Previous Article | Next Article 
Journal of Virology, April 2005, p. 4550-4551, Vol. 79, No. 7
0022-538X/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JVI.79.7.4550-4551.2005
Deubiquitination, a New Function of the Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus Papain-Like Protease?

LETTER
A new coronavirus has been identified as the infectious agent
of severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS). Although SARS was
successfully contained by quarantine measures, the reconstructed
itinerary of the virus through 30 countries and its high mortality
rate illustrate the global threat that this newly emerging disease
represents (
17). During the expression of the SARS coronavirus
(SCoV) genome, two viral cysteine proteases, a papain-like protease
(PLpro) and a chymotrypsin-like protease (3CLpro), process the
encoded polyprotein precursor to release most of the proteins
required for virus replication. PLpro refers to a domain of
nonstructural protein 3, whose boundaries are defined by homology
to the papain-like fold (
7). The PLpro domain can be regarded
as the catalytic core behind PLpro-mediated cleavages, even
though processing by PLpros has been reported to be modulated
by additional amino acid residues outside of these boundaries
(
15,
18). The SCoV utilizes a single PLpro, whereas most coronaviruses
contain two paralogous enzymes, termed PL1pro and PL2pro (
14).
PLpros in general are not as well characterized as 3CLpros and
have not generated as much interest as pharmaceutical targets.
However, further structure-to-function annotations might refocus
the attention on PLpros. For this purpose, we mined the current
Protein Data Bank (PDB) content using the Structure Prediction
Meta Server (
http://www.bioinfo.pl/meta), which assembles state-of-the-art
fold recognition methods and provides a consensus sequence-to-structure
hyperscore with the 3D-Jury method (
4). The only highly reliable
prediction (3D-Jury score > 100) obtained for the SCoV PLpro
sequence from K1632 to E1847 was the structure of the catalytic
core domain of the herpesvirus-associated ubiquitin-specific
protease (HAUSP), also known as USP7 (
8).
There is compelling evidence for the relevance of a structural relationship between SCoV PLpro and HAUSP (Fig. 1). First, HAUSP is a cysteine protease with a finger domain inserted between the two subdomains of a papain-like fold (8). This structure mirrors the general architecture proposed for the members of the coronaviral PLpro family, which now includes SCoV PLpro, with a Zn ribbon domain inserted in the middle of a papain-like protease domain (7). Our structural bioinformatics data support a circularly permuted rather than a classical Zn ribbon domain for SCoV PLpro, as was recently reported for HAUSP and related enzymes (12). Second, as a deubiquitinating enzyme, HAUSP recognizes the C-terminal ubiquitin sequence, LRGG, which matches the narrow specificity profile of SCoV PLpro (LXGG) derived from the three PLpro-processing sites of the polyprotein (6, 16). The modeled SCoV PLpro binding site is highly complementary to the LXGG sequence and establishes extensive hydrogen bonding with the substrate main chain. In particular, significant occlusions of the S1 subsite (due to N1649 and L1702) and S2 subsite (due to Y1804 and Y1813) account for the strict specificity for diglycine at substrate positions P1 and P2 (Fig. 1C). The structural signatures for strict specificity are present in human coronavirus (HCoV 229E) PL1pro and PL2pro as well as in mouse hepatitis virus (MHV) PL2pro but not in MHV PL1pro (Fig. 1D). This fact correlates with the available specificity data showing a preference for the large arginine residue at the P2 position in the case of MHV PL1pro (2, 3, 9) and with the observation that the irreversible inhibitor E-64d, which contains a bulky P2 residue (leucine), inhibits MHV PL1pro (5, 11) but not MHV PL2pro (10).
Structural similarities to HAUSP suggest that, in addition to
polyprotein processing activity, SCoV PLpro might possess deubiquitinating
activity (including deconjugation of other ubiquitin-like modifiers),
as was observed for an adenoviral protease (
1). This unexpected
activity prediction raises provocative hypotheses regarding
the ability of the SARS virus to evade cellular defense mechanisms.
