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Journal of Virology, October 2002, p. 10383-10392, Vol. 76, No. 20
0022-538X/02/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JVI.76.20.10383-10392.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Pepscan Systems Inc., 8203 AB Lelystad,1 Department of Mammalian Virology, Institute for Animal Science and Health (ID-Lelystad), 8200 AB Lelystad,2 Department of Immunohematology and Blood Transfusion, Leiden University Medical Center, NL-2300 RC Leiden, The Netherlands3
Received 30 April 2002/ Accepted 2 July 2002
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Structural information would be very useful for a better understanding of this unique protein. Because crystallization of this heterogeneous glycoprotein was not successful (J. P. M. Langedijk, unpublished data), disulfide bonds were assigned and a structural model was built. The disulfide bonds are key structural elements that stabilize the functional native conformation and may also guide and test the hypothetical three-dimensional model. The redox state of the nine cysteine residues in the monomer is not known, but it is assumed that, as for other viral surface proteins, all cysteines are disulfide bonded.
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Erns production and purification. Purified Erns was prepared as described previously (8). Briefly, Sf21 cells were infected with recombinant baculovirus expressing glycoprotein Erns of CSFV strain C. Infected cells were incubated for 96 h and then lysed in buffer containing 30 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.5), 10 mM MgCl2, and 1% Nonidet P-40. The lysed cultures were centrifuged to remove cell debris, and the supernatant was stored at -20°C. Erns was purified by immunoaffinity chromatography with monoclonal antibody C5, directed against Erns of CSFV strain C. The concentrations of protein in the fractions containing RNase activity were determined by extrapolation of the absorption at 280 nm on a bovine serum albumin standard curve. RNase-specific activity was assayed as described previously (8) and expressed in units of absorption at 260 nm per minute per milligram. The recombinant protein reacted with MAb C5 and, like native Erns, was shown to be a doublet of 42 to 46 kDa by immunoprecipitation. Its mobility was similar to that of Erns precipitated from SK6 cells infected with CSFV strain Brescia. The purity of the recombinant protein was more than 90% as judged by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. For further purification, cation-exchange chromatography of Erns was performed on a Hitrap SP ion-exchange column (Pharmacia) and the Erns was eluted with NaCl. The specific RNase activity per milligram of the purified recombinant Erns was comparable to that of native Erns (23), indicating that the biological activity of Erns produced in insect cells is indistinguishable from that of native Erns.
Digestion. Erns (200 µg in 0.1 M Tris-HCl [pH 7]-1.7 M urea-20 mM methylamine) was digested at 37°C with 4 µg of trypsin (modified, sequence grade [Boehringer Mannheim]). After 6 and 20 h, 1.75 µg of extra trypsin was added. After 24 h, 12 µg of trypsin inhibitor was added. The mixture was split into two aliquots. One aliquot was separated on a 4-kDa molecular filter (Nalge Nunc). The high-molecular-mass fraction was washed and transferred to 40 mM ammonium acetate (pH 3.96). To this aliquot, urea (final concentration, 1 M), methylamine (final concentration, 20 mM) and 1 µg of endoproteinase Glu-C (sequencing grade; Boehringer Mannheim) were added. The mixture was incubated at 25°C for 20 h. Subsequently, NH4HCO3 was added to reach pH 7. To the other half of the trypsin digest, 15 µl of 300 mM Tris-HCl (pH 6.05) was added. Subsequently, 800 mU of N-glycosidase (E.C. 3.2.2.18; Boehringer Mannheim) was added to both aliquots for 2.5 h at 37°C to cleave N-linked glycosyl groups from the Erns protein fragments. Samples were stored at -20°C until analysis.
HPLC purification. The products were separated by reverse-phase high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) on an Alliance 2690 system (Waters, Milford, Mass.) equipped with a Delta-Pak C18 column (300 Å, 5 µm, 2 by 150 mm [Waters]), using a gradient of water-acetonitrile containing 0.1% trifluoroacetic acid. The products were dried overnight using a speedvac. Samples were reduced by addition of 65 µl of 0.04 M NH4HCO3 and 0.6 µl of 1 M dithiothreitol (DTT). After incubation for 2 h at 20 °C, 4.3 µl of acetic acid (7.5%, vol/vol) was added and the samples were stored at -20°C until analysis.
