scholarly journals Molecular Defects Caused by Temperature-Sensitive Mutations in Semliki Forest Virus nsP1

2008 ◽  
Vol 82 (18) ◽  
pp. 9236-9244 ◽  
Author(s):  
Valeria Lulla ◽  
Dorothea L. Sawicki ◽  
Stanley G. Sawicki ◽  
Aleksei Lulla ◽  
Andres Merits ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT Alphavirus replicase protein nsP1 has multiple functions during viral RNA synthesis. It catalyzes methyltransferase and guanylyltransferase activities needed in viral mRNA capping, attaches the viral replication complex to cytoplasmic membranes, and is required for minus-strand RNA synthesis. Two temperature-sensitive (ts) mutations in Semliki Forest virus (SFV) were previously identified within nsP1: ts10 (E529D) and ts14 (D119N). Recombinant viruses containing these individual mutations reproduced the features of the original ts strains. We now find that the capping-associated enzymatic activities of recombinant nsP1, containing ts10 or ts14 lesions, were not ts. The mutant proteins and polyproteins also were membrane bound, mutant nsP1 interacted normally with the other nonstructural proteins, and there was no major defect in nonstructural polyprotein processing in the mutants, although ts14 surprisingly displayed slightly retarded processing. The two mutant viruses were specifically defective in minus-strand RNA synthesis at the restrictive temperature. Integrating data from SFV and Sindbis virus, we discuss the domain structure of nsP1 and the relative positioning of and interactions between the replicase proteins. nsP1 is suggested to contain a specific subdomain involved in minus-strand synthesis and interaction with the polymerase nsP4 and the protease nsP2.

2008 ◽  
Vol 82 (15) ◽  
pp. 7284-7297 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mayuri ◽  
Todd W. Geders ◽  
Janet L. Smith ◽  
Richard J. Kuhn

ABSTRACT The plus-strand RNA genome of Sindbis virus (SINV) encodes four nonstructural proteins (nsP1 to nsP4) that are involved in the replication of the viral RNA. The ∼800-amino-acid nsP2 consists of an N-terminal domain with nucleoside triphosphatase and helicase activities and a C-terminal protease domain. Recently, the structure determined for Venezuelan equine encephalitis virus nsP2 indicated the presence of a previously unrecognized methyltransferase (MTase)-like domain within the C-terminal ∼200 residues and raised a question about its functional importance. To assess the role of this MTase-like region in viral replication, highly conserved arginine and lysine residues were mutated to alanine. The plaque phenotypes of these mutants ranged from large/wild-type to small plaques with selected mutations demonstrating temperature sensitive lethality. The proteolytic polyprotein processing activity of nsP2 was unaffected in most of the mutants. Some of the temperature-sensitive mutants showed reduction in the minus-strand RNA synthesis, a function that has not yet been ascribed to nsP2. Mutation of SINV residue R615 rendered the virus noncytopathic and incapable of inhibiting the host cell translation but with no effects on the transcriptional inhibition. This property differentiated the mutation at R615 from previously described noncytopathic mutations. These results implicate nsP2 in regulation of minus-strand synthesis and suggest that different regions of the nsP2 MTase-like domain differentially modulate host defense mechanisms, independent of its role as the viral protease.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Laura Sandra Lello ◽  
Koen Bartholomeeusen ◽  
Sainan Wang ◽  
Sandra Coppens ◽  
Rennos Fragkoudis ◽  
...  

