbandje-McKenna, M., Almendral, J. M.
(2006). Host-Selected Amino Acid Changes at the Sialic Acid Binding Pocket of the Parvovirus Capsid Modulate Cell Binding Affinity and Determine Virulence. J. Virol.
80: 1563-1573
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Mani, B., Baltzer, C., Valle, N., Almendral, J. M., Kempf, C., Ros, C.
(2006). Low pH-Dependent Endosomal Processing of the Incoming Parvovirus Minute Virus of Mice Virion Leads to Externalization of the VP1 N-Terminal Sequence (N-VP1), N-VP2 Cleavage, and Uncoating of the Full-Length Genome. J. Virol.
80: 1015-1024
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Ventoso, I., Sanz, M. A., Molina, S., Berlanga, J. J., Carrasco, L., Esteban, M.
(2006). Translational resistance of late alphavirus mRNA to eIF2{alpha} phosphorylation: a strategy to overcome the antiviral effect of protein kinase PKR. Genes Dev.
20: 87-100
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Zadori, Z., Szelei, J., Tijssen, P.
(2005). SAT: a Late NS Protein of Porcine Parvovirus. J. Virol.
79: 13129-13138
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Rubio, M.-P., Lopez-Bueno, A., Almendral, J. M.
(2005). Virulent Variants Emerging in Mice Infected with the Apathogenic Prototype Strain of the Parvovirus Minute Virus of Mice Exhibit a Capsid with Low Avidity for a Primary Receptor. J. Virol.
79: 11280-11290
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Lang, S. I., Boelz, S., Stroh-Dege, A. Y., Rommelaere, J., Dinsart, C., Cornelis, J. J.
(2005). The Infectivity and Lytic Activity of Minute Virus of Mice Wild-Type and Derived Vector Particles Are Strikingly Different. J. Virol.
79: 289-298
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Maroto, B., Valle, N., Saffrich, R., Almendral, J. M.
(2004). Nuclear Export of the Nonenveloped Parvovirus Virion Is Directed by an Unordered Protein Signal Exposed on the Capsid Surface. J. Virol.
78: 10685-10694
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Law, L. M. J., Everitt, J. C., Beatch, M. D., Holmes, C. F. B., Hobman, T. C.
(2003). Phosphorylation of Rubella Virus Capsid Regulates Its RNA Binding Activity and Virus Replication. J. Virol.
77: 1764-1771
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Ros, C., Burckhardt, C. J., Kempf, C.
(2002). Cytoplasmic Trafficking of Minute Virus of Mice: Low-pH Requirement, Routing to Late Endosomes, and Proteasome Interaction. J. Virol.
76: 12634-12645
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Eichwald, V., Daeffler, L., Klein, M., Rommelaere, J., Salome, N.
(2002). The NS2 Proteins of Parvovirus Minute Virus of Mice Are Required for Efficient Nuclear Egress of Progeny Virions in Mouse Cells. J. Virol.
76: 10307-10319
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Wootton, S. K., Rowland, R. R. R., Yoo, D.
(2002). Phosphorylation of the Porcine Reproductive and Respiratory Syndrome Virus Nucleocapsid Protein. J. Virol.
76: 10569-10576
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Lombardo, E., Ramirez, J. C., Garcia, J., Almendral, J. M.
(2002). Complementary Roles of Multiple Nuclear Targeting Signals in the Capsid Proteins of the Parvovirus Minute Virus of Mice during Assembly and Onset of Infection. J. Virol.
76: 7049-7059
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Geigenmuller, U., Ginzton, N. H., Matsui, S. M.
(2002). Studies on intracellular processing of the capsid protein of human astrovirus serotype 1 in infected cells. J. Gen. Virol.
83: 1691-1695
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Miller, C. L., Pintel, D. J.
(2002). Interaction between Parvovirus NS2 Protein and Nuclear Export Factor Crm1 Is Important for Viral Egress from the Nucleus of Murine Cells. J. Virol.
76: 3257-3266
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Rubio, M.-P., Guerra, S., Almendral, J. M.
(2001). Genome Replication and Postencapsidation Functions Mapping to the Nonstructural Gene Restrict the Host Range of a Murine Parvovirus in Human Cells. J. Virol.
75: 11573-11582
[Abstract]
[Full Text]