| Literature DB >> 6331675 |
R Hanecak, B L Semler, H Ariga, C W Anderson, E Wimmer.
Abstract
The poliovirus polyprotein is proteolytically processed predominantly by a virus-encoded proteinase (P3-7c) that cleaves glutamine-glycine amino acid pairs. The biosynthesis of the viral proteinase, itself a product of glutamine-glycine cleavages, was studied by constructing a bacterial expression plasmid that contained a cloned segment of the poliovirus genome slightly larger than the coding region for P3-7c. The induction of expression of this plasmid in E. coli produced several poliovirus-specific polypeptides. One polypeptide, an unstable protein called 3i, was the product of fortuitous in-phase initiation of translation within the coding region of P3-7c. Three other induced polypeptides were products of proteolytic cleavages, the smallest (polypeptide 3) having the properties (amino-terminal amino acids, carboxy-terminal amino acids, size, antigenicity) of P3-7c. Insertion of a DNA linker into the P3-7c coding region results in the loss of P3-7c-specific glutamine-glycine cleavage activity. We conclude that P3-7c was produced by autocatalytic cleavage.Entities:
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Year: 1984 PMID: 6331675 DOI: 10.1016/0092-8674(84)90441-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell ISSN: 0092-8674 Impact factor: 41.582