Alphaviruses have positive-strand RNA genomes containing two open reading frames (ORFs). The first ORF encodes the non-structural (ns) polyproteins P123 and P1234 that act as precursors for the subunits of the viral RNA replicase (nsP1-nsP4). Processing of P1234 leads to the formation of a negative-strand replicase consisting of nsP4 (RNA polymerase) and P123 components. Subsequent processing of P123 results in a positive-strand replicase. The second ORF encoding the structural proteins is expressed via the synthesis of a subgenomic RNA. Alphavirus replicase is capable of using template RNAs that contain essential cis -active sequences. Here we demonstrate that the replicases of nine alphaviruses, expressed in the form of separate P123 and nsP4 components, are active. Their activity depends on the abundance of nsP4. The match of nsP4 to its template strongly influences efficient subgenomic RNA synthesis. nsP4 of Barmah Forest virus (BFV) formed a functional replicase only with matching P123 while nsP4s of other alphaviruses were compatible also with several heterologous P123s. The P123 components of Venezuelan equine encephalitis virus and Sindbis virus (SINV) required matching nsP4s while P123 of other viruses could form active replicases with different nsP4s. Chimeras of Semliki Forest virus, harboring the nsP4 of chikungunya virus, Ross River virus, BFV or SINV were viable. In contrast, chimeras of SINV, harboring an nsP4 from different alphaviruses, exhibited a temperature-sensitive phenotype. These findings highlight the possibility for formation of new alphaviruses via recombination events and provide a novel approach for the development of attenuated chimeric viruses for vaccination strategies. Importance. A key element of every virus with an RNA genome is the RNA replicase. Understanding the principles of RNA replicase formation and functioning is therefore crucial for understanding and responding to the emergence of new viruses. Reconstruction of the replicases of nine alphaviruses from nsP4 and P123 polyproteins revealed that the nsP4 of the majority of alphaviruses, including the mosquito-specific Eilat virus, could form a functional replicase with P123 originating from a different virus, and the corresponding chimeric viruses were replication-competent. nsP4 also had an evident role in determining the template RNA preference and the efficiency of RNA synthesis. The revealed broad picture of the compatibility of the replicase components of alphaviruses is important for understanding the formation and functioning of the alphavirus RNA replicase and highlights the possibilities for recombination between different alphavirus species.


2002 ◽  
Vol 76 (17) ◽  
pp. 8632-8640 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cori L. Fata ◽  
Stanley G. Sawicki ◽  
Dorothea L. Sawicki

ABSTRACT A partially conserved region spanning amino acids 142 to 191 of the Sindbis virus (SIN) nsP4 core polymerase is implicated in host restriction, elongation, and promoter recognition. We extended the analysis of this region by substituting Ser, Ala, or Lys for a highly conserved Arg183 residue immediately preceding its absolutely conserved Ser184-Ala-Val-Pro-Ser188 sequence. In chicken cells, the nsP4 Arg183 mutants had a nonconditionally lethal, temperature-sensitive (ts) growth phenotype caused by a ts defect in minus-strand synthesis whose extent varied with the particular amino acid substituted (Ser>Ala>Lys). Plus-strand synthesis by nsP4 Arg183 mutant polymerases was unaffected when corrected for minus-strand numbers, although 26S mRNA synthesis was enhanced at the elevated temperature compared to wild type. The ts defect was not due to a failure to form or accumulate nsP4 at 40°C. In contrast to their growth in chicken cells, the nsP4 Arg183 mutants replicated equally poorly, if at all, in mosquito cells. We conclude that Arg183 within the Pro180-Asn-Ile-Arg-Ser184 sequence of the SIN nsP4 polymerase contributes to the efficient initiation of minus strands or the formation of its replicase and that a host factor(s) participates in this event.


Virology ◽  
1981 ◽  
Vol 115 (1) ◽  
pp. 161-172 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stanley G. Sawicki ◽  
Dorothea L. Sawicki ◽  
Leevi Kääriänen ◽  
Sirkka Keranen

2008 ◽  
Vol 89 (3) ◽  
pp. 676-686 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kristi Tamm ◽  
Andres Merits ◽  
Inga Sarand

