Structural determination of importin alpha in complex with beak and feather disease virus capsid nuclear localization signal

2013 ◽  
Vol 438 (4) ◽  
pp. 680-685 ◽  
Author(s):  
Edward I. Patterson ◽  
Andrew K. Dombrovski ◽  
Crystall M.D. Swarbrick ◽  
Shane R. Raidal ◽  
Jade K. Forwood
2002 ◽  
Vol 76 (16) ◽  
pp. 8460-8467 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michelle Portlance Walker ◽  
W. Ian Lipkin

ABSTRACT Borna disease virus (BDV) is a nonsegmented negative-strand RNA virus that replicates and transcribes its genome in the nucleus of infected cells. BDV proteins involved in replication and transcription must pass through the nuclear envelope to associate with the genomic viral RNA. The RNA-dependent RNA polymerase (L) of BDV is postulated to be the catalytic enzyme of replication and transcription. We demonstrated previously that BDV L localizes to the nucleus of BDV-infected cells and L-transfected cells. Nuclear localization of the protein presupposes the presence of a nuclear localization signal (NLS) within its primary amino acid sequence or cotransport to the nucleus with another karyophilic protein. Because L localized to the nucleus in the absence of other viral proteins, we investigated the possibility that L contains an NLS. The minimal sequence required for nuclear localization of L was identified by analyzing the subcellular distribution of deletion mutants of L fused to a flag epitope tag or β-galactosidase. Although the majority of the L fusion proteins localized to the cytoplasm of transfected BSR-T7 cells, a strong NLS (844RVVKLRIAP852) with basic and proline residues was identified. Mutation of this sequence resulted in cytoplasmic distribution of L, confirming that this sequence was necessary and sufficient to drive the nuclear localization of L.


2014 ◽  
Vol 89 (2) ◽  
pp. 1348-1363 ◽  
Author(s):  
Timo Schippers ◽  
Keith Jarosinski ◽  
Nikolaus Osterrieder

ABSTRACTMarek's disease virus (MDV), an alphaherpesvirus, is the causative agent of a lethal disease in chickens characterized by generalized nerve inflammation and rapid lymphoma development. The extensive colinearity of the MDV genome with those of related herpesviruses has eased functional characterization of many MDV genes. However, MDV carries a number of unique open reading frames (ORFs) that have not yet been investigated regarding their coding potentials and the functions of their products. Among these unique ORFs are two putative ORFs, ORF011 and ORF012, which are found at the extreme left end of the MDV unique long region. Using reverse transcriptase PCR, we showed that ORF011 and ORF012 are not individual genes but form a single gene through mRNA splicing of a small intron, resulting in the novel ORF012. We generated an ORF012-null virus using an infectious clone of MDV strain RB-1B. The deletion virus had a marked growth defectin vitroand could not be passaged in cultured cells, suggesting an essential role for the ORF012 product in virus replication. Further studies revealed that protein 012 (p012) localized to the nucleus in transfected and infected cells, and we identified by site-directed mutagenesis and green fluorescent protein (GFP) reporter fusion assays a nuclear localization signal (NLS) that was mapped to a 23-amino-acid sequence at the protein's C terminus. Nuclear export was blocked using leptomycin B, suggesting a potential role for p012 as a nuclear/cytoplasmic shuttling protein. Finally, p012 is phosphorylated at multiple residues, a modification that could possibly regulate its subcellular distribution.IMPORTANCEMarek's disease virus (MDV) causes a devastating oncogenic disease in chickens with high morbidity and mortality. The costs for disease prevention reach several billion dollars annually. The functional investigation of MDV genes is necessary to understand its complex replication cycle, which eventually could help us to interfere with MDV and herpesviral pathogenesis. We have identified a previously unidentified phosphoprotein encoded by MDV ORF012. We were able to show experimentally that predicted splicing of the gene based on bioinformatics data does indeed occur during replication. The newly identified p012 is essential for MDV replication and localizes to the nucleus due to the presence of a transferable nuclear localization signal at its C terminus. Our results also imply that p012 could constitute a nucleocytoplasmic shuttle protein, a feature that could prove interesting and important.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Piotr Grabarczyk ◽  
Martin Delin ◽  
Dorota Rogińska ◽  
Lukas Schulig ◽  
Hannes Forkel ◽  
...  

The Krüppel-like transcription factor BCL11B is characterized by wide tissue distribution and crucial functions in key developmental and cellular processes and various pathologies including cancer or HIV infection. Although basics of BCL11B activity and relevant interactions with other proteins were uncovered, how this exclusively nuclear protein localizes to its compartment remained unclear. Here, we demonstrate that unlike other KLFs, BCL11B does not require the C-terminal DNA-binding domain to pass through the nuclear envelope but encodes an independent, previously unidentified nuclear localization signal (NLS) which is located distantly from the zinc finger domains and fulfills the essential criteria of an autonomous NLS. First, it can redirect a heterologous cytoplasmic protein to the nucleus. Second, its mutations cause aberrant localization of the protein of origin. Finally, we provide experimental and in silico evidences of the direct interaction with importin alpha. The relative conservation of this motif allows formulating a consensus sequence (K/R)K-X13-14-KR+K++ which can be found in all BCL11B orthologues among vertebrates and in the closely related protein BCL11A.


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