Literature DB >> 20042496

The capsid proteins of Aleutian mink disease virus activate caspases and are specifically cleaved during infection.

Fang Cheng1, Aaron Yun Chen, Sonja M Best, Marshall E Bloom, David Pintel, Jianming Qiu.   

Abstract

Aleutian mink disease virus (AMDV) is currently the only known member of the genus Amdovirus in the family Parvoviridae. It is the etiological agent of Aleutian disease of mink. We have previously shown that a small protein with a molecular mass of approximately 26 kDa was present during AMDV infection and following transfection of capsid expression constructs (J. Qiu, F. Cheng, L. R. Burger, and D. Pintel, J. Virol. 80:654-662, 2006). In this study, we report that the capsid proteins were specifically cleaved at aspartic acid residue 420 (D420) during virus infection, resulting in the previously observed cleavage product. Mutation of a single amino acid residue at D420 abolished the specific cleavage. Expression of the capsid proteins alone in Crandell feline kidney (CrFK) cells reproduced the cleavage of the capsid proteins in virus infection. More importantly, capsid protein expression alone induced active caspases, of which caspase-10 was the most active. Active caspases, in turn, cleaved capsid proteins in vivo. Our results also showed that active caspase-7 specifically cleaved capsid proteins at D420 in vitro. These results suggest that viral capsid proteins alone induce caspase activation, resulting in cleavage of capsid proteins. We also provide evidence that AMDV mutants resistant to caspase-mediated capsid cleavage increased virus production approximately 3- to 5-fold in CrFK cells compared to that produced from the parent virus AMDV-G at 37 degrees C but not at 31.8 degrees C. Collectively, our results indicate that caspase activity plays multiple roles in AMDV infection and that cleavage of the capsid proteins might have a role in regulating persistent infection of AMDV.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 20042496      PMCID: PMC2826067          DOI: 10.1128/JVI.01917-09

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


  50 in total

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  18 in total

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5.  Internal polyadenylation of parvoviral precursor mRNA limits progeny virus production.

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8.  Simian virus 40 infection triggers a balanced network that includes apoptotic, survival, and stress pathways.

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10.  During Infection, Theiler's Virions Are Cleaved by Caspases and Disassembled into Pentamers.

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