For example, it is tempting to speculate that ISG15 deconjugation
by PLpro allows the SARS virus to counteract protein ISGylation,
an interferon-induced process that may contribute to innate
immunity to viral infection (
13). The deubiquitination function
would greatly impact the value of PLpro as a therapeutic target
and provide a framework for the development of antivirals to
treat SARS. Strategies for the design of inhibitors of SCoV
PLpro must also take into consideration the potentially overlapping
specificity of this protease with those of cellular deubiquitinating
enzymes. Our finding suggests the performance of follow-up experiments
that will increase the understanding of the functional roles
of papain-like proteases in the viral life cycles of SCoV and
related viruses.

REFERENCES
1 - Balakirev, M. Y., M. Jaquinod, A. L. Haas, and J. Chroboczek. 2002. Deubiquitinating function of adenovirus proteinase. J. Virol. 76:6323-6331.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
2 - Bonilla, P. J., S. A. Hughes, and S. R. Weiss. 1997. Characterization of a second cleavage site and demonstration of activity in trans by the papain-like proteinase of the murine coronavirus mouse hepatitis virus strain A59. J. Virol. 71:900-909.[Abstract]
3 - Dong, S., and S. C. Baker. 1994. Determinants of the p28 cleavage site recognized by the first papain-like cysteine proteinase of murine coronavirus. Virology 204:541-549.[CrossRef][Medline]
4 - Ginalski, K., A. Elofsson, D. Fischer, and L. Rychlewski. 2003. 3D-Jury: a simple approach to improve protein structure predictions. Bioinformatics 19:1015-1018.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
5 - Gosert, R., A. Kanjanahaluethai, D. Egger, K. Bienz, and S. C. Baker. 2002. RNA replication of mouse hepatitis virus takes place at double-membrane vesicles. J. Virol. 76:3697-3708.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
6 - Harcourt, B. H., D. Jukneliene, A. Kanjanahaluethai, J. Bechill, K. M. Severson, C. M. Smith, P. A. Rota, and S. C. Baker. 2004. Identification of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus replicase products and characterization of papain-like protease activity. J. Virol. 78:13600-13612.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
7 - Herold, J., S. G. Siddell, and A. E. Gorbalenya. 1999. A human RNA viral cysteine proteinase that depends upon a unique Zn2+-binding finger connecting the two domains of a papain-like fold. J. Biol. Chem. 274:14918-14925.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
8 - Hu, M., P. Li, M. Li, W. Li, T. Yao, J. Wu, W. Gu, R. E. Cohen, and Y. Shi. 2002. Crystal structure of a UBP-family deubiquitinating enzyme in isolation and in complex with ubiquitin aldehyde. Cell 111:1041-1054.[CrossRef][Medline]
9 - Hughes, S. A., P. J. Bonilla, and S. R. Weiss. 1995. Identification of the murine coronavirus p28 cleavage site. J. Virol. 69:809-813.[Abstract]
10 - Kanjanahaluethai, A., D. Jukneliene, and S. C. Baker. 2003. Identification of the murine coronavirus MP1 cleavage site recognized by papain-like proteinase 2. J. Virol. 77:7376-7382.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
11 - Kim, J. C., R. A. Spence, P. F. Currier, X. Lu, and M. R. Denison. 1995. Coronavirus protein processing and RNA synthesis is inhibited by the cysteine proteinase inhibitor E64d. Virology 208:1-8.[CrossRef][Medline]
12 - Krishna, S. S., and N. V. Grishin. 2004. The finger domain of the human deubiquitinating enzyme HAUSP is a zinc ribbon. Cell Cycle 3:1046-1049.[Medline]
13 - Ritchie, K. J., C. S. Hahn, K. I. Kim, M. Yan, D. Rosario, L. Li, J. C. de la Torre, and D. E. Zhang. 2004. Role of ISG15 protease UBP43 (USP18) in innate immunity to viral infection. Nat. Med. 10:1374-1378.[CrossRef][Medline]
14 - Snijder, E. J., P. J. Bredenbeek, J. C. Dobbe, V. Thiel, J. Ziebuhr, L. L. Poon, Y. Guan, M. Rozanov, W. J. Spaan, and A. E. Gorbalenya. 2003. Unique and conserved features of genome and proteome of SARS-coronavirus, an early split-off from the coronavirus group 2 lineage. J. Mol. Biol. 331:991-1004.[CrossRef][Medline]
15 - Teng, H., J. D. Piñón, and S. R. Weiss. 1999. Expression of murine coronavirus recombinant papain-like proteinase: efficient cleavage is dependent on the lengths of both the substrate and the proteinase polypeptides. J. Virol. 73:2658-2666.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
16 - Thiel, V., K. A. Ivanov, A. Putics, T. Hertzig, B. Schelle, S. Bayer, B. Weissbrich, E. J. Snijder, H. Rabenau, H. W. Doerr, A. E. Gorbalenya, and J. Ziebuhr. 2003. Mechanisms and enzymes involved in SARS coronavirus genome expression. J. Gen. Virol. 84:2305-2315.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
17 - World Health Organization. The World Health Report 2003shaping the future. [Online.] http://www.who.int/whr/2003.