Mass spectrometry. Electrospray ionization mass spectrometry (ESI-MS) was performed on a hybrid quadrupole time-of-flight mass spectrometer (Q-TOF; Micromass, Manchester, United Kingdom), equipped with an on-line nanoelectrospray interface (capillary tip, 20 µm [internal diameter] by 90 µm [outer diameter]) with an approximate flow rate of 250 nl/min. This flow was obtained by splitting of the 0.4-ml/min flow of a conventional high-pressure gradient system, using an Acurate flow splitter (LC Packings, Amsterdam, The Netherlands). Injections were done with a dedicated micro/nano-HPLC autosampler, the FAMOS (LC Packings, Amsterdam, The Netherlands), equipped with two extra valves for phase system-switching experiments. Digestion solutions were diluted in water-methanol-acetic acid (95:5:1, vol/vol/vol) and were trapped on the precolumn (MCA-300-05-C18; LC Packings) in water-methanol-acetic acid (95:5:1, vol/vol/vol). After washing of the precolumn to remove the buffers present in the digests, the trapped analytes were eluted with a step gradient from 70 to 90% water-methol-acetic acid (10:90:1, vol/vol/vol) in water-methanol-acetic acid (95:5:1, vol/vol/vol) in 10 min, with a flow of 250 nl/min. This low elution flow rate allows for a few additional MS-MS experiments if necessary during the same elution. Mass spectra were recorded from mass 50 to 2000 Da every second with a resolution of 5,000 full width half maximum. In MS-MS mode, ions were selected with a window of 2 Da with the first quadrupole and fragments were collected with high efficiency with the orthogonal time-of-flight mass spectrometer. The collision gas applied was argon (4 mPa) and the collision voltage was approximately 30 V. The MS and MS-MS spectra were interpreted with the help of the Biolynx software package supplied with the mass spectrometer.
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FIG. 1. Amino acid sequence of CSFV strain C Erns. Residues 1 to 227 correspond to residues 268 to 494 of the CSFV polyprotein (20). Fragments of tryptic digests are coded T1 to T14; double digests are coded GT1 to GT8.
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FIG. 2. HPLC chromatograms of trypsin-digested (top) and trypsin-Glu-C double-digested (bottom) Erns, obtained by monitoring the UV absorbance at 215 nm. Fractions corresponding to the peaks were collected and analyzed. Detected fragments are indicated.
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TABLE 1. Trypsin digestion
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TABLE 2. Trypsin-Glu-C double digestion
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-amino group of peptides, forming carbamylated peptides (24). All fractions that contain the T5 fragment increased 2 Da in mass after reduction, which implies an adjacent disulfide bridge between cysteines 68 and 69 (Table 1). The T5 fragments may have been glycosylated at Asn65 because the measured mass of reduced T5 (2,377.8 Da) is 0.8 Da higher then the theoretical mass (2,377.0 Da). Because Asn65 is a potential glycosylation site, deglycosylation may account for the 1-Da difference because it converts the Asn into Asp. Reduction of the fraction at 72.61 min resulted in the disappearance of the 2,680.4-Da fragment and the appearance of the reduced 2,320.2-Da fragment. This implies a disulfide bridge between cysteines 38 and 82 in fragments T3 (362.2 Da) and T8 (2,320.2 Da). The measured mass of T8 is 1.1 Da higher than the theoretical mass. Because Asn95 is a potential glycosylation site, deglycosylation may account for the 1-Da difference. Only N-terminal fragments were identified after trypsin digestion. Due to the lack of trypsin cleavage sites and the possible cystine connectivity, no C-terminal fragments could be detected. Therefore, the trypsin digest was digested with endoproteinase Glu-C, as described in Materials and Methods.
