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Journal of Virology, February 2001, p. 1790-1797, Vol. 75, No. 4
Department of Zoology and Genetics, Iowa
State University, Ames, Iowa 50011-3260
Received 4 August 2000/Accepted 20 November 2000
Retroelements (retrotransposons and retroviruses) have two
genes in common: gag, which specifies structural
proteins that form a virus or virus-like particle, and
pol, which specifies catalytic proteins required for
replication. For many retroelements, gag and
pol are present on separate reading frames. Their
expression is highly regulated, and the ratio of Gag to Pol is critical
for retroelement replication. The Saccharomyces
retrotransposon Ty5 contains a single open reading frame, and we
characterized Gag and Pol expression by generating transpositionally
active Ty5 elements with epitope tags at the N terminus or C terminus
or within the integrase coding region. Immunoblot analysis identified two Gag species (Gag-p27 and Gag-p37), reverse transcriptase (Pol-p59), and integrase (Pol-p80), all of which are largely insoluble in the
absence of urea or ionic detergent. These proteins result from
proteolytic processing of a polyprotein, because elements with
mutations in the presumed active site of Ty5 protease express a single
tagged protein (Gag-Pol-p182). Protease mutants are also transpositionally inactive. In a time course experiment, we monitored protein expression, proteolytic processing, and transposition of a Ty5
element with identical epitope tags at its N and C termini. Both
transposition and the abundance of Gag-p27 increased over time. In
contrast, the levels of Gag-p37 and reverse transcriptase peaked after
~14 h of induction and then gradually decreased. This may be due to
differences in stability of Gag-p27 relative to Gag-p37 and reverse
transcriptase. The ratio of Ty5 Gag to Pol averaged 5:1 throughout the
time course experiment, suggesting that differential protein stability
regulates the amounts of these proteins.
0022-538X/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JVI.75.4.1790-1797.2001
Copyright © 2001, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Expression and Processing of Proteins Encoded by
the Saccharomyces Retrotransposon Ty5
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of
Zoology and Genetics, Iowa State University, 2208 Molecular Biology
Building, Ames, IA 50011-3260. Phone: (515) 294-1963. Fax: (515)
294-7155. E-mail: voytas{at}iastate.edu.
Journal paper J-19002 of the Iowa Agriculture and Home Economics
Experiment Station, Ames, Iowa, project no. 3383.
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