Literature DB >> 12186911

Truncation of herpes simplex virus type 2 glycoprotein B increases its cell surface expression and activity in cell-cell fusion, but these properties are unrelated.

Zhenghong Fan1, Michael L Grantham, M Shane Smith, Eric S Anderson, James A Cardelli, Martin I Muggeridge.   

Abstract

Formation of small polykaryons by cell-cell fusion is characteristic of herpes simplex virus (HSV) lesions, but the great majority of viruses isolated from such lesions produce only limited cell fusion in tissue culture. Because of this, HSV laboratory strains that produce extensive cell fusion (syncytium formation) in culture are regarded as variants or mutants. Furthermore, the rarity of clinical isolates able to produce syncytia in culture suggests that extensive cell fusion is deleterious in vivo. Mutations that confer a syncytial phenotype can then be regarded as bypassing a mechanism that normally limits cell fusion. Determination of how these mutations, some of which are in the cytoplasmic tail of glycoprotein B (gB), lead to syncytium formation will likely reveal how fusion is controlled. Here we show the following. (i) Truncation of the cytoplasmic tail of HSV type 2 gB (gB-2) by a minimum of 25 residues or a maximum of 49 residues produces a syncytial phenotype. (ii) Truncation by 20 to 49 residues increases cell fusion when gB-2 is coexpressed with only gD-2, gH-2, and gL-2. (iii) Truncation by 25 or more residues removes a potential endocytosis motif and increases gB-2 cell surface expression. (iv) Mutation of this motif increases gB-2 cell surface expression but does not increase fusogenic activity, whereas mutation of another potential endocytosis motif does not increase surface expression but does increase fusogenic activity. Therefore, syncytial mutations in the cytoplasmic tail of gB-2 do not act by increasing cell surface levels of the protein.

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Year:  2002        PMID: 12186911      PMCID: PMC136473          DOI: 10.1128/jvi.76.18.9271-9283.2002

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Virol        ISSN: 0022-538X            Impact factor:   5.103


  41 in total

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  39 in total

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7.  Mutations in Pseudorabies Virus Glycoproteins gB, gD, and gH Functionally Compensate for the Absence of gL.

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