Literature DB >> 22915809

Regulated interaction of tegument proteins UL16 and UL11 from herpes simplex virus.

Pooja Chadha1, Jun Han, Jason L Starkey, John W Wills.   

Abstract

It is well known that proteins in the tegument (located between the viral capsid and envelope proteins) play critical roles in the assembly and budding of herpesviruses. Tegument proteins UL16 and UL11 of herpes simplex virus (HSV) are conserved among all the Herpesviridae. Although these proteins directly interact in vitro, UL16 was found to colocalize poorly with UL11 in cotransfected cells. To explain this discrepancy, we hypothesized that UL16 is initially made in an inactive form and is artificially transformed to the binding-competent state when cells are disrupted. Consistent with a regulated interaction, UL16 was able to fully colocalize with UL11 when a large C-terminal segment of UL16 was removed, creating mutant UL16(1-155). Moreover, membrane flotation assays revealed a massive movement of this mutant to the top of sucrose gradients in the presence of UL11, whereas both the full-length UL16 and the C-terminal fragment (residues 156 to 373) remained at the bottom. Further evidence for the presence of a C-terminal regulatory domain was provided by single-amino-acid substitutions at conserved cysteines (C269S, C271S, and C357S), which enabled the efficient interaction of full-length UL16 with UL11. Lastly, the binding site for UL11 was further mapped to residues 81 to 155, and to our surprise, the 5 Cys residues within UL16(1-155) are not required, even though the modification of free cysteines in UL16 with N-ethylmaleimide does in fact prevent binding. Collectively, these results reveal a regulatory function within the C-terminal region of UL16 that controls an N-terminal UL11-binding activity.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22915809      PMCID: PMC3486286          DOI: 10.1128/JVI.01879-12

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


  76 in total

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3.  Interaction and interdependent packaging of tegument protein UL11 and glycoprotein e of herpes simplex virus.

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4.  Direct and specific binding of the UL16 tegument protein of herpes simplex virus to the cytoplasmic tail of glycoprotein E.

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Journal:  J Virol       Date:  2011-07-06       Impact factor: 5.103

5.  Glycoproteins E and I facilitate neuron-to-neuron spread of herpes simplex virus.

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8.  The human cytomegalovirus UL94 open reading frame encodes a conserved herpesvirus capsid/tegument-associated virion protein that is expressed with true late kinetics.

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7.  Glycoprotein D of HSV-1 is dependent on tegument protein UL16 for packaging and contains a motif that is differentially required for syncytia formation.

Authors:  Jillian C Carmichael; Jason Starkey; Dan Zhang; Akua Sarfo; Pooja Chadha; John W Wills; Jun Han
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8.  Varicella-zoster virus ORF49 functions in the efficient production of progeny virus through its interaction with essential tegument protein ORF44.

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10.  ORF33 and ORF38 of Kaposi's Sarcoma-Associated Herpesvirus Interact and Are Required for Optimal Production of Infectious Progeny Viruses.

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