The cytotoxicity of Semliki Forest virus (SFV) infection is caused partly by the non-structural protein nsP2, an essential component of the SFV replicase complex. Due to the presence of a nuclear localization signal (NLS), nsP2 also localizes in the nucleus of infected cells. The present study analysed recombinant SFV replicons and genomes with various deletions or substitutions in the NLS, or with a proline-to-glycine mutation at position 718 of nsP2 (P718G). Deletion of one or two arginine residues from the NLS or substitution of two of the arginines with aspartic acid resulted in a virus with a temperature-sensitive phenotype, and substitution of all three arginines was lethal. Thus, most of the introduced mutations severely affected nsP2 functioning in viral replication; in addition, they inhibited the ability of SFV to induce translational shut-off and kill infected cells. SFV replicons with a P718G mutation or replacement of the NLS residues 648RRR650 with RDD were found to be the least cytotoxic. Corresponding replicons expressed non-structural proteins at normal levels, but had severely reduced genomic RNA synthesis and were virtually unable to replicate and transcribe co-electroporated helper RNA. The non-cytotoxic phenotype was maintained in SFV full-length genomes harbouring the corresponding mutations; however, during a single cycle of cell culture, these were converted to a cytotoxic phenotype, probably due to the accumulation of compensatory mutations.


2003 ◽  
Vol 77 (4) ◽  
pp. 2301-2309 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yukio Shirako ◽  
Ellen G. Strauss ◽  
James H. Strauss

ABSTRACT We have previously shown that Sindbis virus RNA polymerase requires an N-terminal aromatic amino acid or histidine for wild-type or pseudo-wild-type function; mutant viruses with a nonaromatic amino acid at the N terminus of the polymerase, but which are otherwise wild type, are unable to produce progeny viruses and will not form a plaque at any temperature tested. We now show that such mutant polymerases can function to produce progeny virus sufficient to form plaques at both 30 and 40°C upon addition of AU, AUA, or AUU to the 5′ terminus of the genomic RNA or upon substitution of A for U as the third nucleotide of the genome. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that (i) 3′-UA-5′ is required at the 3′ terminus of the minus-strand RNA for initiation of plus-strand genomic RNA synthesis; (ii) in the wild-type virus this sequence is present in a secondary structure that can be opened by the wild-type polymerase but not by the mutant polymerase; (iii) the addition of AU, AUA, or AUU to the 5′ end of the genomic RNA provides unpaired 3′-UA-5′ at the 3′ end of the minus strand that can be utilized by the mutant polymerase, and similarly, the effect of the U3A mutation is to destabilize the secondary structure, freeing 3′-terminal UA; and (iv) the N terminus of nsP4 may directly interact with the 3′ terminus of the minus-strand RNA for the initiation of the plus-strand genomic RNA synthesis. This hypothesis is discussed in light of our present results as well as of previous studies of alphavirus RNAs, including defective interfering RNAs.


2000 ◽  
Vol 74 (15) ◽  
pp. 6725-6733 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tero Ahola ◽  
Pekka Kujala ◽  
Minna Tuittila ◽  
Titta Blom ◽  
Pirjo Laakkonen ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT The membrane-associated alphavirus RNA replication complex contains four virus-encoded subunits, the nonstructural proteins nsP1 to nsP4. Semliki Forest virus (SFV) nsP1 is hydrophobically modified by palmitoylation of cysteines 418 to 420. Here we show that Sindbis virus nsP1 is also palmitoylated on the same site (cysteine 420). When mutations preventing nsP1 palmitoylation were introduced into the genomes of these two alphaviruses, the mutant viruses remained viable and replicated to high titers, although their growth was slightly delayed. The subcellular distribution of palmitoylation-defective nsP1 was altered in the mutant: it no longer localized to filopodial extensions, and a fraction of it was soluble. The ultrastructure of the alphavirus replication sites appeared normal, and the localization of the other nonstructural proteins was unaltered in the mutants. In both wild-type- and mutant-virus-infected cells, SFV nsP3 and nsP4 could be extracted from membranes only by alkaline solutions whereas the nsP2-membrane association was looser. Thus, the membrane binding properties of the alphavirus RNA replication complex were not determined by the palmitoylation of nsP1. The nsP1 palmitoylation-defective alphaviruses produced normal plaques in several cell types, but failed to give rise to plaques in HeLa cells, although they induced normal apoptosis of these cells. The SFV mutant was apathogenic in mice: it caused blood viremia, but no infectious virus was detected in the brain.