18 - Ziebuhr, J., V. Thiel, and A. E. Gorbalenya. 2001. The autocatalytic release of a putative RNA virus transcription factor from its polyprotein precursor involves two paralogous papain-like proteases that cleave the same peptide bond. J. Biol. Chem. 276:33220-33232.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
| | | | | |
Traian Sulea
Holger A. Lindner
Enrico O. Purisima
Robert Ménard*
Biotechnology Research Institute National Research Council of Canada 6100 Royalmount Ave. Montreal, Quebec H4P 2R2, Canada
|
| | | | | |
* Phone: (514) 496-6317 Fax: (514) 496-5143 E-mail: robert.menard{at}nrc-cnrc.gc.ca. |
Journal of Virology, April 2005, p. 4550-4551, Vol. 79, No. 7
0022-538X/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JVI.79.7.4550-4551.2005
This article has been cited by other articles:
-
Ratia, K., Pegan, S., Takayama, J., Sleeman, K., Coughlin, M., Baliji, S., Chaudhuri, R., Fu, W., Prabhakar, B. S., Johnson, M. E., Baker, S. C., Ghosh, A. K., Mesecar, A. D.
(2008). A noncovalent class of papain-like protease/deubiquitinase inhibitors blocks SARS virus replication. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA
105: 16119-16124
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Li, Z., Barajas, D., Panavas, T., Herbst, D. A., Nagy, P. D.
(2008). Cdc34p Ubiquitin-Conjugating Enzyme Is a Component of the Tombusvirus Replicase Complex and Ubiquitinates p33 Replication Protein. J. Virol.
82: 6911-6926
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Narayanan, K., Huang, C., Lokugamage, K., Kamitani, W., Ikegami, T., Tseng, C.-T. K., Makino, S.
(2008). Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus nsp1 Suppresses Host Gene Expression, Including That of Type I Interferon, in Infected Cells. J. Virol.
82: 4471-4479
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Chen, Z., Wang, Y., Ratia, K., Mesecar, A. D., Wilkinson, K. D., Baker, S. C.
(2007). Proteolytic Processing and Deubiquitinating Activity of Papain-Like Proteases of Human Coronavirus NL63. J. Virol.
81: 6007-6018
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Kamitani, W., Narayanan, K., Huang, C., Lokugamage, K., Ikegami, T., Ito, N., Kubo, H., Makino, S.
(2006). Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus nsp1 protein suppresses host gene expression by promoting host mRNA degradation. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA
103: 12885-12890
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Ratia, K., Saikatendu, K. S., Santarsiero, B. D., Barretto, N., Baker, S. C., Stevens, R. C., Mesecar, A. D.
(2006). Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus papain-like protease: Structure of a viral deubiquitinating enzyme. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA
103: 5717-5722
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Barretto, N., Jukneliene, D., Ratia, K., Chen, Z., Mesecar, A. D., Baker, S. C.
(2005). The Papain-Like Protease of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus Has Deubiquitinating Activity. J. Virol.
79: 15189-15198
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Lindner, H. A., Fotouhi-Ardakani, N., Lytvyn, V., Lachance, P., Sulea, T., Menard, R.
(2005). The Papain-Like Protease from the Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus Is a Deubiquitinating Enzyme. J. Virol.
79: 15199-15208
[Abstract]
[Full Text]