Trypsin-Glu-C double digests. All trypsin-Glu-C double-digest fragments listed in Table 2 match the theoretical mass except for the T1 fragment (see above). As shown for the trypsin digests, the fragments that contained cysteines 68 and 69 (fragments GT2 and T5) showed a mass increase of 2 Da after reduction, implying the presence of an adjacent disulfide bridge between cysteines 68 and 69 (Fig. 3 and 4). MS-MS analysis of fragment GT2b (m/z 565) confirmed the sequence DYTCCQKLQR and also confirmed the Asn65-to-Asp65 conversion (Fig. 3c). In the fractions that eluted between 51 and 61 min, subfragments of GT8 were identified, which appeared to be disulfide linked to other GT8 subfragments (Fig. 5; Table 2). In most cases the reduced fragments could be detected. For the fraction at 57 min, the peptide sequence was fully confirmed by MS/MS analysis of fragment GT8c (m/z 805) (Table 2; Fig. 5c). Therefore, cysteines at position 171 form the intermolecular disulfide bridge, which connects two Erns monomers.
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FIG. 3. (a and b) ESI-MS spectra of the fraction at 33 min (Fig. 2, bottom) before (a) and after (b) reduction with DTT. Each peak is labeled with an m/z ratio and a charge state designation. (c) Product ion mass spectrum of the GT2b peptide at m/z 565 (residues DYTCCKLQR). The spectrum displays two series of peaks, the so-called b ions and y ions, that allow the sequence to be elucidated. A part of the y-ion series consists of the masses 851.4, 750.3, 647.4, 544.4, 416.3, 303.2, and 175.9, which correspond to the partial sequence T-C-C-(Q/K)-L-(Q/K)-R. A part of the b-ion series consists of the masses 279.08 and 380.14, which correspond to the partial sequence DY. Mw, molecular mass.
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FIG. 4. ESI-MS spectra of the fraction at 49.5 min (Fig. 2, bottom) before (a) and after (b) reduction with DTT. Each peak is labeled with an m/z ratio and a charge state designation. Calculated masses (A to D) are indicated in the figure. B corresponds to fragment T5T6. C corresponds to a disulfide-containing fragment that contains fragment GT6. Mw, molecular mass.
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FIG. 5. (a and b) ESI-MS spectra of the fraction at 58.6 min (Fig. 2, bottom) before (a) and after (b) reduction with DTT. Each peak is labeled with an m/z ratio and a charge state designation. A corresponds to fragment GT8c+GT8c. (c) Product ion mass spectrum of the peptide GT8c at m/z 805 (residues CGSLLQDA). The spectrum displays two series of peaks, the b ions and y ions, that allow the sequence to be elucidated. A part of the y-ion series consists of the masses 646.3, 559.3, 446.2, 333.1, 205.1, and 90.1, which correspond to the partial sequence S-L-L-(Q/K)-D-A. A part of the b-ion series consists of the masses 248.1, 361.2, 474.3, 602.3, and 717.3, which correspond to the partial sequence G-S-L-L-(Q/K)-D. Mw, molecular mass.
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Using MS-MS analysis, we found more proof for the identity of the smaller fragments contained in the high-molecular-mass fragment (Table 2). MS-MS analysis revealed the sequences 123NVVTQAR129 and 159VSVE162 in a 4,549-Da fragment and the sequences 123NVVTQAR129 and 146FAGTVIES153 in a 5,489-Da fragment. The identity of the high-molecular-mass fragment indicated that cysteines 110 and 114 are not connected by a disulfide bridge but that these residues must be connected by a disulfide bridge to cysteines 138 and 155. This leaves only two possibilities for connectivity. Unfortunately, there is no cleavage site for trypsin or Glu-C between cysteines 110 and 114 (residues CAVTC). However, trypsin in particular can be promiscuous under the described conditions. Tables 1 and 2 show several examples of missed cleavages and also of fragments which have been cleaved after residue Ala, Leu, or Thr (fragments T5b, GT2b, and GT8a,c). Indeed, promiscuous cleavage between cysteines 110 and 114 could also be found in the fragments GT4a + GT6 and GT4b/T12 + T13 (Table 2). At 47 min in the chromatogram, a fragment of 1,384.5 Da was detected, and after reduction the GT6 fragment was detected. The peptide sequence was also fully confirmed by MS/MS (Table 2). Therefore, cysteines 110 and 155 must be connected by a disulfide bridge. This leaves only cysteines 114 and 138 that must form the final disulfide bridge. Proof of this connectivity was found in the sample at retention time 39.78 min, which has a mass that corresponds to GT4b/T12 + T13 (Table 2).