1999 ◽  
Vol 73 (10) ◽  
pp. 8732-8740 ◽  
Author(s):  
José-Antonio Daròs ◽  
Mary C. Schaad ◽  
James C. Carrington

ABSTRACT The tobacco etch potyvirus (TEV) RNA-dependent RNA polymerase (NIb) has been shown to interact with the proteinase domain of the VPg-proteinase (NIa). To investigate the significance of this interaction, a Saccharomyces cerevisiae two-hybrid assay was used to isolate conditional NIa mutant proteins with temperature-sensitive (ts) defects in interacting with NIb. Thirty-six unique tsNIa mutants with substitutions affecting the proteinase domain were recovered. Most of the mutants coded for proteins with little or no proteolytic activity at permissive and nonpermissive temperatures. However, three mutant proteins retained proteolytic activity at both temperatures and, in two cases (tsNIa-Q384P and tsNIa-N393D), the mutations responsible for the ts interaction phenotype could be mapped to single positions. One of the mutations (N393D) conferred ats-genome-amplification phenotype when it was placed in a recombinant TEV strain. Suppressor NIb mutants that restored interaction with the tsNIa-N393D protein at the restrictive temperature were recovered by a two-hybrid selection system. Although most of the suppressor mutants failed to stimulate amplification of genomes encoding the tsNIa-N393D protein, two suppressors (NIb-I94T and NIb-C380R) stimulated amplification of virus containing the N393D substitution by approximately sevenfold. These results support the hypothesis that interaction between NIa and NIb is important during TEV genome replication.


2006 ◽  
Vol 80 (6) ◽  
pp. 3108-3111 ◽  
Author(s):  
Valeria Lulla ◽  
Andres Merits ◽  
Peter Sarin ◽  
Leevi Kääriäinen ◽  
Sirkka Keränen ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT We have sequenced the nonstructural protein coding region of Semliki Forest virus temperature-sensitive (ts) mutant strains ts1, ts6, ts9, ts10, ts11, ts13, and ts14. In each case, the individual amino acid changes uncovered were transferred to the prototype strain background and thereby identified as the underlying cause of the altered RNA synthesis phenotype. All mutations mapping to the protease domain of nonstructural protein nsP2 caused defects in nonstructural polyprotein processing and subgenomic RNA synthesis, and all mutations in the helicase domain of nsP2 affected subgenomic RNA production. These types of defects were not associated with mutations in other nonstructural proteins.


2007 ◽  
Vol 81 (6) ◽  
pp. 2849-2860 ◽  
Author(s):  
Giuseppe Balistreri ◽  
Javier Caldentey ◽  
Leevi Kääriäinen ◽  
Tero Ahola

ABSTRACT We have analyzed the biochemical consequences of mutations that affect viral RNA synthesis in Semliki Forest virus temperature-sensitive (ts) mutants. Of the six mutations mapping in the multifunctional replicase protein nsP2, three were located in the N-terminal helicase region and three were in the C-terminal protease domain. Wild-type and mutant nsP2s were expressed, purified, and assayed for nucleotide triphosphatase (NTPase), RNA triphosphatase (RTPase), and protease activities in vitro at 24°C and 35°C. The protease domain mutants (ts4, ts6, and ts11) had reduced protease activity at 35°C but displayed normal NTPase and RTPase. The helicase domain mutation ts1 did not have enzymatic consequences, whereas ts13a and ts9 reduced both NTPase and protease activities but in different and mutant-specific ways. The effects of these helicase domain mutants on protease function suggest interdomain interactions within nsP2. NTPase activity was not directly required for protease activity. The similarities of the NTPase and RTPase results, as well as competition experiments, suggest that these two reactions utilize the same active site. The mutations were also studied in recombinant viruses first cultivated at the permissive temperature and then shifted up to the restrictive temperature. Processing of the nonstructural polyprotein was generally retarded in cells infected with viruses carrying the ts4, ts6, ts11, and ts13a mutations, and a specific defect appeared in ts9. All mutations except ts13a were associated with a large reduction in the production of the subgenomic 26S mRNA, indicating that both protease and helicase domains influence the recognition of the subgenomic promoter during virus replication.


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