Title of article :
The Role of the S-S Bridge in Retroviral Protease Function and Virion Maturation
Author/Authors :
Helena Z?bransk?، نويسنده , , Roman Tuma، نويسنده , , Ivan Kluh، نويسنده , , Ales Svatos، نويسنده , , Tomas Ruml، نويسنده , , Richard Hrabal، نويسنده , , Iva Pichov?، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Abstract :
Retroviral proteases are translated as a part of Gag-related polyproteins, and are released and activated during particle release. Mason-Pfizer monkey virus (M-PMV) Gag polyproteins assemble into immature capsids within the cytoplasm of the host cells; however, their processing occurs only after transport to the plasma membrane and subsequent release. Thus, the activity of M-PMV protease is expected to be highly regulated during the replication cycle. It has been proposed that reversible oxidation of protease cysteine residues might be responsible for such regulation. We show that cysteine residues in M-PMV protease can form an intramolecular S-S bridge. The disulfide bridge shifts the monomer/dimer equilibrium in favor of the dimer, and increases the proteolytic activity significantly. To investigate the role of this disulfide bridge in virus maturation and replication, we engineered an M-PMV clone in which both protease cysteine residues were replaced by alanine (M-PMVPRC7A/C106A). Surprisingly, the cysteine residues were dispensable for Gag polyprotein processing within the virus, indicating that even low levels of protease activity are sufficient for polyprotein processing during maturation. However, the long-term infectivity of M-PMVPRC7A/C106A was noticeably compromised. These results show clearly that the proposed redox mechanism does not rely solely on the formation of the stabilizing S-S bridge in the protease. Thus, in addition to the protease disulfide bridge, reversible oxidation of cysteine and/or methionine residues in other domains of the Gag polyprotein or in related cellular proteins must be involved in the regulation of maturation.
Keywords :
retroviral protease , Mason-Pfizer monkey virus , disulfide , dimerization , Maturation
Journal title :
Journal of Molecular Biology
Journal title :
Journal of Molecular Biology