Modeling. Two stretches of Pestivirus Erns show sequence homology to members of the Rh/T2/S RNase superfamily (7). The crystal structure of the family members RNase Rh, RNase MC, RNase S3, and RNase LE have been determined (14, 17, 21, 25), and the three-dimensional (3D) structures confirmed that both stretches with sequence homology to Erns constitute the active site of the RNase. Apart from the two stretches of sequence homology, further homology in the rest of the protein was not apparent. Despite the low sequence homology, a complete alignment was constructed using different types of scoring matrices and multiple sequence alignment of a large set of RNase sequences. A satisfactory alignment was not possible using alignment software with any parameter setting. Therefore, part of the alignment was edited manually. For parts with low sequence homology, the alignment was guided by the secondary-structure prediction of the PHD software (B. Rost and C. Sander, Nature 360:540, 1992).
The multiple-sequence alignment is shown in Fig. 6. The parts of the Erns sequences with low homology or conflicting secondary structure predictions are shown in bold type.
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FIG. 6. Alignment of several RNases belonging to the RNase Rh/T2/S family. RNase I, Escherichia coli (accession no. P21338); RNase M, Aspergillus saitoi (P19791); RNase TRV, Trichoderma viride (P24657); RNase T2, Aspergillus oryzae (P10281); RNase Rh, Rhizopus niveus (P08056); RNase 1, Arabidopsis thaliana (P42813); RNase LE, Lycopersicon esculentum (P80022); RNase 6, Homo sapiens (NP003721); RNase MC, Momordica charantia (P23540); RNase S3, Petunia (Q40875); RNase S2, N., Nicotiana alata (P04007); RNase S2 A., Antirrhinum hispanicum (Q38716); RNase S4, Antirrhinum hispanicum (Q38717); RNase 2, Arabidopsis thaliana (P42814); RNase Aer., Aeromonas hydrophila (Q07465); Probable RNase Haem., Haemophilus influenzae (P44012); Erns of CSFV, strain Brescia (P21530); Erns of BVDV, strain SD-1 (Q01499). The crystal structure of RNase Rh (italic sequence) was used as a template for the 3D model of CSFV Erns. Secondary-structure elements are indicated by bars and are marked S1 to S5 (strands) and H1 to H7 (helices). Secondary structures are based on crystal structure of RNase Rh except for helix H1, found in RNase MC, RNase S3, and RNase LE. Residues within 1 distance unit from CSFV are boxed. Gaps are indicated by dashes. Sequences of pestivirus Erns that could not be aligned are shown in bold type.
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FIG. 7. 3D model of CSFV Erns. Disulfides, unpaired Cys171, and active-site residues His30, Glu75, and His79 are shown as stick models. Secondary-structure elements are colored blue to red from the N to the C terminus. The C-terminal domain responsible for translocation is colored red.
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subunit of acetylcholine receptor (
AChR) (12), methanol dehydrogenase (MDH) (2) and the Janus-faced atracotoxins (J-ACTXs) (29). In
AchR, the disulfide is involved in acetylcholine binding; in MDH, the enzymatic activity is abolished when the disulfide at the enzyme active site is reduced; and in J-ACTX, the disulfide is critical for insecticidal activity and may be directly involved in interactions with the target molecule. Vicinal disulfides are readily reduced in
AchR and MDH; because of possible strained cyclic geometry, the disulfide may be highly reactive. |
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FIG. 8. Schematic representation of the Erns homodimer showing the disulfide bridge connection. Cysteine residues are numbered.
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After inspection of the multiple sequence alignment, some major dissimilarities between the sequences of pestivirus Erns and the other RNases can be observed (Fig. 6). The sequence of pestivirus Erns is by far the most dissimilar to the known plant, fungal, bacterial, and mammalian Rh/T2/S RNases. If pestiviruses acquired the mammalian cellular RNase gene by RNA recombination, it has diversified considerably outside the active-site regions, because the sequence is very dissimilar from that of human RNase 6 (Fig. 6) (27) and the homologous mouse, pig, bovine, or chicken RNase (data not shown). The function of the mammalian RNase 6 may be helpful for the elucidation of the function of Erns and vice versa. Interestingly, RNase 6 may be involved in the suppression of B-cell non-Hodgkin's lymphomas and acute lymphoblastic leukemias (1), while Erns may be involved in the depletion of B lymphocytes (18), which indicates that the functions of the two proteins may be more similar than the low sequence homology would suggest.
The most important differences between Erns and the other members of the Rh/T2/S RNase family is the truncated N terminus, the large insertion of a cysteine-rich domain between helix 6 and helix 7, and an elongated and very dissimilar C-terminal region (shown in red in Fig. 7). The structural differences of Erns from the RNase Rh template structure are the loss of several clustered loops or domains on one side of the protein (compared with the RNase Rh template protein) and the addition of large clustered loops or domains on the opposite side of the protein. The exact structure of the large insertions cannot be predicted. Specifically, the cysteine-rich domain (residues 107 to 141) and the C-terminal 37 residues should be considered a rough approximation. The cysteine-rich domain is constrained by its N and C termini and the two disulfides, but the C-terminal region can be folded to different parts of the protein. The C-terminal region contains a large number of positive charges, has a high score for amphipathic helicity, and is an important antigenic site for all pestivirus Erns proteins (16). According to the alignment, the 37 C-terminal residues form a separate domain that shows more homology to the L3 loop of ribotoxins type II and to membrane-active peptides such as magainins (15). Previously it was shown that the C-terminal domain of Erns and the homologous L3 loop of ribotoxins were responsible for protein translocation across the plasma membrane (15). Therefore, the structure of the C-terminal region may be metastable and may change its conformation when it contacts heparan sulfate or the plasma membrane.
The biochemical analysis did not address the position and nature of the carbohydrates, but the lower mass of four fragments and MS-MS analysis indicate that Asn2, Asn11, Asn65, Asn95, and Asn158 may have been N glycosylated. Deglycosylation converts an Asn residue into an Asp residue, resulting in the loss of 1 Da. Asn2 is close to the active site, but the side chain (and the possible carbohydrate) is directed away from the active site. It is not clear from the model if a bulky carbohydrate at Asn2 can be accommodated in the 3D model. All other positions at which Asn-to-Asp conversion occurred and may have been N glycosylated are in good agreement with the model. Asn11 is located on the exposed loop between helix 1 and strand 2. Asn65 is located on the exposed loop between helix 3 and helix 4; Asn95 is located on "disrupted" helix 5, which runs under the ß-sheet; and Asn158 is located on the loop between helix 7 and strand 3 (not present in BVDV). In the recently published crystal structure of RNase S3, N-linked glycans were observed at the same location as Erns Asn11 and Asn95 (17). The exposed C-terminal region of Erns is completely devoid of potential glycosylation sites. An interesting sequence motif (81WXXW84) is located between helix 4 and helix 5. Recently, this motif has been recognized to be a potential recognition site for C mannosylation, a novel type of glycosylation that involves the attachment of an
-mannosyl residue to the C-2 atom of the first tryptophan. Little is known about the role of C mannosylation. Structural studies of RNase 2 show that the main structural role of the mannose residue is stabilization of a loop and the ability to keep tryptophan in a specific orientation (28). It is not known whether Sf21 cells can carry out C mannosylation.
The combination of MS of peptide fragments and homology modeling has allowed us to assign disulfide bonds and propose a 3D model for Erns. Erns is quite atypical compared with the other Rh/T2/S RNases. The Erns sequence is by far the most dissimilar; the protein is homodimeric, contains a translocation domain, and contains a motif for potential C mannosylation; the structure contains two disulfide bridges in a unique cysteine-rich region; and the protein contains a very rare vicinal disulfide bridge. This list of exciting features will help future functional studies on this secreted RNase.
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